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a Guide to Safari

On safari, the earth speaks in tracks, the wind carries stories, and every sunrise is a promise

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March 13, 2026/

AUTHENTICITY – Namibia’s secret weapon. The big Namibian question? “What am I doing in Namibia and what brought me here?” Many first time Visitorsto Namibia contemplates this pending feeling when disembarking at Hosea KutakoInternational...

February 27, 2026/

Traveling Botswana a Guide to Botswana's destinations Okavango Delta The Okavango Delta is a vast inland wetland where channels, islands, and floodplains shift with seasonal water levels. Wildlife thrives in this constantly changing ecosystem....

February 27, 2026/

Traveling South Africa a Guide to South Africas destinations Kruger National Park Kruger is one of Africa’s largest and most accessible wildlife reserves. Its open savannas and river systems support an impressive concentration of...

February 27, 2026/

Traveling Namibia a Guide to Namibia's destinations Sossusvlei & Deadvlei Sossusvlei lies within the Namib Desert and is home to some of the world’s tallest red sand dunes. Ancient camelthorn trees stand stark against...

Like all great travellers, I have seen more than I remember…

By T. Grobler

Like all great travellers, I have seen more than I remember — and remember more than I have seen.

Namibia has a way of doing that to you.

I remember the silence first. The kind that hums in your ears long after the engine is switched off. A dry riverbed in Damaraland. The last light stretching across stone and sand. Somewhere beyond the ana trees, an elephant moved — slow, deliberate, ancient.

I don’t remember how long we waited. Photographers rarely measure time in minutes. We measure it in light.

The bull stepped into the open just as the sun dissolved into amber dust. No rush. No performance. Just presence. Shutters clicked softly behind me. In that moment, I wasn’t thinking about camera settings or composition. I was thinking about how small we are — and how extraordinary it is that places like this still exist.

In the north, conservancy land stretches wide and wild. Communities live alongside lions and elephants, not separated from them. Wildlife here is not staged. It is earned — through patience, respect, and the understanding that we are guests.

Years from now, I may forget the exact date, the lens I used, even the route we drove. But I will remember the feeling — the golden dust, the stillness, the quiet understanding that travel is not about collecting places.

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