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Tourism
Regions
Botswana offers
so much in the way of wildlife and culture, as well as fascinating
attractions, that the best way to understand the destination is
the break it down by it's regions.
First up is
the Southern Region, which is how how visitors enter Botswana.
It features the Botswana's capital city of Gaborone, with its
museums, nearby diamond mines, government center, and nightlife.
Lobatse
is the border town through which most visitors enter Botswana
from South Africa. There also are a few game reserves within driving
distance from Gaborone, including Mokolodi, Gaborone and Manyelanong.
Click
here for more details on the Southern Region.
Arguably the
most popular and geographically dramatic area of Botswana is the
Moremi and Okavango Region. Maun is the main city here
and it is the primary point for arrival and departure by air.
The Okavango Delta is the world's largest inland delta and is
one of Africa's most fascinating - and best known - safari areas.
A safari
in the Okavango Delta' is one of Africa's top big game safaris.
Day and night game drives, walking safaris and mokoro ride are
all available in this lush water-wilderness of papyrus swamps,
shallow reed-beds and floodplains, dotted with islands and laced
with a network of channels. A patchwork of private reserves offer
small, and often, luxury camps with exclusive game-viewing safaris,
making this a wonderful place to truly relax and rejeuvenate.
Moremi
Game Reserve is a large protected wildlife area of 3,000 sq km
(1170 sq mi) that includes approximately 20% of the Okavango Delta.
Its wide range of habitats -- from seasonal and permanent wetland
and reed beds to forest and savannah woodland - supports an astounding
range of fauna - from exotic birds, zebras, buffalo, wildebeest
and giraffes to hippos and lions. To protect the environment,
there are very few lodges and camping sites; the majority of lodges
and camps ring the reserves. Click
here for more details on the Moremi and Okavango Region.
Most visitors
to Botswana include the Chobe Region on their itinerary
because of the Chobe River. Chobe National Park has one of the
largest game concentrations on the Africa continent, and is best
known for its spectacularly large elephant population and close
proximity to Victoria Falls. Huge amounts of big game congregate
beside the Chobe Riverfront, in the north of the park, as the
dry season progresses. The Chobe riverfront is easily accessible,
and with the lure of excellent game watching both on and beside
the river, the well frequented areas can become a bit crowded.
Further south is the less populated Savute, a magical spot for
mobile safaris in addition to its camps and lodges. The Savute
is a dramatic area to see high concentrations of elephant and
lions, as well sighting of all the other major predators; the
endangered wild dog, leopard, cheetah and the hyena. It is also
renowned for its excellent birding during the summer months as
well as being home to some very rare rock paintings drawn by the
early San Bushmen, who once inhabited the region. The Linyanti
Wildlife Reserve is another big game area located by the Kwando-Linyanti
rivers, where the marsh subsides into lagoons and steadily flowing
rivers with riverine forests leading to open grasslands, and dry
inland wooded areas. The Linyanti Reserve is highly populated
with animals particularly in the dry winter months: huge herds
of elephants, thousands of zebra, the particularly beautiful sable
and roan antelopes, red lechwe and the aquatic sitatunga antelope,
and predators - lion, leopard, cheetah, wild dog and hyena. Birdlife
is abundant here and particularly vocal with a magnificent dawn
chorus. Daytime noises include incessantly grunting hippos and
trumpeting elephants, while the night brings roaring lions and
laughing hyenas. Kasane is the main city in this region. Click
here for more details on the Chobe Region.
In the Kgalagadi
Region, the Central Kalahari Game Reserve is an ultimate
remote safari destination -- and at its best when visited on an
intrepid mobile safari in the early months of the year when the
beautiful valleys between dunes become lush with vegetation, attracting
thousands of springbok and gemsbok. You'll also find good numbers
of ostrich and giraffe, herds of wildebeest, excellent cheetah
and the Kalahari's famous black-maned lions. Less easy to spot
are the leopard and brown hyena -- common residents of the Central
Kalahari. Overall,
this is a very arid region -- desert-like in the summer, cold
in the winter. Ghanzi is the main city for this region. One of
the top attractions for visitors is visiting a village of the
San bushmen with a guide and observing their unique way of life.
The Kgalagadi Transfrontier Park in the Southern Kalahari, straddles
Botswana and South Africa and is the first formally declared Transfrontier
Park in Africa - being designed to serve as a model for conservation
in the 21st Century. On the Botswana side is the Mabuasehube ('red
earth' in Segologa) area of the Park; one of the world's largest
and most pristine wildernesses with shifting sand dunes and herds
of Eland and Gemsbok. Click
here for more details on the Kgalagadi Region.
Nata is the
main city in the Makgadikgadi and Nxai Pans Region. The
Magkadigkadi Salt Pans are the largest salt pans in the world,
often likened to a moonscape. During the wet season, huge numbers
of both greater and lesser flamingos come to the Magkadigkadi
to feed and breed in the shallow saline water located on the pans,
and the grasslands at the perimeter of the pans support one of
the largest migrations of zebras. However, people visit this vast,
wild, completely untamable area to experience its seemingly endless
stark and mysterious beauty. This area is popular for quad biking
and mobile camping safaris. Located only two hours drive from
Maun, Nxai Pan is one of the more easily accessible of Botswana's
parks. Yet it still remains relatively untouched and seemingly
remote. It contains some spectacular scenery and has some of the
northern Kalahari's best game viewing. It is one of the few places
in Africa where you can find springbok and impala grazing side
by side. Kudu are also common, as are the diminutive steenbok.
During the wet season the zebra migration of the Magkadigkadi
often spills over into the Nxai Pan area. Mobile camping safaris,
self-drive camping are popular, and one eco-lodge, Nxai Pan, is
now operating inside the national park. Click
here for more details on the Makgadikgadi and Nxai Pans Region.
The Eastern
and Central Region is home to mostly rural and agricultural
activity, however there are several attractions for visitors.
The Tuli Game Reserve in the extreme east of Botswana is situated
between the Limpopo, Motlouse and Shashe rivers and contains an
abundance of wildlife, a profusion of birds and a breathtaking
diverse wilderness of savannah, riverine forests, open plains
and sandstone outcrops. A wonderful location for excellent game
drives as well as adventure activities such as mountain bike safaris,
horseback safaris, and hot air ballooning. Francistown is the
main city for this region. Click
here for more details on the Eastern and Central Region.
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