Country
Duration
3 days
Group Size
Min 1 Max 12
Style
Highlights
Sesriem
Rated 4.9/5
Namibia – 3-day Dunes Express – Group accommodated
From $1,070Includes
Excludes
Itinerary
Sesriem, Namibia
-
Desert Camp
Day 1 - 3
Self-catering at its Best amidst unparalleled Desert Beauty...
Day 1
Day Notes:
There's the option for a leisurely start as you'll leave Swakopmund at 11:30 am. There are many opportunities to keep busy during the morning. Our guide will discuss all the options with you and will be able to facilitate any bookings that you would like to make.
Departing at 11:30 am after being picked up from the airport or your accommodation, you'll head east into the desert. You'll first cross the Namib gravel plains and have two mountain passes to traverse this afternoon. You'll emerge from the mountains onto a flat road and almost immediately cross the Tropic of Capricorn at 23.5 degrees. Your destination for today is Desert Camp, located very close to the national park entrance at Sesriem. You'll aim to arrive in the late afternoon. There will be time for a short walk to see the sun dip below the impressive Naukluft Mountains.
NOTE: No single supplement will be charged if you are willing to share a room with another single traveller of the same sex.
Driving time: ~4 1/2 hours.
-
Transfer from Chameleon Backpackers Guesthouse to Desert Camp
-
Check-in to Desert Camp
Day 2
Day Notes:
Sunrise in the dunes is the name of the game this morning and that means a pre-dawn start and a very early breakfast. The best time to photograph the dunes is around sunrise and sunset. This is when you can see towering sand dunes illuminated a glowing orange, apricot red on one side and swathed in shadow on the other. The depth of field is amazing at this time of day. From Sesriem we cover the 60 km into the dunes quickly and arrive at the 2x4 car park where all 2 wheel drive vehicles have to stop. From here we enter the ancient Tsauchab River-bed for the last 5km leg to Sossusvlei itself. The Tsauchab River is ephemeral, it only flows seasonally, when there is enough rain, and for the most part the riverbed is dry. Eons ago, during these rare floods the Tsauchab sometimes received enough water to flow all the way to the Atlantic Ocean. However, as the millennia passed and the dune fields began to form, (around five million years ago), wind -blown sand invaded the riverbeds. The rivers became more and more constricted by sand until eventually the occasional floods could not break through the sand barriers that had been erected by the wind. The valley we drove along this morning to get here is kept free of sand by the Tsauchab but Sossusvlei is now permanently waters end. Sossusvlei does still sometimes flood, (perhaps once in a decade). After good rains in the Naukluft Mountains where the river rises Sossusvlei can become inundated, and the lake that this creates can last for many months, but no longer can the river find its original path to the Atlantic. There is a 4x4 shuttle service that will transport us through the sandy terrain of the river-bed. We will visit Dead Vlei, an ancient pan completely surrounded by dunes, that is strikingly populated with dead, skeletal camelthorn trees. These trees have been a feature on this landscape for over 1000 years. Sossusvlei is almost surrounded by dunes, just one narrow path kept open by the Tsauchab River. We have time to explore the area on foot and to climb one of the highest dunes in the world, some towering 300 m above us, the views are breathtaking and justly famous. We drive back the way we came, (there is only one road), stopping at the iconic Dune 45, (so named as it is 45 km from Sesriem. There is time to climb Dune 45 if you still have energy, or perhaps just a sit in the shade at the base of the dune will suffice. Driving back to Sesriem we take a short excursion to see the Sesriem Canyon. Only four km from Sesriem, this canyon has been carved out of the landscape by the Tsauchab River. Around two million years ago there was an ice age in Europe. This caused glaciers to form and resulted in a worldwide drop in sea level. The knock on effect of this at Sesriem Canyon was that it increased the length and waterflow of the Tsauchab River. This greater force of water allowed the Tsauchab to begin cutting through the terrain resulting in the canyon we can see today. We can easily walk into the riverbed, it is usually much cooler in the canyon and we can follow the river for some way along its journey to Sossusvlei. We head back to Desert Camp in the late afternoon.
-
Sossusvlei Exploration
Day 3
-
Check-out from Desert Camp
-
Cheetah Conservation Fund Cheetah Drive
-
Transfer from Desert Camp to Chameleon Backpackers Guesthouse
End of Itinerary
Destinations
Sesriem
Accommodations
Desert Camp
THIS TOUR DEPARTS EVERY FRIDAY & SUNDAY
01 January - 31 March 2025
- Per person sharing: NAD 16,000
- Single supplement: NAD 1,800*
- Per child 5 - 11 years, sharing with an adult: NAD 13,500
01 April 2025 - 31 March 2026
- Per person sharing: NAD 18,500
- Single Supplement: NAD 2,100*
- Per child 5 - 11 years, sharing with an adult: NAD 15,500
1 April 2026 - 31 March 2027
- Per person sharing: NAD 19,600
- Single supplement: NAD 2,300*
- Per child 5 - 11 years, sharing with an adult: NAD 16,600
*Not mandatory. Single travelers can be matched with another traveler of the same sex on a twin share basis
Sleeping bag and small pillow can be rented for NAD 30 per day
Request more information
Enquire Now
Request more information