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"We must use time wisely and forever realize that the time is always ripe to do right"
...Nelson Mandela



7N Botswana Safari Chobe National Park Houseboat and Camping Safari

This unique  Safari  focuses on the Chobe National  Park experiencing it  from 2 different types Safaris.

Day  1 ) Arrive  Johannesburg overnite at the Airport  hotel to get over jet lag. If  you  would like, I can arrange a transfer to a
wonderful First Class African style restaurant. 1N

Day 2) Take the hotel shuttle to the airport, and board  your flight to the  Victoria Falls.From  April to about   August I use the  Zambia side of the falls:
 from mid  August onwards   I use the Zimbabwe side of the  falls.   2N

Airport  transfers, lodging of choice, breakfast, tour of the falls, sunset river cruie is  all included.Enjoy the art and craft markets, Elephant back Safari and many other  activities
that this  area has to offer.

Day 4  and  5 )  Transfer  to Chobe  National Park a quick 90 minutes away.....enjoy 2 days of Safari game viewing by land at  any one  of the local game lodges
 or at one of the permanent tented  camp sites with  your private  guide ...explore this park in depth for  2N 

Day 6  and  7) We then transfer  you to your houseboat  Safari  where for 2N you will  cruise up the  Chobe  River, experiencing the banks of the river
as the animals  come  down to drink.  Small Boats  are towed  behind, to enable  you to get  very close  to  the river  banks, walking in  a local village,
birding and fishing are all  included.

Day 8)  Transfer  back to Victoria  Falls  for  your  flight  back  to  Johannesburg...

 

 

CHOBE NATIONAL PARK     


   The Chobe National Park, which is the second largest national park in Botswana and covers 10,566 square kilometres, has one of the greatest concentrations of game found on the African continent. Its uniqueness in the abundance of wildlife and the true African nature of the region, offers a safari experience of a lifetime.The park is divided into four distinctly different eco systems: Serondela with its lush plains and dense forests in the Chobe River area in the extreme north-east; the Savuti Marsh in the west about fifty kilometres north of Mababe gate; the Linyanti Swamps in the north-west and the hot dry hinterland in between.The original inhabitants of what is now the park were the San people, otherwise known in Botswana as the Basarwa. They were hunter-gatherers who lived by moving from one area to another in search of water, wild fruits and wild animals.

 The San were later joined by groups of the Basubiya people and later still, around 1911, by a group of Batawana led by Sekgoma. When the country was divided into various land tenure systems, late last century and early this century, the larger part of the area that is now the national park was classified as crown land. In 1931 the idea of creating a national park in the area was first mooted, in order to protect the wildlife from extinction and to attract visitors. In 1932, an area of some 24,000 square kilometres in the Chobe district was declared a non-hunting area and the following year, the protected area was increased to 31,600 square kilometres. However, heavy tsetse fly infestations resulted in the whole idea lapsing in 1943. In 1957, the idea of a national park was raised again when an area of about 21,000 square kilometres was proposed as a game reserve and eventually a reduced area was gazetted in 1960 as Chobe Game Reserve.

Later, in 1967, the reserve was declared a national park - the first national park in Botswana. There was a large settlement, based on the timber industry, at Serondela, some remains of which can still be seen today. This settlement was gradually moved out and the Chobe National Park was finally empty of human occupation in 1975. In 1980 and again in 1987, the boundaries were altered, increasing the park to its present size.A major feature of Chobe National Park is its elephant population. First of all, the Chobe elephant comprise part of what is probably the largest surviving continuous elephant population. This population covers most of northern Botswana plus northwestern Zimbabwe. The Botswana's elephant population is currently estimated at around 120,000. This elephant population has built up steadily from a few thousand since the early 1900s and has escaped the massive illegal off take that has decimated other populations in the 1970s and 1980s.

The Chobe elephant are migratory, making seasonal movements of up to 200 kilometres from the Chobe and Linyanti rivers, where they concentrate in the dry season, to the pans in the southeast of the park, to which they disperse in the rains. The elephants, in this area have the distinction of being the largest in body size of all living elephants though the ivory is brittle and you will not see many huge tuskers among these rangy monsters.

 

 

 

 

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