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Blackbacked jackal, Ongava Game Reserve

Namibia Sandwich Harbour

Safari at Etosha national park Namibia

Road-trip in Namibia, just a dream...

Namibia_Sossusvlei desert

Namibia, Namib Naukluft National Park, Lodge, Sunset,

Himba kids @ Epupa Falls

A child at Dobra Reception Centre in Namibia. The Centre, run by the United Nations High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR), is helping to smooth the resettlement of Namibia returning to their country after years of exile. This is the first stage of a voluntary repatriation of 40,000 exiles.

1/Jul/1989. Namibia. UN Photo/Milton Grant. www.unmultimedia.org/photo/

Oryx, Etosha National Park

Namibia Sandwich Harbour

Nós aí nas Dunas da Namib Naukluft Conservation Area, Namibia. Nov/2015

 

The Namib-Naukluft National Park is a national park of Namibia encompassing part of the Namib Desert (considered the world's oldest desert) and the Naukluft mountain range. With an overall area of 49,768 km2 (19,216 sq mi), the Namib-Naukluft is the largest game park in Africa and the fourth largest in the world.[1] The most well-known area of the park is Sossusvlei, which is the main visitor attraction in Namibia.

 

A surprising collection of creatures survives in the hyper-arid region, including snakes, geckos, unusual insects, hyenas, gemsboks and jackals. More moisture comes in as a fog off the Atlantic Ocean than falls as rain, with the average 106 millimeters of rainfall per year concentrated in the months of February and April.

The winds that bring in the fog are also responsible for creating the park’s towering sand dunes, whose burnt orange color is a sign of their age. The orange color develops over time as iron in the sand is oxidized, like rusty metal; the older the dune, the brighter the color.

 

These dunes are the tallest in the world, in places rising more than 300 meters (almost 1000 feet) above the desert floor. The dunes taper off near the coast, and lagoons, wetlands, and mudflats located along the shore attract hundreds of thousands of birds.

 

‘Namib’ means open space and the Namib Desert gave its name to form Namibia – “land of open spaces”. The park was established in 1907 when the German Colonial Administration proclaimed the area between the Swakop River and the Kuiseb River a game reserve. The park's present boundaries were established in 1978 by the merging of the Namib Desert Park, the Naukluft Mountain Zebra Park and parts of Diamond Area 1 and some other bits of surrounding government land.

Road-trip in Namibia, just a dream...

Sossusvlei - Bird's Castle

seen near Kalkfeld, Otjozondjupa Region, Namibia

Namibia, January 2012

Namibia Sandwich Harbour

Baboon : Hobartere Lodge Etosha Namibia Sep 2019

Road-trip in Namibia, just a dream...

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