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Namibia Wing Safari: Luxury Adventure Holiday

Namibia  | 15 nights  |  From £10,875pp incl flights

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Luxury Namibia Holidays and Safaris

Eerie, vast, unforgiving, Namibia's deserts and rugged plains are mind-blowingly beautiful. Days see the desert glow orange while night is silent and silver. Watch big game in Etosha National Park, Namibia's most well known, while further south, look out for desert elephant and black rhino in Damarland, some of the creatures to survive in this inhospitable wilderness. Meanwhile shipwrecks on Namibia's Skeleton Coast tell tales of swirling mists and shifting sands. For a real adventure, take to the air to experience these dramatic landscapes from above and witness one of the most remote and inaccessible places on earth.

Thought you'd done luxury holidays in Africa? Think again: Namibia offers a whole new dimension.

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Namib-Nakluft National Park & Sossusvlei Thumb

Namib Naukluft National Park and Sossusvlei

The towering red sand dunes of Sossusvlei, along with the petrified forests and cracked limestone pans of the Namib Naukluft National Park, make up some of Namibia’s most stunning scenery. As for our lodges, they’re the perfect desert oases where you can soak up Namibia’s red-washed sunsets, tear up the highest sand dunes in the world on quad bike, and gaze at the Milky Way in the perfect night sky. Sossusvlei Desert Lodge is particularly magical for stargazing with its own observatory and team of astronomers. For a day trip from Sossusvlei, we highly recommend a flight to Fish River Canyon: the second largest canyon in the world.

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Etosha National Park

Dominated by a vast chalky salt pan, Namibia’s most famous national park is a must. Elephant, giraffe, lion and rhino are in residence, along with cheetah and leopard, and the pans also play host to great herds of zebra and wildebeest. Fly into the luxury camps like Ongava and Onguma and take advantage of some seriously impressive guides, or park yourself up at a waterhole and wait for the animals to come to you. Needless to say, the shimmering reflections of zebra and giraffe mirrored in the water make for the classic Etosha photograph.

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Skeleton Coast and Kaokoveld

Dotted with foreboding shipwrecks and wailing colonies of sea lions, the windswept shores of the Skeleton Coast feels like the end of the earth. Seeing as it’s so remote, the best way to experience its desolate beauty is on an unforgettable flying safari. Further inland along the Angolan border, the Kaokoveld is home to the Himba: a fascinating nomadic community who wander the rugged mountains and rolling sand dunes.

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Damaraland

With a dramatic mountain backdrop, the rocky desert of Damaraland is studded with giant red boulders and euphorbia bushes. Equally rough and ready is the black desert rhino for which the region is famed. To spot this rare species, along with desert elephant, cheetah, and ostrich stay at Desert Rhino Camp. Other buried treasures include Bushman rock art at Twyfelfontein, the bizarre Petrified Forest, and – as with everywhere else in Namibia – unrivalled stargazing.

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The Caprivi Stip

Reaching out into the lush territory of Botswana and Zambia, the Caprivi Strip contrasts dramatically with the arid landscape found in the rest of Namibia. Head here for an invigorating contrast after your desert adventure: exploring the wetlands and soaking up the amazing birdlife. You could also cross the border to Botswana’s Okavango Delta, which is effervescent with large game and more birdlife, take a cruise along the Zambezi River, or have a spectacular finale at the Victoria Falls.

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Windhoek and Central Highlands

Windhoek is Namibia’s small, friendly capital and almost everyone will spend a night here at the start or finish or their trip. After one of their excellent steaks, and a Namibian beer or two, many of our guests will stock up on supplies before heading off on a self drive itinerary. On route to Etosha, you may like to stop off in the Central Highlands: relaxing at a lodge like Okonjima with fantastic views of the ancient landscape, and plenty of hiking opportunities.

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Luderitz

Nearly cut off by the desert sands, this sleepy Germanic diamond port feels like arriving at the end of the world. Luderitz is the gateway to visiting Kolmanskop: a coastal ghost town swallowed by sands. Pay a visit to the eerie collection of deserted houses where windswept dunes creep their way up the stairs, and empty baths lie discarded on the sands outside. Definitely one for photographers, and yet another experience that’s unique to Namibia.

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Fish River Canyon

Fish River Canyon is the world’s second largest canyon and every bit as impressive as its American counterpart - it makes for an excellent week’s trip from Windhoek in combination with Luderitz, or for the most exclusive excursion going, fly in for the day from Swakopmund. The scenery is ravishing, so be sure to have your camera at the ready for stunning vistas wherever you look. Although the accommodation here is basic, it’s definitely worth contacting us to talk through the options.

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Swakopmund

A breezy stop off for self-drivers between Damaraland and Sossusvlei, Swakopmund is a lovely Germanic sea side town clinging to the Skeleton Coast. Spend a couple of nights at Villa Margherita, a lovely owner-run colonial guest house, and from here can you potter to traditional German bakeries, devour delicious sea food at ‘The Tug’ (a retired tug boat on the sea front), and kayak out to the seal colony at Pelican Point.

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