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Camp KalahariCamp KalahariCamp KalahariCamp KalahariCamp KalahariLocation: Botswana » Central » Makgadikgadi Pans » Makgadikgadi Pans Game Reserve » Gweta

Camp Kalahari

Camp Kalahari Botswana

Description

In the style of Jack’s original camps, is a large and comfortable thatched library, lounge and dining area; here Guests can relax and enjoy the serenity and peace of this enchanting area.

Camp Kalahari has ten Meru tents: Seven twin tents, two double tents and one family unit comprising two twin tents with an i

There are two distinctly different seasons in the Makgadikgadi: The dry season, lasting from the 15th of April to the 31st of October and the wet season, lasting from the 1st of November to the 14th of April.

When the rains arrive at the beginning of the wet season, the landscape is transformed.
   
Water gathers on the saltpan. Algae bloom, crustaceans breed, and clouds of flamingo descend to feed on them.

Then herds of zebra and wildebeest materialise, drawn by the lush grass, and for several months, the desert is teeming with game and predators.    
   
Guests visiting Camp Kalahari during the wet season can witness the last surviving migration of zebra and wildebeest in Southern Africa. Most people associate the migration with East Africa and don’t know about this, the second largest migration of African ungulates, with an estimated 30,000 animals, the majority being zebra, participating each year.

When the waters dry up, the birds and animals migrate and the extraordinary ecosystem of the Makgadikgadi becomes the main attraction.

It is during the dry season that Guests can experience the vast Makgadikgadi Salt Pans on quad bikes.
   
Get dressed up in dark glasses and Lawrence of Arabia headgear and race out on to the pan. Fat tyres skim over the surfaces where heavier vehicles would sink. The fact that you can travel across the pans at great speed and still arrive nowhere only underlines the pans immensity. There is nothing out here. Absolutely nothing.
   
The Guides at Camp Kalahari team up with a small group of Zu/’hoasi Bushmen to guide our Guests on a morning’s walk, offering a window into the past, The Bushmen teach us how they have survived in this harshest of environments, using their vast and ancient knowledge of plants, animal behaviour and survival skills.

Close by is the famous Chapman’s Baobab (Also known as the Seven Sisters) which is acknowledged to be the third largest tree in Africa, and was the campsite of early explorers like Livingstone and Selous when they pioneered the area.
This gives you an opportunity to gain a fascinating insight into the history of the early explorers.

A safari to Camp Kalahari is also a complete desert experience focusing on
   
 species unique to the area such as aardvark, gemsbuck and springbuck.

Guests are also virtually guaranteed of seeing the rare and elusive brown hyaena and are able to walk through the Kalahari with a gang of habituated but wild meerkats!

As the sun rises, these pixie-faced creatures emerge from their burrows and join you, sunning themselves with paws behind their backs,

completely indifferent to your presence. A baby might sit on someone's toe or a sentinel hop onto your head!

As they all scurry off to forage, you follow. The meerkats dig up scorpions and pounce on beetles while your Guide maintains a running commentary on their social habits and survival strategies.



nter-leading bathroom.
   

All tents have en suite outdoor bathrooms, flush loos and the hottest wettest showers in the Kalahari.

The tent interiors are classic old safari style, replete with comfy beds, crunchy cotton sheets, stripy African blankets and hot water bottles in winter.        
   

Camp Kalahari’s chef is a talented chap, noted for his tasty soups and particularly for his "Pilli-Pilli Ho-Ho," a lethal concoction of chillies marinated in sherry and gin. Smeared over one's breakfast eggs, it's just the thing to sharpen sleepdulled wits in preparation for whatever adventures await!  

Camp KalahariCamp Kalahari

Camp KalahariCamp KalahariCamp Kalahari