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OKAVANGO DELTA

10 reasons to visit the Okavango Delta

Tourism in Botswana’s Okavango Delta generates revenue that directly funds conservation. Here are 10 reasons why it’s so worth visiting and supporting the effort to conserve this world wonder.
WORDS BY JACK NEIGHBOUR
PHOTOGRAPH BY CHRIS BOYES/NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC

It’s an ecological marvel

The Delta is as complex as it is beautiful. Surrounded by desert, it’s completely sustained by seasonal rains that nourish a staggering range of plant and animal life. Seasonal flooding swells and replenishes this verdant oasis, attracting huge numbers of iconic wildlife that move between fertile plains, marshlands, and huddles of shaded islands. When the floodwater recedes, the Delta shrinks, concentrating animal numbers and making for some of the very best game viewing in the world.
PHOTOGRAPH BY CHRIS BOYES/NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC

It’s a birdwatchers paradise

Some 450 species of wetland birds have been recorded in the Delta, making it a hotspot for ornithologists and birdwatchers. It’s easy to view most of these birds from the water, too, from the serene comfort of a mokoro—a traditional canoe-like boat. Despite the diversity of species here, overall bird numbers in the Delta seem to fluctuate, which is what led the National Geographic Okavango Wilderness Project to survey the river systems that feed it. NGOWP discovered threats to this system, including uncontrolled fire, commercial agriculture, and water diversion, which could impact bird numbers in the Delta. Since then, National Geographic has been joined by De Beers through the Okavango Eternal Partnership, supporting its mission to help protect the source waters and rivers that supply the Delta and the people and wildlife that rely on it.

You can spot big game

Big cats prowl the Delta’s open plains, along with many of Africa’s other remarkable mammals. A local guide will be able to get you closer to predators like lions, leopards, and wild dogs. Viewing lions involves walking single file as your guide spots and follows fresh paw prints—which often eventually lead to lions resting in the shade. It’s there, standing down wind, crouched in silence, that your viewing pleasure reaches its peak. Because these animals often roam the entire region, Okavango Eternal is working to create protected wildlife corridors along the rivers that feed the Delta so that they can roam safely and freely.

You can follow an elephant’s footsteps

Typically, elephants are a full-day spotting experience. You’ll need to hop between islands scattered through the water until they make their presence known. Your local guide will be an expert in animal behavior without them, you could venture too close and trigger a mock charge—trumpeting, ear flapping, stomping up dust. To stay safe, follow your guide’s instruction―and lead: stay low, keep a distance, and enjoy these gentle giants in a way that respects their space. Sadly, elephants outside of the Delta often come into conflict with humans.  Okavango Eternal is helping to reinforce the importance of elephants in maintaining a healthy ecosystem, as well as helping to develop “elephant safe” security measures like chili-pepper-laced fences around crops and villages.

It’s a little break from the world

In addition to the excitement of seeing incredible wildlife, there’s nothing quite like the serenity offered by the quiet isolation at the heart of the Okavango Delta. A low-impact tourism model means that footfall through the Delta is carefully managed, making for a unique, highly tailored trip. No crowds, no tourist traps―just some of the most tranquil safari experiences you could ever imagine. There’s also a range of ways you can experience this wild land, from tented camps all the way to 5-star lodges with terraces, plunge pools, and views of some of the most vibrant flora and fauna in the world.

It’s rich in cultural heritage

The people of Botswana offer the warmest welcome and will happily offer you insight into the many unique cultures around the Delta. These local communities are descended from early San settlers, and many ancient cultures, such as the BaYei, still employ supreme hunter-gatherer skills to track animals and find useful plants, adding depth to the bush experience. Yet there are still many tourism opportunities that communities in the region could benefit from. Because of this, the best prospects, for younger people especially, have been to move to more urban areas for work, leaving fewer of the next generation to steward their communities.

One of the best views is from above

The Delta is so expansive, you’ll most likely need to fly from the local town of Maun to one of the many safari camps that freckle the region. It’s an adventure you’ll be glad to have embarked on, as flying offers breathtaking aerial views of everything you’ll get to see when back on terra firma. As part of the work to better integrate communities into the tourism industry and its numerous benefits, many of these small bush planes are often flown by skilled local pilots able to deftly land on the simple airstrips that grant access to your camp. Thanks to investment in technical and educational development by the Botswana government, more bright, ambitious minds from local communities are learning this valuable skill.

You can glide along the water

Very few places in the world offer boat-based safaris, and no wild experience quite matches navigating the Delta’s labyrinth network of waterways in a mokoro—a traditional, long canoe used by local people here for centuries. An expert guide can traverse you, though, to any part of this landscape, allowing for views and observations that only those who have grown up in the Delta have the knowledge―and the skill―to find. Okavango Eternal is currently working to help integrate more Delta communities into the tourism industry here so they can benefit more from its income. One way this has been accomplished is the Ngashi Classic—a mokoro racing event named after the pole used to propel the boats—which hosts local polers in a competition allowing participants to champion their skills and network with others in the region.

The water attracts all manner of animals

Herd animals like water buffalo are a sight to behold, whether just standing together as a collective or causing the Earth to shudder as they thunder across it. In this case, spotting a lone animal isn’t actually an opportunity to get in closer, as “dagger boys” (as they’re known locally) are older male buffalo that have been forced out of their herds. They can be aggressive if approached, but your guide will likely be able to get you a good look from a safe distance.

You can explore the Delta by foot

Although few experiences rival a mokoro safari, walking trails offer a great alternative for those who would rather stick to dry land. These take you into the drier reaches without the need for a vehicle, and add the thrill of truly being out in the wild. Slower and arguably more immersive, over a couple of days your guide will track plains-dwelling animals across the wide, waterless spaces where you might spot a predator like a cheetah, the world’s fastest mammal on land. To book a tailored experience, most safari companies will give you the details of a local guide who you can contact before your trip and discuss exactly what you’d like to see.

Explore Okavango Eternal here.

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Monitoring the heart of the Okavango Delta

In northern Botswana, a vast wetland sprawl is the ecological engine for the entire Okavango basin. Every year, a team of scientists and other experts gives it a health check.

BY THALEFANG CHARLES
PUBLISHED APRIL 3, 2023 NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC
Every year for more than a decade, scientists and other researchers from the National Geographic Okavango Wilderness Project (NGOWP), now also supported by De Beers through the Okavango Eternal partnership, trace centuries-old routes of the river people through the Okavango Delta to conduct biodiversity surveys. “We follow the exact route every year. Nothing much has changed―and that’s a good thing,” says Dr. Rainer von Brandis, NGOWP research director, on seeing similar numbers of species each year. Von Brandis explains that these transects—the process of traveling across a section of the region while gathering data on the ecosystem—are like monitoring the Delta’s heartbeat. “[With the data collected], we would be the first to know exactly when something goes wrong, or if anything changes,” he says. For the research team, any changes in wildlife numbers or diversity could indicate problems in the upstream ecosystem—the one that stretches all the way up into the Angola highlands and supplies the water that fuels life in the Delta. This is one of several transects that Okavango Eternal is supporting, and should the team’s findings uncover any problems with the Delta’s “heartbeat,” a faster solution can be found.
Since 2010, scientists with the Okavango Wilderness Project have conducted 12 biodiversity surveys on the Okavango Delta to check for any changes in the ecosystem.

PHOTOGRAPH BY KARABO MOILWA/NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC

During the flood season, the expedition employs the traditional vessel of the Okavango called a mokoro―a type of dugout canoe―to navigate the complex labyrinth of waterways. Scientists also rely on the knowledge and experience of locals to guide them through this completely wild place. In the village of Seronga, the launch point for the Delta crossing, these guides, or “polers” as they are known, gather around a pile of nkashi—the traditional wooden poles used to punt and steer mekoro. Each poler must select the most suitable nkashi for the way ahead. It is ritualistic: The choice they make will have an impact on the entire journey. The height, curvature, and weight are the most important elements that influence the choice of nkashi. Carved from the mogonono tree (also known as a silver terminalia), they must physically feel it … stroke their hands up and down … connect with it spiritually. If the poler feels a connection with their nkashi, it will shape itself to their thrust, allowing its handler to cut through the water all the more deftly.

Skilled mokoro polers take their time when selecting a nkashi―the traditional wooden stick used to push the canoe―to accompany them on their journey through the Okavango Delta. The connection between poler and pole is a spiritual one.

PHOTOGRAPH BY KARABO MOILWA/NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC

To navigate, the expedition uses both modern GPS technology and “human GPS”—an ability possessed by experienced polers who know the intricate waterways of the Okavango Delta by heart. These are the people whose ancestors are buried on the Delta’s islands. They grew up surrounded by water, and learning to pole was like learning to walk. The river has given them everything―from food to education to recreation. This knowledge is generational, but fleeting—if it’s not passed down to younger generations and practiced regularly, it will likely disappear. Project leaders recognize this, and have made it a practice to pair local veteran polers with younger polers so this invaluable indigenous skill set can be passed down proactively. This is why Oarabile Xhao, a youthful poler from Jedibe village, joined the expedition with his grandfather, the legendary poler Comet Sairuku; now an elder will pass this Okavango Delta legacy to yet another generation.

Expeditions are normally comprised of around eight mekoro carrying 16 people representing different disciplines, each has a specific role to play for the success of the expedition. There are various scientists, bush guides, local elders, storytellers, and strong young polers like Xhao, whose nickname, “Yamaha,”―after the boat engine brand―reflects his strength and speed in the water.

A key daily activity is surveying wetland birds: their numbers can indicate the overall health of the ecosystem. As the expedition team’s mekoro snake through the river bordered by thick papyrus, a call from inside the bush cries out “cheeew-t-t-t-t treew, t-t-t-t-t-treew.” The first in the crew to hear this birdcall shouts, “Black crake!” To which the designated scientist responds, “Copy!” The species name is then entered into a database using a specialized research tablet. Later, on the open floodplains, an African fish eagle sitting majestically atop a tree on a distant island is spotted by National Geographic Explorer Gobonamang “GB” Kgetho, a particularly sharp-eyed poler. Perhaps the bird’s mate on the other side of the river will call out to its partner with a distinctive “wheee-ah-kleeuw-kleeuw-kluuu”: One more for the survey.

It isn’t just wetlands birds that are spotted and recorded―all life along the river, including people, is included in the researchers’ long list. Along the nearly 300-kilometer (185-mile) expedition route, there are specific sites from which scientists will collect data each year, including water quality and vegetation status.

Wildlife counting really gets dramatic when the team reaches an area called the Mombo plains on Chief’s Island. This is where we observe hundreds of whistling ducks taking off from a riverbank, where, just beyond the waterline, hide big crocodiles. Hundreds of red lechwe crash and splash as they spring up and down in the river across our path. Large herds of elephants feed and drink. Older members of the herd are calm knowing that they are safe interacting with humans in the Okavango Delta, while the younger ones, still unsure of the humans in mekoro, sometimes startle their parents and cause the whole herd to run. Some older bulls do not like to give way, having us move around them instead.

From the diverse wetland birds to the largest populations of elephants in southern Africa, wildlife is the pulse of the Okavango Delta—the more species that exist here, the healthier and stronger the ecosystem is.

PHOTOGRAPH BY KARABO MOILWA/NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC (LEFT) AND PHOTOGRAPH BY THALEFANG CHARLES/NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC (RIGHT)

It’s important to keep an eye out for hippos. Especially sleeping ones. Polers have a complex relationship with hippos: They appreciate them because hippos are the engineers of the waterways—creating and maintaining them as they forage and eat, but when a hippo sleeping in the water is disturbed by a mokoro, the encounter can end with a capsized boat―or worse. Luckily the team’s extraordinary polers can often detect hippos underwater, and they possess almost superhuman reaction times when we do encounter a hippo. Expert polers like National Geographic Explorer Tumeletso “Water” Setlabosha are always alert: Even when at the back of the mekoro formation, Setlabosha is able to spot suspicious ripples ahead and warn the front.

We are usually in the water between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m. Some days are bliss as we glide through beautiful channels with crisp, clear waters carpeted with blooming water lilies. Other days we might spend hours battling through a vegetation blockage on the river. But the most difficult days are when the survey route runs dry, and we must portage our fully-laden mekoro over land using harnesses.

At the end of each day, we find an island to serve as our home for the night. A good camping space is an area shaded by trees like the jackalberry, water berry, or fig. Campsites with expansive views of the river and lots of palm trees tend to be team favorites—here, scientists can upload their daily data while the rest of the team prepares for the night. Elephants like to move through these areas while feeding, creating stunning scenes at twilight when both palms and elephants are silhouetted against beautiful light.

At night everyone responds to a call of “Grubs up!” announcing that dinner is ready with an equally loud “Copy!” before gathering around the campfire. Dinner is always rice and beans―although, the kitchen team is quick to point out, dinner is sometimes beans and rice.

The best nights are under clear winter skies when there is no moon. On these dark nights in the bush, there is no light pollution to obscure the most vivid star views. It is beautiful. And then comes the distinctive nighttime soundtrack of the African bush—grunts, chirps, shrieks, laughter, squeals, growls, buzz, howls, trumpets, and, of course, the mighty roars of the lion kings. Safely in our tents, we often host visitors at night. Sometimes hyenas are snooping for anything to chew on (we are advised to never leave shoes outside our tents). And on some nights, lions visit. When a lion roars near your camp at night, it is quite the experience: You can feel the vibration through the ground―and in the deafening silence that follows, you can hear your own heartbeat clearly.

But joy arrives in the morning when the dawn chorus welcomes the sunrise to announce another beautiful day for poling through the Okavango Delta. Finally, this expedition―and our journey―end in Maun at the Botswana Wild Bird Trust’s Nkashi Knowledge Centre. This is where, after customary celebratory hugs, we finally enjoy the much anticipated “burger and beer” meal—a tradition that we’ve adopted from project leader Dr. Steve Boyes, who embarked on the first transect in 2010 with a small team that included poler and guide Gobonamang Kgetho. Now the science team is able to send their samples to labs to study the health of this incredible wetland and record their findings. Their research will help to increase scientific understanding about the wildlife species that call the Delta home, how they interact, and how any changes in the water supply could be affecting it. This is how we monitor the heartbeat of the Okavango—to work toward ensuring its permanent protection.
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In northern Botswana’s Kalahari Desert lies one of the world’s largest, most biodiverse wetlands. While the Okavango Delta is protected within Botswana, the critical headwaters that supply it through Angola and Namibia are not, putting the future of people and wildlife living there at risk.

As the leading diamond company, De Beers discovers diamonds in Botswana, Canada, Namibia, and South Africa. Through the company’s Building Forever commitment, they have pledged to create a lasting and positive impact for the people and countries where diamonds are found. Discover more.

The National Geographic Okavango Wilderness Project has been surveying the entire river system, collecting data, and working with local communities, governments, and NGOs to secure sustainable protection of the entire Okavango Basin.

EXPLORE THE OKAVANGO

Click along the river below to explore the Okavango

The source watersBiodiversityPeople and CultureANGOLAZAMBIANAMIBIABOTSWANAOkavango Delta

A lifeline to the Delta

Surrounded by the dry sands of the Kalahari Desert, seasonal rains from Angola’s highlands supply the Okavango Delta each year, making them vital for its survival.

EXPERIENCE A DAY IN THE OKAVANGO DELTA IN 360

Ever wondered what it’s like to visit the most pristine wild place in Africa? Get up close and personal with wildlife in the Okavango Delta and be inspired to go there for real.

STORIES FROM THE OKAVANGO

Stories of people, places, animals, and ecosystems in the greater Okavango Basin.

ARTICLE

Life on Transect

In northern Botswana, a vast wetland sprawl is the ecological engine for the entire Okavango water basin. Once a year, a team of researchers give it a health check.

ARTICLE

Okavango Eternal: Year one

Over their first year in partnership, National Geographic and De Beers have taken invaluable steps to help create livelihood opportunities in harmony with the protection of the Okavango Basin.

ARTICLE

How technology protects the Okavango

Expeditions have always relied on technology to collect vital knowledge of our world. Exploring one of the largest watersheds in Africa is no different.

ARTICLE

Connected by water

At either end of the Okavango River Basin, two individuals head up a partnership helping local communities maintain a balanced, prosperous way of living.

ARTICLE

A day in the Okavango Delta

What’s it like to arrive in one of the most pristine, unspoiled oasis in all of Africa? Batswana photojournalist Thalefang Charles

GALLERY

10 reasons to visit the Okavango Delta

Tourism within Botswana’s Okavango Delta helps generates income that directly funds its conservation. Here are 10 reasons why it’s so worth visiting and lending your support.

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I would like to think of myself as a full time traveler. I have been retired since 2006 and in that time have traveled every winter for four to seven months. The months that I am "home", are often also spent on the road, hiking or kayaking. I hope to present a website that describes my travel along with my hiking and sea kayaking experiences.

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