safari botswana buchen

Sub regions inside

Broader region.

Kalahari Anib Lodge

Botswana is a fascinating world that is defined by its diverse landscape of desert, grasslands, and waterways. Botswana offers an unforgettable safari experience in some of Africa’s most pristine and remote game areas. It’s renowned for its migrating mammals, endangered wild dog and rhino, and some unique species of antelope. The Okavango Delta affords travelers the opportunity to experience unparalleled game viewing in a hot air balloon, motorized boat and mokoro (traditional dugout canoe). From a water wonderland to the sand dunes of the Kalahari, one can view century-old Baobabs, interact with San Bushmen to discover incredible survival secrets, and turn into a land post for a family of habituated meerkats that are scouting the area for predators.

Botswana promises a safari unlike anything else you could have imagined.  

The best time to travel to Botswana depends on what you wish to experience.

The cooler, drier winter months from May to October are excellent for game-viewing as herds of animals flock to decreasing water sources and the vegetation thins out. Days are warm; nights can be cold, especially in the desert. This is also the period when floodwaters reach the Delta making for excellent water-based activities such as boating and mokoro rides.

The hot, wet summer months from November to March are good for bird watching when migrants abound. Although game viewing is more challenging, these months draw fewer crowds and have plenty to offer. Many reserves are at their most beautiful, as the vegetation is lush and green, providing an ideal background for wildlife photography. This is also the animals’ calving season, so it’s perfect for seeing gamboling babies.

Chobe National Park

This is an integral part of the Botswana safari experience. Chobe National Park takes its name from the Chobe River which forms the northern boundary of the park and a river safari - or cruise - is one of the best options to explore the area.  It's known for its large herds of elephants and Cape buffalo, which converge along the Chobe Riverfront in the dry months. Lions, antelopes, and hippos inhabit the woods and lagoons around the Linyanti Marsh. The floodable grasslands of the Savuti Marsh attract numerous bird species, plus migrating zebras.

Okavango Delta

The Okavango Delta is the world’s largest inland river delta located in northern Botswana. It's known for its sprawling grassy plains, which flood seasonally, becoming a lush animal habitat. The Moremi Game Reserve occupies the east and central areas of the region. Here, dugout canoes are used to navigate past hippos, elephants and crocodiles. On dry land, game drives allow you to explore the pristine wilderness and experience Africa’s wildlife, including lions, leopards, giraffes and rhinos.

Linyanti, Selinda & Kwando

The vast open plains of northern Botswana teem with predators, elephants and buffalos and with very few lodges in the large private concessions of Linyanti, Selinda and Kwando – the result is an extremely private safari experience. The area is fed by the Kwando and Linyanti Rivers, which converge into the Selinda Spillway.

Kalahari Desert

The Kalahari Desert is a large semi-arid sandy savanna in Southern Africa extending for 900,000 square kilometers (350,000 square miles), covering much of Botswana, parts of Namibia and regions of South Africa. Activities in the Kalahari Desert includes game drives, Kalahari Desert walking safaris, cultural tours and much more.

Tsodilo Hills

The Tsodilo Hills has a special significance to the Bushmen who have been living there for thousands of years. The Tsodilo Hills consist of four large pieces of rock, rising unexpectedly from the dry expanse of desert. The Bushmen referred to the bigger rock as the 'male', the smaller one was known as the 'female', and the smallest one was the 'child'. There is a small Bushmen habitat nearby as well as a village inhabited by the Hambukushu people. The thousands of rock paintings can be found by following different trails leading to over 350 sites.

Makgadikgadi Salt Pans

With an area of 3 900 sq. km, Makgadikgadi is situated in the middle of the dry savanna of north-eastern Botswana. It is one of the largest salt flats in the world. Among the many things to do in Makgadikgadi Pans National Park are safari rides, game drives, bird watching, a tour of the Gweta, and bush walks. Wildlife includes eland, lions, zebras, cheetah, gemsbok, springbok, red hartebeest, bushbuck, giraffe, steenbok, elephants and many more.

Kgalagadi Transfrontier Park

Kgalagadi Transfrontier Park is a vast wildlife preserve in the Kalahari Desert region of Botswana and South Africa, bordering Namibia to the west. It’s characterized by red dunes and dry rivers. Wildlife includes migrating herds of wildebeest and springbok, plus predators like raptors and black-maned Kalahari lions. Various lodges and wilderness camps offer game-viewing drives and guided walks with park rangers.

Known as “the land of the giants”, the 12 000 hectare Tuli Block is a narrow fringe of land at Botswana's eastern border. Tuli Block is set in a landscape of enormous trees on the banks of the Limpopo River, beautiful riverine forests of lime-green fever trees, and rocky landscapes carved from ancient granite and basalt rocks over millions of years. A variety of activities offer an all-rounded experience including fantastic game viewing opportunities, spectacular bird watching, and the famous leopards of Tuli.

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safari botswana buchen

  • Botswana Safari

The ultimate guide to your next Botswana Safari

Get to know botswana.

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By Antoinette Booyse

Safari Travel Planner

​On a Botswana safari, you’ll discover Southern Africa’s countless natural wonders in the utmost comfort and luxury. The country’s varied environments, from the floodplains of the Okavango Delta to the woodlands of Chobe National Park, offer ideal backdrops for remarkable Botswana safari experiences .

This remarkable country is home to intriguing landscapes, geographical wonders, and luxurious eco-friendly accommodations . An abundance of wildlife, birdlife, and world-renowned national parks and reserves all come together to make Botswana a prime safari destination for a memorable holiday in Africa.

Safaris tours in Botswana offer a variety of unique eco-friendly ways to experience the fantastic wildlife and birdlife that the country has to offer. Whether aboard a game drive vehicle, on the back of a horse, or even on a mokoro ride, a Botswana wilderness safari holiday truly has something for everyone.

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Why Botswana?

  • Untouched landscapes make a wilderness safari in Botswana naturally beautiful and a drawcard for many tourists and photographic safari goers alike.
  • Botswana’s variety of adventurous activities makes it an excellent family safari destination .
  • The large number of wildlife and birdlife on a Botswana vacation means there is plenty to see during game drives or mokoro rides. Botswana also stakes claim to Africa’s second biggest migration route , an incredible spectacle that features massive herds of zebra, wildebeest, and buffalo that attract plenty of top predators.
  • Botswana is home to the most elephants in all of Africa.
  • Botswana has designed an Ecotourism Certification System . The system encourages and supports tourist enterprises’ responsible environmental, social, and cultural activities and ensures they supply excellent eco-friendly products to consumers.

Where to go in Botswana

  • Chief’s Island in Botswana
  • Chobe National Park and Savuti Marsh in Botswana
  • Kubu Island in Botswana
  • Makgadikgadi Pans in Botswana
  • Moremi Game Reserve in Botswana
  • Okavango Delta in Botswana

The largest island in the Okavango Delta, Chief’s Island, is situated in the prestigious Mombo concession of the renowned Moremi Game Reserve. You’ll find the fascinating Big Five and many other wild animals on Chief’s Island. The predators on this island are particularly well known. High concentrations of top prey species, such as buffalo, impala, wildebeest, zebra, giraffe, tsessebe, and warthog, are drawn to its expansive floodplains and variety of habitats.

lions in chiefs island

As water levels rise, much of the delta’s wildlife retreat to this area, which has been raised above the water level by tectonic activity. As a result, the island is home to some of Botswana’s most diverse wildlife. Wildlife abounds on Chief’s Island, where visitors can spot it on exhilarating game drives, bush walks, and boat tours. Elephants, lions, leopards, buffalo, and rhinoceros are all found in this area, so your chances of seeing the Big five are excellent.

On Chief’s Island, visitors have a choice of comfortable, luxurious accommodation options . A few operators even have mobile camps on the island.

Mombo Concessions

On the northwestern tip of Chief’s Island lies one of Okavango’s most famous game viewing areas, the Mombo Concession. Mombo is known to BaYei locals as “the place of plenty” and is arguably the most fertile land of the Okavango.

Mombo Camp, interior view

Mombo is located just below where the Okavango River splits into three primary channels and supports a diversity of wildlife hard to find anywhere else in Africa. When the water levels of the Okavango rise during winter floods, many animals move to find dry land on the island.

Stunning Leopard in the wild

In the nineties, wild dogs ruled the Mombo Concession, with the largest pack having as many as 40 dogs. Their presence inspired the book Running Wild by Dave and Helene Hamman, which played an essential role in raising awareness of these lesser-known carnivores’ behavior and vulnerable status.

Nowadays, Mombo is a great place to visit on a Botswana vacation as it is famous for its large lion population and very relaxed leopards.

Botswana’s famous Chobe National Park , which includes the Savute Channel and the natural grandeur of the Linyanti River, is a must-see wildlife attraction. Chobe National Park, which covers about 11,000 km2 (4,247 square miles), was Botswana’s first national park and has Africa’s highest concentration of wildlife. Chobe Savuti Marsh is located in Chobe National Park.

  • Chobe National Park

Chobe National Park was proclaimed in 1968 and protects an area of 11,700km2 (4,517 square miles) that was mainly ravaged by big game hunters and commercial logging at the time of its formation.

The Park is located in the northeast of Botswana, falling within the convergence of two major biomes: Kalahari savanna meets broad-leaved and acacia woodland and Zambezi Teak forest. Running through these beautiful ecosystems is the illustrious Chobe River, with its yawning floodplains and surrounding riparian forest. Chobe has some of the best safari lodges in Africa , with great views of the wildlife, delicious food, and excellent service on a Botswana safari holiday.

Elephant in Botswana are a sight to behold

The Chobe River rises in Angola as the Kwando (Cuando) River and then disappears into the swamplands of the Linyanti, reemerging as the Chobe River. During winter months, the banks of the Chobe attract the largest population of elephants in the world at around 60 000 – 70 000 individuals.

Add great herds of buffalo, notoriously fearless lion prides, and 468 bird species to date, and you’ve got a playground for nature-lovers that’s second to none. From November to December, herbivores migrate between the Chobe River and the Savuti Marsh in pursuit of fresh grazing grounds.

The Savuti Marsh in Botswana

The Savuti Marsh is an expanse of grasslands in the western region of Chobe National Park. In Botswana’s BaYei dialect, the word Savute means “unclear,” which is thought to be a reference to the area’s unpredictable water supply, the Savuti Channel.

During the rainy season, the Savuti plains are lush and green. While Bateleur eagles and White-backed vultures circle the skies, large herds of buffalo and zebra can be seen roaming the open plains. Small islands with Ilala and Wild date palms are grouped together, providing shady hiding places for predators during the midday sun. During the dry season, many elephants are drawn to three man-made water holes introduced to the Savuti region in 1995.

A lodge overlooking Savuti

The Savuti channel has been a subject of great intrigue throughout history for its mysterious patterns of flow that experts believe to be influenced by underground tectonic forces.

The earliest mention of it can be found in European missionary explorer David Livingstone’s journal where, in 1851, he referred to Savuti (“Sontwa”) as a “dismal swamp”. The channel seems to have remained a drying wasteland for close to a century but began to flow again in 1957 when it drowned a large portion of the area’s acacia trees.

These dead trees still stand today, creating an intriguing, almost ghost-like landscape. In 1982, the channel again dried up, a process that Dereck and Beverley Joubert documented in their film Stolen River and, later, Journey to the Forgotten River.

Elephant wandering the Savuti Marsh

The drought transformed a thriving wildlife area into a dramatic battleground for survival. Large lion prides became specialized elephant killers, and crocodiles sought refuge by hibernating in the Gubatsaa Hills. In 2008, the area got wetter, and the channel flooded into the marsh in 2010, with the channel beginning to dry up again in 2016.

The drying-up process is fascinating, with storks, eagles, herons, and numerous other bird species flocking around small pools to feast on trapped fish. Even leopards have been caught grabbing catfish from the muddy shallows, showing their remarkable ability to adapt to changing environmental conditions.

Kubu Island is a dry granite rock island located in the Makgadikgadi Pan area, en route to four major parks and game reserves in Botswana. Kubu Island is the only place on a Botswana safari with prominent rocky features, breathtaking views of the salt pans in the Makgadikgadi , and solitary aesthetic beauty.

It’s beautiful in a rugged, enigmatic way, made more so by the presence of puzzling relics and ruins that litter the arid hillside. Artifacts found on the side of the lake appear to date from early Stone Age times, over 100 000 years ago, right up to recent decades.

The baobabs on Kubu Island

Some researchers have suggested that the island may have been used for ancient rainmaking ceremonies, with its protruding rocks being the highest point in the area. Because human settlers could not have survived here without water, the island was most likely inhabited when a giant lake still surrounded it, or at least several wetter pans fed by other watercourses, reached by boat. Perhaps it would have been teeming with fish, crocodiles, and hippos.

The Makgadikgadi is an extraordinary Botswana region characterized by salt pans stretching as far as the eye can see, rocky granite islands, and open grasslands that spring to life in the wet season. In 1970, the Makgadikgadi Pans National Park was declared, which today comprises an area of 4,900km2 (1,891 square miles).

The Makgadikgadi’s two largest pans, Ntwetwe pan and Sua pan (sometimes called Sowa pan), do not fall within the park’s boundaries but are reachable by 4×4 rental in the dry season. These are both spectacular places to explore on a Botswana safari holiday for those who seek freedom in solitude.

Botswana's baobab trees are a beautiful reminder of nature standing the test of time

Plains surrounding the saltpans are dotted with ostrich, zebra, springbok, and oryx, closely pursued by dark-maned lions. On the western border of Makgadikgadi Pans National Park is the Boteti (or Botletle) River, a prime drinking and bathing spot for domestic cattle and migrating zebras and elephants.

Nxai Pan National Park is another unique area to explore where, in the peak of the wet season, Botswana safari travelers spend a good deal of the night listening to the evocative roaring of lions that ambush both springbok and impala at waterholes during daylight hours.

Moremi Game Reserve , the only officially recognized wildlife reserve in the iconic Okavango Delta , is also often considered the most stunning for Botswana safari tours . The most diverse habitats and animal populations can be found in Moremi Game Reserve. This reserve spans thousands of square kilometers and encompasses a breathtaking panorama of forests, lagoons, floodplains, and islands, making up nearly a fourth of the Okavango Delta.

safari botswana buchen

Lion, cheetah, leopard, elephant, African wild dog, zebra, Red lechwe, and many more resident species can be viewed year-round, making for excellent game viewing on a Botswana safari holiday. The idea to create a reserve in the Okavango region came from Robert Kay (a crocodile-hunter turned conservationist) and his wife June (a writer).

Yet it was the local BaTawana people (with help from the San/BaSarwa) who spearheaded the project, most notably Mohumagadi Pulane Moremi, the wife of deceased Chief Moremi II and the BaTawana’s Queen Regent. The reserve was named after the BaTawana Royal title, “Moremi”.

Botswana’s world-famous Okavango Delta , also known as the “Jewel of the Kalahari”, could easily be the most pristine oasis in the world. The Okavango River finds its origins in the highlands of Angola, in a catchment area of about 112,000 km2/43,243 square miles. From here, it begins a winding journey of 1,900 km (1180 mi) before fanning out into an intricate system of waterways covering 22,000 km (13670 mi) of Kalahari sand, a phenomenon that astronauts in space can observe.

Zebra family running through the wetlands of the Okavango Delta

Although the river would have once reached the ocean, today, it is swallowed up by a thirsty basin of white Kalahari sand, creating an effect that resembles an outstretched emerald hand, or more correctly referred to by scientists as an “alluvial fan”.

Shot of two young women out horseback riding together

With top-notch wildlife, Okavango Delta luxury lodgings , and guiding, the Okavango Delta offers some of the best safari experiences in Africa . Additionally, it provides some of the most diverse safari pursuits including walking safaris , horseback safaris , mokoro, boat, balloon, and helicopter safaris, among a wide range of other safari activities.

There are many different kinds of places to stay in the Okavango Delta. Water camps focus on the delta, its unique waterways, birds, and animals that live in the water. Land-based camps focus on the wildlife that comes to this oasis in the wilderness. Mixed camps have activities on land and water. Most visitors on a safari in Botswana choose a camp that uses both land and water or mixed-use camps.

Travel with Confidence

With over 20 years of experience, our team will help you tailor your itinerary to your perfect adventure., 24/7 support, personalized, popular botswana safaris, these recommended tours for botswana can be tailor-made to match your budget..

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50 Botswana Safaris to choose from

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When is the best month to travel to botswana.

  • Botswana in January

January is one of Botswana’s highest rainfall months, with an average of 100mm (3,93in) falling in unpredictable and heavy downpours. As a result, January is not the most popular time to visit for a Botswana safari. It does mean that prices are a lot lower, making this prime safari destination more accessible to travelers on a lower budget. Birding safaris are excellent at this time of year; however, the water levels in the Delta are low, and the presence of water means wildlife is scattered.

Mokoro rides on a luxury Okavango Delta Safari

Botswana’s climate is regular and consistent, with hot, wet summers and mild, dry winters. The north gets the most rain, and precipitation decreases steadily as you head south.

December and January are the wettest months, with average daily temperatures ranging between 30°C/86°F and 35°C/95°F and hot days approaching 40°C/104°F. The most extreme conditions are in the Central Kalahari, but even the nights seldom drop below 15°C/59°F.

  • Botswana in February

By February, the summer rains are beginning to lessen; otherwise, conditions stay much the same as in January. Average daytime temperatures remain in the low 30°C/86°F, while the coldest nights in the Kalahari may occasionally drop below 15°C/59°F. Towering thunderclouds still form an impressive backdrop for afternoon photographs, and the atmosphere stays clear and fresh after each bout of rain.

Red Billed Hornbill spotted on a Botswana birding safari

February is prime time for visiting the Central Kalahari, Savuti, and Makgadikgadi and Nxai Pans, attracting large numbers of zebra, springbok, and oryx. Predators, especially lions, are never far away. Elephants can be harder to spot in summer as they tend to disperse due to the abundant vegetation and increased surface water. Birding safaris , however, are at their best, with numerous migrant species and large flocks descending on the pans.

Springboks in the Central Kalahari Botswana

Road conditions are at their muddiest in February, so make sure you’re carrying recovery equipment and driving in convoy if possible. Driving on or near the pans is particularly treacherous, and doing so will almost certainly get you stuck on your safari in Botswana.

In Moremi and around the delta, certain tracks may be closed due to flooding, and others will have deep pools that you’ll need to treat with caution. Always ask other travelers about the conditions ahead during your Botswana safari tour , and look out for no-entry signs or the equivalent – logs or branches laid deliberately across the road.

  • Botswana in March

The steady drop in temperature and rainfall continues throughout March, but hot days across the country can still reach the mid 30°C/86°F. In the south and center of Botswana, cold nights can drop to 10°C/50°F but tend to stay between 15°C/59°F and 20°C/68°F in the north. There are still afternoon thunderstorms every few days, which keep the atmosphere clear. March remains an excellent month for spectacular landscape photographic safaris .

March and April are considered some of the best months to visit the Kgalagadi on your Botswana safari. The Kgalagadi is worth visiting at any time of year, but as the summer rains withdraw, the landscape is at its most striking – a vast green grassland against low, red-ochre dunes. As the animals begin to congregate around pans still full, predators, especially lions, gather too, with exciting interactions virtually guaranteed.

Stunning Oryx in the Kgalagadi Transfrontier Park

Further north, the Central Kalahari is also green and full of life, though road conditions around the pans remain incredibly muddy. To the northeast, Nxai Pan is no exception, although it’s especially wonderful at this time of year as migrating grazers make the most of the lush grassland and abundant surface water.

In the Okavango Delta, the marula trees start dropping fruit, attracting hungry elephants, often right into camp. There are few things more marvelous than sipping on your drink, and watching the sunset, as a magnificent elephant munches happily at a marula tree nearby.

By the end of the month, the roads in Moremi have usually begun to dry, making driving a bit easier. The water in the delta is now approaching its lowest level, and mokoro trips may not be possible, but boat safaris out to the deeper channels are usually available year-round.

  • Botswana in April

The April/May shoulder season is an excellent time to visit Botswana for safari. By April, rainfall has almost wholly ceased across the country, although there may still be a few scattered showers. Everywhere is still green, and most pans still hold some water, but what is available is getting scarcer, forcing both predators and prey to stay near.

Average daytime temperatures are now about 30°C/86°F and nights hover around 15°C/59°F, pleasant enough for long evenings around the campfire, while also allowing for a more comfortable sleep.

Elephant are bountiful in certain parts of Botswana

By mid-April, water levels in the iconic Okavango Delta panhandle are beginning to rise, although it takes a few months for them to filter down to Moremi. The delta feels fresh and alive, with fruit-laden trees and tall, green grass as far as the eye can see.

April is the start of the antelope breeding season, and the well-fed male impalas begin fighting it out for females. If you’re keen on fishing, then the deeper waters of the panhandle offer bream (tilapia) from April to August, but tigerfish are more likely from late August/September.

A large buffalo in the Okavango Delta

The Kgalagadi and Central Kalahari are at their best in April – a combination of cooler weather, prolific game, and lush, leafy landscapes. Game is still plentiful at Nxai Pan, and the muddy tracks are drying quickly with the rains almost gone.

By the end of the month, road conditions are much improved across the country. It’s still best to avoid crossing the Makgadikgadi Pans, however. The transit route from Lekhubu to Gweta may not be dry for at least another month.

  • Botswana in May

May is the beginning of Botswana’s dry winter season, and there’s usually no rain anywhere in the country. Average daytime temperatures range from 25°C/77°F to 30°C/86°F, and it’s generally slightly warmer in the north and cooler in the south. Evenings in the north are below 15°C/59°F, and by the end of the month, nights in the Kalahari can fall close to freezing.

May is one of the best all-around months for visiting Botswana for safari, with good to excellent game viewing, mild, dry weather, and relatively quiet campsites and parks that get much busier later in the season.

People on a sunset safari cruise on Chobe River in Chobe National Park, Botswana

There’s good game viewing all across Botswana, but especially in the Savuti region, where herds of zebra and buffalo congregate in large numbers. As surface water evaporates, elephants return to the Linyanti Chobe River System, the Khwai River, and northern Moremi.

African elephant in Makgadikgadi National Park, Botswanna,Africa.

In the northwest panhandle, the seasonal flood waters are beginning to filter into the rest of the delta, although it’ll take another few months before they percolate all the way to the southeast. The gently rising water attracts numerous resident water birds, while migrant species take to the skies in numbers and begin the long journey north. This is why they consider May to be a great birding safari month in Botswana.

  • Botswana in June

June is another excellent month to visit Botswana for safari, although the parks get busier from around the 20th as schools in neighboring South Africa break for winter holidays. These usually run from the last week of June to mid-July, and campsites across Botswana book up quickly. Late June marks the start of the high season in Botswana, and July to October is the busiest time.

Make sure you book your campsites well in advance. June and July are Botswana’s coldest months, and night-time temperatures in the Kalahari can drop below freezing. In the north, it rarely freezes, but lows of 5°C/41°F are common, and morning game drives can be icy.

Moremi Game Reserve Game Drive

Daytime temperatures are roughly the same across the country, averaging between 20°C/68°F and 25°C/77°F. As ever, the north is warmer and hot days may still reach 30°C/86°F.

By June, the pans have usually dried, forcing the animals to find more permanent water sources. They begin to congregate in large numbers along the fringes of the Okavango Delta and on the northern waterways of the Savuti Channel and Chobe Linyanti River System. June is a great time to see African wild dogs as they begin to search for dens for their pups.

In the Kgalagadi and Central Kalahari, lions and other predators are never far from the permanent waterholes, and large herds of springbok and oryx – which can survive with limited water – can still be seen on the drying, golden plains.

  • Botswana in July

July is Botswana’s coldest month, and night-time temperatures can drop below freezing in the center and south. In the north, expect lows of between 0°C/32°F and 5°C/41°F. Early morning game drives can be icy with the added wind chill. Daytimes average between 20°C/68°F and 25°C/77°F across the country, with hot days in the far north occasionally touching 30°C/86°F.

The black-back jackal, seen here in Botswana

It’s also the driest month for a safari in Botswana, with practically no rain anywhere in the country. July is an excellent time to visit the Okavango Delta , Moremi, and Chobe when the wildlife congregates in greater and greater numbers along the permanent water channels.

In Moremi, the flood waters are now at their highest, and there’s plenty to eat along the myriad waterways. Their bright green fringes lie in stark contrast to the arid surrounding plains, where the thinning vegetation allows for superb game viewing tours .

Cheetah relaxing before a big hunt

Wildlife sightings in the Kgalagadi and Central Kalahari are still good, although not at their best. The permanent waterholes become the focal points for the larger predators, while the shorter grass makes it easier to spot smaller animals such as the honey badger and Cape fox. By late July, the pans are thoroughly dry, and crossing from Lekhubu to Gweta should pose no problems.

  • Botswana in August

August remains extremely dry across Botswana, although by the end of the month, there may be a brief shower somewhere in the south. Temperatures are already beginning to rise, and while nights in the Kalahari can still fall below freezing, sub-zero mornings are the exception, not the norm.

Daytime temperatures also climb rapidly during August, and hot days across the country will regularly top 30°C/86°F. August is a very popular safari month in Botswana. Campsites and lodges in Botswana should be booked far in advance.

The Kalahari is a spectacular desert that teems with life

In the Okavango Delta, water levels are high, reaching as far south as Maun. Game viewing along the waterways is at its best and will remain so until the first rains fall in November. Late August marks the start of the Barbell (catfish) run in the northwest panhandle. From now to November is also the best time to catch Tigerfish, and the panhandle’s lodges and houseboat safaris are at their busiest.

Tiger fishing is a favorite pastime in Botswana

Away from the delta, water is extremely scarce, and the animals gravitate to the few man-made waterholes. The Kgalagadi’s Kaa Gate and Nxai Pan’s South Camp offer oases in a dry and desolate land. Kaa Gate is known for its black-maned Kalahari lions, and no stay at South Camp is complete without a thirsty elephant trundling through the campground.

  • Botswana in September

Northern Botswana stays completely dry during September, but the center and south may receive a few scattered showers. Temperatures climb rapidly throughout the month and no longer drop below 0°C/32°F, even in the Kalahari. Average lows are between 10°C/50°F and 15°C/59°F, a bit cooler in the south and warmer in the north.

By the end of September, the days are hot everywhere, averaging over 30°C/86°F and approaching 40°C/104°F in Maun and Kasane. September is another busy month for safari tours in Botswana , and the popular northern camps should be booked well in advance.

Houseboating on the Chobe

September and October are particularly impressive along the Chobe and Linyanti Rivers. Thousands of animals rely on these waters for survival, especially elephants, which can drink up to 200 liters of water daily. After a long, hot day foraging for food, hundreds of elephants gather along the river, often running the last few meters, trumpeting wildly in their excitement and thirst.

Moremi is also excellent in September, although the days are getting hot now. The dry, thin vegetation makes for excellent wildlife viewing and the cooler mornings and evenings are best for predator spotting as they come to the channels to drink.

Hippo in full view in Moremi

By September, the Okavango’s Barbell (catfish) run is in full swing, and it’s also prime time for Tigerfish in the northwest panhandle. The Kalahari and pans are almost at their driest in September, but the full October heat has yet to arrive. Wildlife viewing across the central and southern parks can be hit and miss, but the endless golden grasslands have their own beauty.

Lurking in the grass are the Kalahari’s black-maned lions, stalking the large herds of springbok, oryx, and Red hartebeest that still roam the plains. While many visitors to Botswana focus on the north, the south and central parks still have a lot to offer and can be much quieter and easier to book at this time of year.

  • Botswana in October

October is Botswana’s hottest month, and temperatures can exceed 40°C/104°F in the country’s north. The south is a bit cooler, but not by much. Nights in the south average between 15°C/59°F and 20°C/68°F, and in the far north are often much warmer. In the south and center, the rains usually come earlier, with the first afternoon thunderstorms bringing some relief.

In the north, it rarely rains until the end of the month, and the rainy season doesn’t start properly until mid-November. Despite the heat, October is a popular Botswana safari month, especially along the Chobe River, which is famous for its herds of thirsty elephants.

Baobabs are a prolific feature in Botswana

In Moremi, the delta waters begin to drop, opening up the flood plains and providing much-needed vegetation for the grazers. The drying pools also trap fish, which draw vultures and other scavengers in for a feast. Away from the delta, the vegetation is denuded and sparse – not at its most beautiful, but great for spotting predators. To the northwest, the panhandle’s Barbell (catfish) run is still going strong, and September and October are the best months to catch Tigerfish.

The Chobe river is famous for its elephant sightings

By October, Botswana’s seen no rain for six months, and the cloudless skies turn a pale, dusty blue – exactly the color of Botswana’s flag! Be prepared for heat, dust, bumpy roads, excellent wildlife sighting tours , and long, warm evenings under the stars. It can be an excellent time to be on the pans, especially Baines’ Baobabs and Lekhubu Island.

There may be no animals around, and the midday heat can be intense, but the incredible dusty sunsets are worth it as the light fades to pastel pinks and purples over the baobabs.

  • Botswana in November

November is the spring shoulder season for Botswana safaris, a time of soaring thunderclouds, returning migrant birds, and fields of newborn calves once the rains arrive. It’s still scorching, with daily highs of 35°C/95°F to 40°C/104°F across the country, and it can get even hotter in the north, where nights are humid and often well over 20°C/68°F. The start of the rainy season is always hard to predict, but good years can see early November rainfall in the south and central Kalahari, while Moremi and Chobe usually have to wait until later.

Thunderstorms loom overhead in Botswana

November is all about when the rains will begin, and when they do arrive, it’s with a literal bang. Before the first thunderstorms, conditions are much the same as in October, with increasingly desperate animals drawn to whatever permanent water sources they can find.

Waters in the delta continue to recede, opening up the flood plains and providing essential, fresh grazing. The Chobe and Linyanti river banks are now crowded with game, and large numbers of elephants congregate on the waterways.

An aerial view of mighty buffalo

Once the rains do come, the relief is palpable. The dust clears from the skies, the pans fill, and the antelope birthing season begins. If there have been early rains, this is an excellent time to visit Botswana’s Central Kalahari, where enormous herds of oryx and springbok attempt to protect their newborns from prowling cheetahs and lions.

Road conditions are still reasonable at this early stage of the wet season, and you can still drive confidently without worrying too much about getting stuck.

  • Botswana in December

December and January are Botswana’s wettest months, with afternoon thunderstorms a regular feature across the country. The rains are cooling, but daytime temperatures remain high, averaging in the low 30°C/86 °F , but with hot days of up to 40°C/104 °F or more. Nights tend to be humid and warm, often not dropping below 20°C/68°F.

The clear atmosphere and thunderclouds make for excellent photographic safaris , and you can expect a spectacular thunderstorm every few days.

The Savuti region is beautiful

December is the start of the summer ‘ green season ’ when the vegetation recovers and grazing land is plentiful. New-born calves frolic on the Kalahari plains and are often targeted by the ever-present predators. As the pans slowly fill, more and more animals are drawn to the central parks, and both the Central Kalahari and Nxai Pans National Parks have abundant wildlife.

The Savuti region is also packed with game, although the elephants along the Chobe River are beginning to disperse as more water and vegetation becomes available inland.

The mighty Chobe river is a wildlife magnet - especially in the dry season when water is scarce

As the rains intensify, the roads around the pans deteriorate. Thick mud can make some tracks impassable, and it’s a good idea to travel in a convoy. The roads through and around Moremi also get worse as the rains continue. Large holes in the roads fill with water, and the going can be very slow as you navigate the deep pools and fallen tree trunks.

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Free safari planning advice from destination experts

Faqs about botswana.

  • Safari/bucket showers are common in mobile or tented camps where there is no permanent plumbing. They are an effective yet environmentally friendly way to shower where water is at a premium and provide plenty of hot water to wash comfortably.
  • Generally, there is an en-suite private shower stall within your tent with a “rainfall” style shower head at which you can control the water flow. Outside the tent, there is a large waterproof bag or bucket which is filled with about 10 to 15 litres (5 US gallons) of hot water before being raised with a pully/rope system to either connect to the shower pipe or fill a cistern.
  • The water is delivered at the ideal temperature so it is best to use it as soon as it arrives. Staff typically fill the showers at a pre-arranged time of day, or you simply need to give them a few minutes notice so they can get it ready.
  • If you’re travelling to Botswana , you will need vaccinations for hepatitis A, typhoid fever, polio as well as medications for travellers diarrhea.
  • Malaria prophylaxis is recommended when you're travelling to the northern part of Botswana. Other immunizations may be necessary depending upon the circumstances of the trip and the medical history of the traveller.
  • Insect repellents are recommended, in conjunction with other measures to prevent mosquito bites.
  • All travellers should visit either a travel clinic or their personal physician four to eight weeks before departure. Malaria - Prophylaxis with Lariam (mefloquine), Malarone (atovaquone/proguanil) or doxycycline is recommended for the northern part of the country.
  • January to March is the best time to witness the Makgadikgadi zebra migration as well as the wildebeest.
  • Botswana official currency is the Botswana Pula (BWP).  Other countries using the same Botswana currency include Zimbabwe.
  • Botswana Banks accepts the following foreign currencies: US Dollars, Pounds Sterling, Euro and South African Rands in cash.
  • Credit and debit cards, including International Visa and MasterCard, are accepted at most lodges. However, Express and Diners Club are not accepted by the banks of Botswana or by the camps.

Our Recommended Activities in Botswana

  • Bird Watching in Botswana
  • Boat Cruise in Chobe, Botswana
  • Flight Over the Flamingos in Botswana
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  • Horseback Riding in Botswana
  • Mokoro Safari in Botswana
  • Museum at Jack’s Camp in Botswana
  • Quad Biking in Botswana
  • Rock Paintings of Gubatsaa Hills
  • The Historic Baobabs in Botswana
  • Walk with Bushmen in Botswana
  • Walking with Meerkats in Botswana

Botswana stands as a dream destination for birdwatching safaris, boasting an astounding array of bird life that thrives across its diverse ecosystems, which include savannas, wetlands, woodlands, and deserts. From majestic raptors and elegant waterbirds to vibrant songbirds, Botswana’s nearly 600 bird species make it a must-visit for avid birdwatchers.

When to Go Birding in Botswana?

The best time for birdwatching in Botswana is during the spring and summer months, from October to March. This period sees a remarkable influx of avian species, with bird diversity increasing significantly. By December, the bird population swells to an impressive 20% more than in the winter months, offering a unique opportunity to observe a wide array of birds in their natural habitat.

Where to go birdwatching in Botswana

A group of hippopotamus (Hippopotamus amphibius) lounge in the Chobe River. A Great Egret (Ardea alba) stands on the back of one.

Home to Botswana’s longest bird list of 450 species, Chobe National Park features diverse habitats like floodplains, riverine woodland, and broadleaved woodland.

Notable species include:

  • African FinFoot
  • White-backed Night Heron
  • Narina Trogon

Accessible via the village of Kasane, the park requires a 4×4 for navigation.

Makgadikgadi Pans

Flamingos in the Makgadikgadi Pans, Botswana

Known for its large flamingo colonies, especially in high-rainfall years.

These Makgadikgadi Pans offer sights of:

  • White Pelicans
  • Secretary Birds
  • Various raptors

The area requires a 4×4 vehicle, and visitors must be prepared with essentials like water.

Wattled Crane courtship in the Okavango Delta

This Ramsar site offers a mix of habitats, from flooded grasslands to riverine forests.

Notable birds include:

  • Wattled Cranes
  • Slaty Egrets
  • Pel’s Fishing Owls

The delta is best accessed by light aircraft or from Maun for the western delta and Moremi Game Reserve.

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10 Birds to Spot on a Safari in Botswana

African fish eagle.

African fish eagle in Botswana.

Known for its majestic appearance and fishing skills, often found near large bodies of water.

Lilac-Breasted Roller

Lilac-breasted roller in the Okavango Delta, Botswana.

A brightly colored bird known for its acrobatic flight, commonly seen in open woodlands and savannas.

Kori Bustard

kori bustard strolling in Botswana

One of the heaviest flying birds, known for its distinctive courtship display.

Secretary Bird

The Secretary bird is a fearsome snake wrangler

Recognizable for its hunting skills and long legs, typically found in savannas and grasslands.

Saddle-Billed Stork

Saddle billed stork | Photo credits: Changa Safari Camp

Notable for its colorful bill and tall stature, often seen in wetlands hunting fish and other aquatic prey.

African Jacana

African Jacana Botswana

Known as “lily-trotter,” distinguished by its long toes, allowing it to walk on floating vegetation

Pel’s Fishing Owl

Pels fishing owl in the Okavango Delta, Botswana.

A large, nocturnal owl, elusive and sought after by birdwatchers, usually found near water bodies.

African Skimmer

African Skimmer fishing by dragging beak with small hooks through water in Chobe River, Chobe National Park, Botswana

Unique for its lower mandible used to skim for fish, often seen in synchronized group flights.

Carmine Bee-Eater

Southern carmine bee-eater in Chobe National Park, Botswana.

Recognizable by its carmine plumage and long tail feathers, typically found nesting in riverbank colonies.

Greater Painted-Snipe

Bird: Wood Sandpiper. Tringa glareola.

Known for its cryptic plumage and sexual role reversal, commonly found in wetlands.

Going on a Birdwatching Safari in Botswana

With binoculars and a camera in hand, birdwatching in Botswana promises to be an unforgettable birding experience. Whether exploring by safari, river cruise, or bush walk, the variety of bird species ensures a rewarding adventure. Each bird, admired for both beauty and behavior, plays a crucial role in maintaining biodiversity and healthy ecosystems.

For those eager to witness these magnificent birds, speaking to a safari expert at Discover Africa about a tailor-made, luxury safari is a great starting point. Discover Africa can help you craft the perfect itinerary to explore Botswana’s rich bird life in comfort and style.

Botswana’s birdwatching opportunities are a testament to the country’s commitment to conservation and the preservation of natural habitats. As a birdwatcher’s paradise, it offers an unparalleled experience to observe and appreciate some of the most fascinating avian species in the world.

The best way to enjoy all that a Botswana safari holiday offers is on a boat cruise on the Chobe River. The town of Kasane, which borders the Chobe National Park, is the starting point for all Chobe boat trips. Regular morning and afternoon departures are available. In the renowned Chobe National Park , you can get up close and personal with a wide range of wildlife. Enormous herds of animals frequently travel to the river and the islands to feast on the luscious new grass.

A group of safari tourists in a boat is watching buffalos and a large herd of African elephants (Loxodonta africana. Chobe National Park, Botswana, Africa.

On a Chobe Boat cruise, you’ll have frequent hippos and crocodile encounters, as they love to bask in the sun next to the water. Botswana safari goers can also see buffalo, Puku and lechwe antelopes, giraffes, and other plains game. You might even be fortunate enough to glimpse a lion or a leopard. Given that the Chobe National Park itself is home to over 460 different bird species, a cruise on the Chobe is also very popular for birding safaris .

Red Lechwe Antelopes

Boat cruises can be organized by one of the many riverside safari operators. There are also houseboats and boats fitted with the latest photographic equipment operated by Pangolin Safaris. The Chobe waterfront is the most commercial part of Chobe National Park, close to the town of Kasane. There are several large hotels and lodges along the river, although Chobe Game Lodge is the only lodge along the river that falls within the park’s boundaries. The public campsite along the Chobe river is called Ihaha .

Greater and lesser flamingos go from East Africa’s Great Rift Valley to engage in one of Africa’s most incredible avian feasts. From a helicopter flight over the flamingos, these stunning birds look like pink clouds in a silver sky. Helicopter flights over the flamingos are run by Helicopter Horizons and can be organized through San Camp , Jack’s Camp , and other Botswana safari accommodation options in the area.

A spectacular aerial view of flamingos in Botswana

Another place to view the flamingos on a safari in Botswana is from Nata Bird Sanctuary (northeast of Sua Pan), 10km/6,2mi from the town of Nata. There is a basic campsite near the entrance to the park, and the sanctuary is open to day visitors who can gaze at the flamingos from an elevated wooden hide during wet months.

The sanctuary is run by a community trust and is home to 165 bird species recorded in the area, including pelicans, spoonbills, ostriches, and myriad ducks and small waders.

Flamingo at the Waterhole in the Okavango Delta, Botswana

A great spectacle each year in Chobe (and all across Botswana) happens during the onset of the first rains; the rain triggers reproductive winged termites to leave their colonies in pursuit of wet earth to begin new mounds.

As they exit in their thousands, they attract birds of every plume and feather, including large raptors and vultures that congregate around mounds to snatch these sausage-bodied insects from the air. Even leopards partake in the feast, taking advantage of the rich protein source.

There is no better way to grasp the region’s remoteness than by flying over the iconic Okavango Delta in a light aircraft/helicopter. From the air, the wetland landscape is woven together with great intricacy. Serpentine channels cut through emerald carpets of marsh, spilling into lagoons with pods of hippos.

the view from an aircraft flying over the Okavango delta

Winding streams twist and loop, diverging into lazy pools and vast plains scattered with islands. Palm trees hug the islands’ outer banks, encircling white-sandy grazing grounds speckled with impala, zebra, wildebeest, and buffalo.

Animal tracks criss-cross through dry wooded areas and continue through shallow waters where black and orange silt marble the sand.

It’s common to see lechwe splashing over swampy ground and large herds of elephants. Sometimes giraffes gallop awkwardly across savanna plains with their characteristic slow-motion gait or families of zebra frolic in patches of sand.

Aerial view of Elephants - Okavango Delta - Botswana

A flight from Maun is mandatory to reach most Okavango Delta luxury camps and lodges , but many travelers also book additional scenic flights. Most flights leave from Maun (the small tourist town known as the “gateway to the Okavango”).

After taking off, there is an expanse of mopane veld littered with homesteads and cattle before the plane reaches the buffalo fence, and finally, the Okavango Delta in its full splendor.

Once the plane crosses the buffalo fence, there is more chance of spotting wild animals, and slowly but surely, the landscape transforms into a watery wonderland. Winter is the best time for a scenic flight over the Okavango Delta.

Breathe in the aromas of the bush and feel the breeze in your hair during a horseback riding adventure in Botswana. Horseback safaris in Botswana are one of the best ways to get close to the bush without being on foot. The freedom of riding a horse across the plains is exhilarating.

Horse riding expeditions are a great way to view wildlife

While the more adventurous can enjoy several days on a horseback safari, those strapped for time can take a quick, half-day ride in the vicinity of the camp or lodge. Because horses aren’t seen as a threat by wildlife, antelope and even animals like lions and elephants get much closer than they would during a Botswana safari on foot .

Horseback safaris in Botswana are entirely safe. They take place in a completely controlled environment, and the guides are knowledgeable and well-informed about the area. There are significant differences between horse riding as a morning or afternoon activity and a multi-day ride where travelers spend nights in fly-camps or simply under the stars beside a campfire.

Horse Riding in the Makgadikgadi Pans

The multi-day horseback safari requires riding skills and, more importantly, the physical stamina to ride for six to eight hours daily. Guests must be very comfortable on horseback and be able to handle their horses.

The shorter half-day riding requires less skill, which happens at a slower pace. The horses or ponies are carefully paired with each rider, and novices are well looked after. If you’re after the perfect horseback safari, booking the right accommodation in Botswana is crucial. Different lodges operate in vastly different areas.

The most intimate way to explore the Okavango’s meandering channels and hidden lagoons is on a guided mokoro safari trip. Mokoro trips are available at many water-based camps and lodges in the Okavango and Maun for self-drivers. The thought of slinking through the wild territory of hippos and crocodiles may seem a little daunting, but it helps to keep in mind that the men who guide these safaris have spent a lifetime navigating these waters and know what they’re doing.

Mokoro guides commonly choose shallow areas where there is less chance of encountering hippos and always have a scout polling ahead to keep a good lookout.

Mokoro Rides through the Okavango Delta

A mokoro safari in Botswana gives you the best chance to catch a glimpse of the rare and secretive Sitatunga antelope. Sitatunga love quiet backwaters with floating papyrus islands and usually feed while partially submerged in water.

Male sitatunga antelope hiding in water, Botswana

They are expertly adapted for swamp life with splayed, elongated hooves that enable them to tread soft marshlands with ease. When a mokoro approaches, these shy ungulates will commonly swim away, with only their nuzzles sticking out of the water.

Other fascinating creatures to look out for on a Mokoro safari are:

  • Colorful Painted Reed frogs
  • Tiny Long Reed frogs
  • Malachite and Pied kingfishers
  • Pygmy geese
  • African and lesser jacanas
  • Day and night water lilies

Jack’s Camp is one of Southern Africa’s most storied and recognizable camps. The camp was established by explorer Jack Bousfield in the 1960s and is situated in a spectacular location on the edge of Botswana’s Makgadikgadi Pans, looking over shimmering expanses of sun-scorched earth.

Jack Bousfield was a bushwhacking crocodile hunter who arrived in Botswana from his Tanzanian homeland in the 1960s. He was overtaken by the Makgadikgadi region’s romance and set up a small camp. He died in 1992 in an airplane crash, and Jack’s son Ralph and his then-partner built the glamorous Jack’s Camp in his father’s memory.

Jacks camp rooms

The newly renovated Jack’s Camp honors the place’s longstanding and beloved 1940s camping aesthetic. Seven twin and two double guest tents are significantly larger than they used to be.

The famous interiors are still present, but now there are also cabinets from the Natural History Museum, elaborate textiles from around the world, and cooling systems for the beds. Showers are available indoors and outdoors in ensuite bathrooms, as well as a personal plunge pool on each veranda.

Jacks Camp Museum

The renowned Natural History Museum, a library, an old pool table, and a fully stocked bar are all located in the new, larger mess tent. The renowned nomadic Persian tea has expanded, and the store has been restored and replenished with fresh goods.

A Botswana quad-biking adventure should be on the bucket list of all daring adrenalin seekers for their Safari in Botswana. Revving through the isolated moon-like vistas of the Makgadikgadi gives travelers the luxury of disconnecting with time and space. On a multi-day Quad biking trip, quad bikers can sprawl out beneath the stars in the evening, blissfully cocooned in comfy bedrolls. These extended trips can include stopovers at Kubu Island (during the winter season) and Chapman’s baobab.

Quad bikes under a gallaxy

Many safari lodges in the area offer quad biking, including more budget-friendly places like the wonderfully quirky Planet Baobab.

Visitors can take a journey to Gubatsa Hills for a game drive to see several historic San rock paintings during their safari holiday in Botswana. Gubatsa Hills stands out from its surroundings as a steep outlier in an otherwise level environment. Bushmen rock art in the small hills surrounding Savuti was first discovered in March 1968 by Tim Liversedge, a warden of Chobe National Park . The latest of the paintings is thought to have been done around 1810.

Rock Paintings of Gubatsaa Hills

Although the paintings are all of a similar style and outlined in red-ochre (similar to the nearest rock paintings found at Tsodilo Hills), they seem to have been done by different groups of people.

Through the years, small groups of San bushmen would have moved in and out of the area following migrating game and adding their contributions to the adorned rock faces.

Some of the animals depicted in the paintings are:

Today, Botswana Safari guests can get out and scramble up the rocky hills to view the artworks on the Southeast cliffs overlooking the Savuti channel. Guests can also marvel at the historic baobabs and look out for the rare klipspringer antelope.

There are several extraordinarily monumental historic baobabs in the Makgadikgadi area, but the ones most worth visiting are Chapman’s and Green’s baobabs in Ntwetwe Pan and Baines Baobabs in Nxai Pans National Park. Green’s baobab can be found at Gutsha Pan on the Gweta–Orapa track, 27km south of Gweta village.

In the days of early European explorers, a small pan beside this baobab was filled with perennial water, giving the old tree special significance as a beacon of hope that signaled a spot to replenish supplies after a long trek through the saltpans.

Sunrise at Kubu Island, Botswana

The intrepid Green brothers were among the many early traders, hunters, and explorers to carve their names here, leaving “Green’s Expedition 1858–1859” scrawled into the tree’s bark and giving the tree its name. Perhaps the most intriguing mark on this baobab is the date 1771, which is even before Livingstone’s time and possibly left by an early Portuguese explorer.

The tree is now one of Botswana’s National Monuments. Baobab trees can live for thousands of years, and this one certainly bears the battle scars to prove it, gunshot wounds included.

Located in the south of Nxai Pans National Park are the seven baobabs known as Baines Baobabs or the Sleeping sisters. This stunted cluster of Africa’s most iconic tree was immortalized by the paintings of Thomas Baines, a British landscape artist commissioned by the Royal Geographic Society. Baines camped beneath these trees in 1862 en route to the memorable Victoria Falls .

Baobab Tree, Adansonia digitata, Chobe National Park, Botswana, Africa

The pans at Baines Baobabs are dry and bare for much of the year, as are the branches of the baobabs themselves, but during the wet season, the pans are covered in sheets of water, and green canopies emerge from the tree’s branches.

Baines Baobabs overlook Kaudia Camp Pan on the South side of the Nxai Pan South camp. Three allocated camping areas with basic toilet and shower facilities require visitors to bring their own water.

You can gain a unique grasp of the culture and in-depth knowledge and awareness that these native people have of the earth by taking a walk across the Kalahari terrain with a local San Bushman. The San bushmen of the Kalahari have long been a subject of great intrigue and fascination, admired by anthropologists, scientists, storytellers, and everyday travelers alike.

San Culture in Botswana

Sadly, very few bushmen live the same ancient nomadic lifestyle that their ancestors did. Still, some aspects of these traditions have been kept alive through their employment at various safari lodges. While staying at these Botswana safari lodges , travelers can enjoy educational bush walks, where San elders pass on their skills and knowledge.

As the oldest living inhabitants of Africa, the secret of the San’s survival was their total dependence on the natural provisions of the land. To the untrained eye, however, the barren shrubs and grasslands surrounding the Makgadikgadi pans seem anything other than a plentiful pantry of resources to survive on.

San bush people gather in the setting sun, Makgadikgadi Pans, Botswana, Southern Africa

This common assumption makes walking with the San a fascinating experience, a time to delve deeply into some of humanity’s most cunning tricks of survival. The walk is a tactile exploration involving tasting various foods, including berries and fire-roasted beetles, and demonstrations in fire-making, dancing, hunting, and medicine-making.

Several camps in the Makgadikgadi region offer a bushman walking activity on a Botswana safari, including Meno a Kwena, Jack’s Camp , and San Camp .

The Makgadikgadi Pans offer guests the incredible chance to spend a morning with a local meerkat colony. The meerkats respond to the non-threatening presence of people by simply carrying on with their daily activities, which consist mainly of rummaging the veld for scorpions and other tasty bites to eat.

A hornet flies past a pair of meerkats in the Kalahari, Botswana

The habituation of these lively little desert mammals depends very much on the dedication of a full-time ‘Meerkat man’ who follows the family group daily and helps locate them for visitors in Botswana.

Guests are driven to the den area in the early morning, just before the meerkats have left their burrows. As the sun rises, they cautiously peep out of little holes in a humble sandy mound and, deeming it safe to come out, scuttle to the highest points to scout for predators and food.

Meerkat Safari Experiences

Sometimes these lookouts happen to be the shoulders and heads of guests! Eventually, the whole colony, babies included, are joyfully chirping and tussling away while guests sit or crouch among them. It’s a truly unique and intimate African experience with one of the most sociable and resourceful desert-adapted creatures on earth.

See Botswana in Your Comfort

  • A Budget Botswana Safari
  • A Luxury Botswana Safari
  • An Affordable Botswana Safari

Budget holiday tour options for Botswana include self-driving or overland safari tours. These are two exciting and adventurous ways to travel through the country and give visitors the chance to be exposed to the country on a more intimate level than fly-in Botswana safaris, which are also far more expensive.

Self-drive safaris in Botswana involve a fair amount of preparation with regards to route planning, taking into consideration the time of year and whether rainfall might have affected accessibility of some areas.

Offroad 4x4 vehicle with tent in the roof

There are few self-catering options within the national parks and the Delta. If you plan to stay at a lodge in an area such as Savuti or Moremi, a reservation will come at a fully inclusive price.

Camping keeps costs down and is ideal for traveling on a budget through Botswana. The public campsites are located within the national parks and are unfenced, quiet, equipped with the basics, and they come in at a reasonable price. Costs for a self-drive holiday in Botswana would include fuel, park and vehicle fees, food and beverages, and any activities that might be of interest, for example, a boat cruise of Chobe River.

Overland safari tours are perhaps the most affordable way to get as much out of a Botswana safari as possible without having to shoulder any of the pressure of handling the route, the vehicle, the fees and payments, activities, food shopping, or meal planning.

Off-road vehicles on a sandy track in Botswana

These pre-planned holidays have a tried and trusted route in place and are led by a professional guide who knows the country well. An overland tour would include visiting all of Botswana’s prime destinations over about two weeks.

The price you pay for the tour includes all transport within the country, three meals a day (unless otherwise specified), park fees, accommodation at campsites and lodges (depending on itinerary), and all standard activities.

The overland trucks are equipped with tents and stretchers, fold-up camping chairs, and a fully equipped kitchen with gas stoves, providing everything you need to be sorted for accommodation.

With extensive protected areas and landscapes designated by UNESCO as World Heritage Sites, the ecosystem in Botswana is pristine, and luxury safaris in Botswana prevail throughout the region. Total extravagance has been achieved in several globally acclaimed private tented camps and luxury safari villas in Botswana , which provide no holds barred treatment for their guests to showcase this one-of-a-kind countryside to the planet’s custodians.

A luxury celebration in Kasane Botswana

Flying between Chobe River, Savuti, Moremi Game Reserve, the Kalahari, and the Okavango Delta luxuriously eliminates the time spent driving along dusty roads in challenging conditions, whisking travelers off to each Botswana luxury safari destination in no time at all.

The Private Concessions of the Okavango Delta provide the most luxurious holiday tours in Botswana where safari activities are exclusive and personalized, and the accommodation and lodge services are elite.

Advice for achieving an affordable Botswana safari would be to plan ahead and book accommodation in Botswana in the best wildlife areas at the best time of year so that you can get the most out of your budget Botswana safari experience. It helps to research the lodges in the country to compare prices and find affordable safari options in hotspot areas like the iconic Okavango Delta , Chobe River, Savuti, and Moremi Game Reserve.

safari botswana buchen

Classic Botswana safari camps without “all the frills” are often the best choices for feeling a genuine connection with the natural surroundings, indulging the senses, and creating a multi-dimensional experience.

If you can forgo luxuries such as air conditioning, electricity, and king-size beds with percale cotton, the reward in terms of value will be far greater.

safari botswana buchen

It is vital to book your Botswana accommodation a year in advance to ensure the availability of lodges during the best season for game viewing. On the other hand, the peak season for some might not be others’ idea of fun.

The popular time to travel will result in a high density of tourists, vehicle traffic, and high prices, which could detract from the experience if you’re out to seek solitude and exclusivity.

For some, the “off-season” is the best time to go, as the prices of safari lodges are reduced by about a third, the parks are much quieter, and there is more freedom to roam.

Holiday Styles and Options in Botswana

  • Active Adventure Holiday in Botswana
  • Big Five Safari in Botswana
  • Birding Safari in Botswana
  • Malaria Free Safari in Botswana
  • Photographic Safari in Botswana
  • Romantic Holiday in Botswana
  • The Zebra Migration in Botswana
  • Walking Safari in Botswana
  • Wild Camping in Botswana

The most adventurous experience you can have on a Botswana holiday is to do it by road. There are good road networks to cater to self-drivers, car rental in Botswana is available in the form of well-equipped 4×4 vehicles, and border crossings are mostly efficient.

Campsites in Botswana are basic and designed to keep the element of the wild present, so sleeping in a tent while a lion, hyena, elephant, or hippo walks by at night is a likely possibility.

The best adventurous self-drive itineraries in Botswana include Moremi and Savuti, where wildlife is abundant, and public campsites have ablution blocks with running water.

There is no electricity for refrigeration or charging, and there are no cooking facilities, so it is essential to pack a gas cooker or use a fireplace. It is vital to bring firewood from outside the park as it’s forbidden to gather wood inside the park.

Pack light, breathable clothing, sunglasses and sunblock, binoculars, and a camera, and always have a map of game drive routes. Fuel is unavailable in the parks, so make sure to refuel before entering or bring extra fuel in jerry cans.

Botswana is one of the world’s prime wildlife viewing destinations . While the Big Five needs no formal introduction, it is fitting to add that Botswana is one of the best countries to go on a Big five safari to see these magnificent animals in one trip.

Quick Guide to Spotting the Big Five on a Botswana safari tour :

  • Chobe National Park is best for the highest concentration of elephants.
  • The Savuti region is best for lion spotting.
  • Northern Okavango is the best place to see the large Cape buffalo.
  • Moremi Game Reserve will offer excellent views of rhinos.
  • Mashatu Game Reserve plays host to the elusive leopard.

Even though Botswana doesn’t have endemic bird species, it is regarded as a premier birding destination because of its protection of a number of threatened and endangered species. Coupled with an excellent seasonal variation in birding, Botswana is a good choice for bird lovers.

The summer months from October to February tend to be the best months for viewing migrant species, while the dry winter months see many birds flock to the waterholes.

The Lesser jacana (credit Rachel Lang)

The call of the Woodland kingfisher is one of the most noteworthy calls in Botswana’s northern region and heralds the summer birding season. Wattled cranes, storks, herons and egrets are also indications that the flood season in the Okavango is not far off.

Wattled cranes are rare

The Okavango Delta in particular is the greatest stronghold in Africa for Wattled cranes, as well as Slaty Egrets. Other notorious species include the Pel’s fishing owl, the African skimmer and the White-backed night heron.

Pels fishing owl

Botswana also has the most renowned Greater Flamingo and Lesser Flamingo breeding sites in southern Africa.

Although Botswana’s malaria risk is lower than some other African countries, there is still a certain risk associated with travel through the bush. Therefore, you should practice precautions before traveling to Botswana for a safari.

The most important thing to note is that anti-malaria medication is a must. You should consult your doctor before leaving for your Botswana Safari tour .

A female lion (Panthera leo) with her juvenile son resting in a tree. Moremi Game Reserve, Okavango Delta, Botswana. Wildlife Shot.

Further precautions such as long-sleeved shirts and jeans in the evenings will reduce your chances of mosquito bites. Pack some mosquito repellent for applying to your hands, face, and neck. It’ll help keep the mosquitoes at bay.

The colder dry winter months have less mosquito activity. May through to October is best. Additionally, areas with fewer people have less risk of transmission, even if there is water. Kalahari, Okavango, and Moremi concessions and the Makgadikgadi Pans are low-risk areas.

Photographic safaris are very popular in Botswana due to the wildlife density and the relaxed attitude animals have around vehicles and boats. The best way to get the most out of photography on safari is to book the experience with a specialized photographic tour operator.

safari botswana buchen

These companies have game-viewing vehicles equipped with camera mounts, swiveling seats, and equipment that will enhance a photographer’s experience. Boat cruises on the Chobe River often bring guests close to elephants, hippos, buffalo, and highly sought-after bird species, such as the African skimmer.

A photographic safari operator will have a trained guide who knows how to manage a sighting for the best photographic results. Photography can take time and patience, so it’s best to hire a private guide and book with a group aiming for the same experience on their Botswana safari holiday.

It’s easy to enjoy a romantic safari in Botswana, given the surrounding environment and romantic views. Some of the best couples activities on a safari in Botswana include mokoro cruises (two to a mokoro), horse riding, private bush dinners, and couples’ spa treatments.

Highlights on a romantic Botswana holiday

The great thing about traveling as a couple is there are very few limitations. Most lodges in Botswana are designed to sleep two people in a room. Accommodation is geared towards couples sharing a bedroom and bathroom facilities. At the same time, verandahs and lounges are made up with two chairs, two bathrobes, two sets of towels, etc.

Travel Tips for a romantic holiday in Botswana

Traveling as a couple through Botswana can be a bonding and challenging experience for those who choose to self-drive. There is room for a pilot and co-pilot, a navigator and a music maestro, a relief driver for long distances, and two people to set up camp, cook, and clean.

Sunset on a Botswana honeymoon

Traveling as a couple in Botswana can be romantic, but it can also be remote. It’s essential to ensure that each person is informed about the destination with regards to navigation, emergency details, knowledge of the animals, and possible risks so that if one person falls ill, the other can take control.

Botswana’s zebra journey between Okavango Delta and Makgadikgadi Pans in search of fresh grazing is the second largest zebra migration in the world. Scattered herds of Botswana’s national animal can be seen throughout the Makgadikgadi palm belt and near the salt pans, where the mineral content of grasses is highest.

The zebra migration in Botswana is the second largest migration in the world

The nomadic habits of the Burchell’s Zebra in Botswana weren’t adequately understood until tracking devices were used by the conservation group Elephants Without Borders in 2012 . The scientists were amazed to discover that some zebras were trekking from as far away as the floodplains of Chobe near the Namibia–Botswana border, arriving in the Makgadikgadi area via Savute.

This migration is a round trip of 500km(310mi), the longest of all recorded large mammal migrations in Africa. The most popular and well-known location for viewing this beautiful spectacle is Meno a Kwena camp situated along the Boteti River on the western boundary of the Makgadikgadi Pans National Park .

Walking safaris in Botswana are geared towards adventurous travelers looking to supplement their safari experience by immersing themselves in nature. If you consider yourself adventurous and want to appreciate some of Botswana’s most pristine places on foot, then consider a walking holiday in this beautiful Southern African nation.

Tourist walking in the african savannah towards baobab tree

Botswana is mostly flat, which means the walking need not be very taxing, but an adventurous mind is key to making the most of the experience.

Walking safaris in Botswana means it’s possible to meet some of the larger wildlife in their natural habitat and see Botswana through a different lens. Walking is led by an experienced guide and done slowly and securely to avoid potentially dangerous situations.

There are three campsites within Chobe National Park , all unfenced and overlooking beautiful wild areas while still having basic ablution facilities (flush toilets and warm showers).

Ihaha (GPS: S 17 50.484?; E 24 52.748) is on the Chobe Riverfront and has ten spacious campsites. The large trees and expansive views over the river is what makes Ihaha a firm favorite for Botswana regulars.

In dry season there is a good chance you will have large herds of elephant and buffalo coming down to drink close to your camp.

Ilhaha camp site in Botswana

Savuti (GPS: S 18 34.014, E 24 03.905) is a campsite suited to hardy campers, with thick sand and limited shade. There are 14 campsites and the best sites are under the shady trees along the Savuti channel (you can request one of these when you make your booking). The barricaded ablution blocks are to ward off thirsty elephants trying to access water during dry season.

Savuti is known as one of the noisier choices of camp (both human and animal noise) but it’s also one of the most exciting, with a good chance of lions, elephants and hyenas wandering into camp at night.

Campers must be on guard against these dangers, especially with small children. It’s important to stay in your campsite after dark and drive rather than walk to the bathroom. There is also a small tuckshop with a limited selection of snacks.

Savuti in Botswana

Linyanti (GPS: S 18 16.228, E 23 56.163) is Chobe’s most peaceful and tranquil campsite with only five demarcated camping areas. The most popular sites are numbers one and two which have uninterrupted views over the Linyanti River.

Linyanti has a limited road network for the public but the scenic meandering riverfront drive is one of the most beautiful stretches in the park.

Linyanti is a more luxurious experience in terms of camping

Who is Travelling to Botswana with you?

  • Botswana Honeymoon Safari
  • Family Safari in Botswana
  • Solo Holiday in Botswana

What better way to celebrate love than on a Botswana honeymoon safari? Just the two of you in the African bush with a private candlelit dinner on your veranda and wildlife passing by. The country is home to some of the most diverse and pristine wilderness areas in Africa, with an abundance of wildlife and natural beauty that will leave you in awe.

The combination of luxury and adventure makes for an unforgettable honeymoon experience . The tranquility and serenity of being in the middle of the wilderness with your loved one is an experience that will stay with you forever.

When to go on a honeymoon Safari in Botswana

The most popular time to visit Botswana for a honeymoon would be during the dry season, from about May to October. Days are warmer with clear skies.

With less rain, the vegetation is not as lush, and it’s easier to spot wildlife. The animals tend to concentrate around the water sources, and this tends to become an action-packed area. However, with the popular season, the number of visitors to Botswana increases, camps can be full, and some sections of the park can feel a little crowded.

Hugging couple looking at elephant herd drinking from waterhole. Adventure and wildlife safari in Africa. People traveling concept.

Traveling during the wet season during a honeymoon in Botswana is a great time to travel if you don’t mind a rain shower or two. The parks are quieter and lodges offer great prices and value-adds.

Showers occur mainly in the afternoon and will have little impact on your Botswana safari vacation. The bush is lush and green. With water comes new life, and you’ll see plenty of newborns. This would also be the time for migrating birds to visit.

Where to travel on a honeymoon in Botswana

The most popular route traveled in Botswana during a safari would include visiting the Chobe National Park , the Okavango Delta, and the Kalahari. The Chobe National Park is known for its large herds of elephants and cruising along the Chobe River while spotting hippos and crocodiles.

Mokoro adventures in the Okavango Delta

The famous Victoria Falls is also only a short two-hour drive from the Chobe National Park and is a great day visit should you be staying a little longer. The sparkling waterways of the Okavango Delta are a must-see when on a Botswana honeymoon safari. The channels create mazes and paths through the wet bush, forming small islands.

These channels are great for exploring in a mokoro, and the islands are ideal for bush walks. The destination often forgotten is the Kalahari. Magical red sand is the home to many desert-adapted animals, including the Black-maned lions.

Accommodation on a honeymoon safari in Botswana

Botswana has you spoiled for choice when choosing your accommodation for your Botswana honeymoon safari and features the option of luxury tents with white linen and mosquito nets draping the beds.

Honeymooning Lodging in Botswana | Photo credits: andbeyond, Nxabega Tented Suite

Some even have an outdoor bath to enjoy after an early morning activity and watch the wildlife pass by as you unwind. There’s also an option to sleep under the African skies. Just wheel your bed out onto your deck and fall asleep with the night sounds of the African bush and the stars shining overhead.

Which activities to include on a honeymoon safari in Botswana

Just as you’re spoiled for choice by the different accommodation options in Botswana, you’ll also have a variety of activities to choose from while honeymooning In Botswana. Game drives, either early morning or afternoon, would be available in most areas throughout Botswana. You drive out as the sun rises, catching the wildlife as they start their day.

Some of the more unique ways of exploring Botswana would be cruising the Chobe River or exploring the waterways of the Okavango Delta in a mokoro. Cruise the Chobe river on your Botswana honeymoon as the cool breeze offers relief from the hot African Sun. Here you get to indulge in each other’s peaceful company as you watch elephants enjoy the refreshing waters and crocodiles lurking around.

safari botswana buchen

There is just something romantic about flying. Why not take to the sky on your Botswana safari honeymoon? Not only can you view the beautiful landscapes below as you board your scheduled flight between camps, but you can also spoil your loved one with a romantic early morning hot air balloon safari.

Wake up before the sun rises as you’re transported to the launch site. Here you get to see the beautiful colorful balloon fill up with hot air as you sip your coffee before jumping aboard. With the sun rising over the landscapes and the wildlife stretching as their day begins, this promises a fantastic start to your day.

Experience one of our Botswana family safaris to create lifelong memories. The variety of Botswana’s wildlife is incredible, from the elephant and zebra herds of Chobe National Park to the thriving Okavango Delta and the big cats of the Kalahari. And it’s not just the wildlife that makes Botswana perfect for family safaris .

Kids on safari watching hippos

There are family-friendly Botswana lodges and private guides for personalized safaris. Botswana has plenty of age-appropriate kids activities, with kids menus and babysitters.

Highlights on a Family Safari in Botswana

In the Kalahari and Makgadikgadi Pans, children will benefit from the demonstrative Bushman walks, which focus on animal tracking, spoor identification, insects, fire-making, traditional uses of plants, and making arrowheads out of stones. 

Families can enjoy safaris in Botswana

Chobe River is ideal for Botswana family safaris because boat cruises are a safe and comfortable way to get close to animals like elephants, hippos, and crocodiles.

For a family with older children, game drives in Moremi and Chobe can be exciting due to the plentiful animal encounters that are sure to be unforgettable.

Travel Tips on a Family Safari in Botswana

It is best to travel to Botswana as a family when the children are a bit older so that they can get the most out of the experience. Children must be older than eight to go on a game drive, while walking safaris require children to be at least 12 years old.

Guided safaris are ideal for family safaris

Wildlife is abundant in Botswana, but terrain can be challenging, and sometimes you might endure a long, bumpy ride to get the results, which children might not tolerate well.

Families traveling from abroad should seek out lodges that cater specifically to children, feature family-sized tents, special babysitting services, and kid-friendly bush walks and activities.

Botswana can be a refreshing, eye-opening, relaxing, and a somewhat spiritual experience for solo travelers; although most activities happen in a group, you’re never really alone. The Okavango Delta has several tiny camps , which would create the peaceful and intimate experience a solo safari traveler might prefer, especially if it is water-based and offers the serene activity of a mokoro excursion.

Solo Mokoro excursion in Botswana

Alternatively, solo safari travelers in Botswana looking to join a group would benefit significantly from an overland safari tour, which covers most of Botswana’s prime destinations.

Highlights of a solo safari in Botswana

Traveling solo in Botswana allows the opportunity to meet new people and create lasting relationships with like-minded individuals, particularly on longer-lasting tours or itineraries in Botswana , such as an overland trip, when a group stays together throughout the experience.

Tourist on a solo Botswana safari

It’s incredibly rewarding to explore a destination as untamed as Botswana on a journey of discovery, contemplation, peace-seeking, or renewal if the purpose of your solo trip is indeed to enjoy it alone.

Travel Tips for a solo safari in Botswana

Guests traveling alone (but not necessarily looking to be alone) will be at home in the Okavango Delta, Moremi, or Chobe National Park, where safari lodges offer between three and 15 bedrooms and cater to guests traveling as a single or a group. Meal times and activities are shared and occur at set times, so the experience is enjoyed as a group.

What You Need To Know

  • Why Go to Botswana?
  • Highlights of Botswana
  • Botswana vs South Africa
  • Botswana vs Namibia
  • Wildlife in Botswana
  • The Elephants of Botswana
  • The Marsh Lion Pride of Botswana
  • Botswana Travel Advice
  • Visa Requirements for Botswana
  • Travelling to Botswana
  • Public Transport in Botswana
  • Cash and Payments in Botswana
  • Is Botswana safe?
  • At Your Lodge in Botswana
  • Botswana Food and Tipping Practices
  • The Cultures of Botswana
  • Shopping and Markets in Botswana
  • Languages in Botswana
  • Packing List for Botswana
  • Vaccinations for Botswana
  • Medical Emergencies in Botswana
  • The Healthcare System in Botswana
  • Travel Insurance for Botswana
  • A Botswana Safari Cost
  • The People and Culture of the Okavango

Botswana’s primary attraction is its vast wilderness. From the endless palm-covered islands of the Okavango Delta , to the moonscape saltpans of the Makgadikgadi region, it’s the perfect destination for anyone seeking pristine, unfenced surroundings.

Botswana’s commitment to safeguarding its wildlife heritage is unparalleled in Africa. The country covers a total area of 581,730 sq km, and approximately 40% of this land falls within a wildlife-protected area.

These areas are a sanctuary for the world’s largest concentration of elephant, and a stronghold for other endangered large mammals such as the black rhinoceros, African wild dog, cheetah and lion.

Tourist takes picture from black rhino on luxury off-road vehicle at safari in Africa

For avian enthusiasts , there exists no better place in the world to view the Slaty Egret and Wattled Crane, and seeing the illusive Pels Fishing Owl for the first time has been known to bring bird-watchers to tears!

In 2014, Botswana consolidated its position as a conservation leader by banning commercial hunting, paving the way for former hunting areas to be transformed into photographic safari destinations .

The government’s decision to opt for a high-quality, low-impact tourism model means that safari-goers can generally avoid congested game drives, especially when staying in one of the many privately operated concessions, which commonly have their visitor density limited to around one guest per 50 sq km. These concessions, licensed out to top safari companies, boast some of the most luxurious yet eco-conscious lodges and camps in Africa .

Photo credits Khwai Leadwood Villa

In order to lease the land, lodge owners must show commitment to uplifting local communities by providing jobs for people in close proximity to concession boundaries. Today wildlife and tourism employs around 45% of adults in Botswana, making it the country’s’ second largest income earner after diamonds.

Travellers can feel secure in the knowledge that Botswana is one of Africa’s most stable and peaceful nations, with the continent’s longest continuous multi-party democracy and a steady economy.

Botswana is a safari destination that boasts outstanding wildlife density and variety, and it is wild and organic without fences and developed tourist facilities. In this sense, it attracts adventurous travellers who are passionate about nature and wildlife experiences and who are not nervous in the presence of wild animals.

safari botswana buchen

Keen photographers would benefit greatly from a Botswana holiday at different times of the year, as varying locations offer unique and interesting natural scenery, not to mention superb wildlife activity to capture.

The terrain in Botswana is rough with plenty of dust, thick sand, and seasonal flooding, so exploring the country by road – which includes long morning game drives in areas like Savuti – means packing an adventurous spirit and tolerance for the natural elements.

On the other hand, Botswana has some impeccable luxury lodge options , with exclusive airstrips, seamless service, world-class food, and supreme comfort, which bring extreme comfort to visitors willing to pay.

Botswana is easily sewn into an itinerary including Victoria Falls and the Kruger National Park , Zimbabwe’s Hwange and Mana Pools, Zambia’s South Luangwa, and Namibia’s Caprivi Strip; so travellers planning a southern Africa trip should consider including a safari in Botswana.

People who return for a Botswana holiday repeatedly give many reasons for their visits, and high on the list is the warmth and peace-loving nature of the local Setswana-speaking people, the incredible diversity of wildlife, exclusivity, and the large variety of safari activities on offer.

African Elephant grazing in the Okavango Delta marshlands in Botswana.

For a small country dominated by the dusty Kalahari Desert, a Botswana safari tour is truly unique in its available variety of activities. Activities in Botswana differ between seasons when landscapes alter dramatically, determined mainly by the natural flooding of rivers and annual rainfall.

The Chobe River in Botswana is a popular hot spot for tourist activities. Botswana safari operators offer fishing trips, specialized photographic safari boat cruises, game drives, and beautiful riverside camping. Chobe Game Lodge , the only lodge inside the Chobe Game Reserve, now boasts several electric and solar-powered safari boats, adding a new element of interest for the modern, eco-conscious traveler.

Savuti, to the west of the Chobe region, is famous for its mysterious and fascinating channel. It has a history of drying up unpredictably, influenced primarily by a series of shifting fault lines that lie deep below the earth’s surface, a continuance of the Great Rift Valley.

Yawning Hippopotamus in Water

The Makgadikgadi saltpans also offer a wide range of exciting activities that keep guests returning again and again. In dry season adventurous travelers can quad bike across the pans and sleep out under the Milky Way, which the Kalahari Bushmen call ‘the backbone of the sky’.

In the green season, Africa’s second largest wildebeest migration unfolds alongside the Boteti River and is a magnificent spectacle, especially when viewed in dusty twilight hues.

The pristine, wild locations of Botswana’s camps and lodges make for an exhilarating Botswana safari, a perfect choice for those who treasure wild places. Safari-lovers speak of feeling a profound sense of freedom in Botswana’s wilderness that deepens with regular visits.

South Africa and Botswana are neighboring countries offering superb wildlife sightings, top-class camps, and lodges. Still, there are several differences to remember when choosing one safari destination over the other.

A safari in South Africa lacks the rugged remoteness of a Botswana safari. Still, private concessions like those in South Africa’s Sabi Sands are a reliable option for those eager to see a maximum amount of wildlife in a short time.

Unlike Botswana, South Africa’s game reserves are all fenced. This fencing limits the natural migration of animals within the ecosystem but results in a higher concentration of game, especially big cats.

Leopard in wildlife, Okavango Delta, Botswana, Africa

Botswana’s game viewing, while excellent, can be unpredictable at times, as animals migrate according to the seasons. South Africa has several private concessions that offer a very exclusive, intimate safari experience on par with Botswana’s. Still, these areas are much smaller, so guests do not get exposed to the same variety of habitats as on a Botswana safari.

South African campsites like those in the Kruger National Park tend to be crowded, especially during school holidays. South African game reserves are mostly accessible by car, and few require a 4×4 vehicle. In contrast, a 4×4 is absolutely necessary to negotiate the thick Kalahari sand tracks in many of Botswana’s wild areas.

Multiple people on a safari viewing an elephant in Pilanesberg National Park

Botswana, with its simpler infrastructure and small remote towns, has a charming ‘real African’ feel, while the plentiful shops in South Africa, even within the Kruger National Park, make stocking up on supplies very convenient.

A South African safari is generally the cheaper route, with more choices regarding mid-range accommodation options. On the other hand, Botswana only offers two options – camp or stay in a luxury lodge, and most luxury Botswana lodges are only reachable by light aircraft, so it’s essential to pack light.

Booking for a camping safari in Botswana must be done at least a year in advance as campsites are limited. In contrast, you’re far more likely to get away with last-minute bookings in South Africa, although booking ahead is always the wiser option.

Namibia is Botswana’s western neighbor, and the two countries share a large portion of the Kalahari Desert . Namibia doesn’t have Botswana’s water supply, making the latter far superior in terms of wildlife density.

The only slight exception is a narrow stretch of land that protrudes from Namibia’s northeast corner, known as the Caprivi Strip.

Being mainly desert, a safari in Namibia is not the right choice for those wanting to see the Big Five on their first safari experience.

gemsbok in the desert

Yet, it does offer the chance to see some unusual desert-adapted creatures like oryx, brown hyena, black rhino, and the famed desert elephants and desert lions.

Both countries are equally rugged and remote, with a low population density and a rich cultural heritage. Still, when it comes to spectacular landscapes, the immensity of Namibia’s panoramic views is hard to beat.

The wilds of Northern Botswana safeguard the largest elephant population in the world. Colossal breeding herds and large solitary bulls traverse the landscapes of Chobe National Park and Moremi Game Reserve. Kobe’s broad-leaved woodlands and riparian forests are home to the endemic Chobe bushbuck and other lesser-known antelope species like Puku, Sable, and Roan.

Sable antelope in Botswana

Chobe also boasts the highest bird species diversity in Botswana (468 species), including birds found nowhere else in the country like the Schalow’s and Purple-crested turacos, Trumpeter and Crowned hornbills, and the Crested guinea fowl.

Savute , in the western Chobe region, is notorious for its large lion prides, historically numbering up to 30-odd individuals. The unpredictability of Savuti’s water supply has been known to set the scene for dramatic feats of survival, including hibernating crocodiles and bold lions preying on adult elephants. Savuti’s vast savanna plains are perfect for enjoying sightings of Burchell’s zebra, Tsessebe, giraffe, and impala.

Lion strike an imposing presence in Moremi

Red lechwe splashing through the swamplands, hippopotamuses treading confidently out of the water at midday, and lions swimming across water channels are just a few of the spectacular wildlife sightings awaiting visitors to the Okavango Delta .

The Okavango comes into its own during winter when rainwater from the highlands of Angola fans out over temporary floodplains that teem with wildlife.

Impala Antelope jumping over a stream, Moremi, Okavango Delta

You could get lucky and spot a semi-aquatic Sitatunga antelope lurking in the papyrus – or a Pel’s Fishing Owl. These beautiful owls replace their daylight rivals, fish eagles, on perches overlooking deep lagoons where they fish for large bream.

The Okavango Delta is also the best place to see the near-endemic Slaty Egret, Wattled Crane, and special waterbirds such as the Lesser Jacana, White-backed Night Heron, and African skimmer.

The Pels fishing owl is a beautiful bird, found in the Okavango

The cracked and dry Makgadikgadi Salt Pans may not look like the environment that would attract a large wildlife population, but appearances can be deceiving.

Come summertime, these desolate arid expanses sprout juicy patches of grass, attracting springbok, wildebeest, and zebra, followed closely by lion and cheetah.

Along the Boteti River, you can watch Southern Africa’s largest zebra migration and, come nighttime, shine a spotlight on the secret lives of playful bat-eared foxes and shy brown hyenas.

A far cry from the photographic safari-enthusiasts that visit Chobe National Par k now, the park was once the haunt of large-scale ivory hunters. It’s hard to imagine that by the second half of the 19th-century ivory hunting was so rife that elephant deaths in Botswana lead to elephants almost being extinct in the Chobe area.

Today, “thlou” (the local Setswana term for elephant) are safe in Chobe National Park and during dry season make up the largest density of elephant population in the world (60 000 – 70 000) a number that has continued to rise in recent years due to poaching pressure in Botswana’s neighboring counties.

Elephant in the Chobe National Park

In essence, Botswana has become a safehouse for an increasing number of Southern Africa’s refugee elephants who no longer feel protected traversing through the borders of Namibia, Zimbabwe, Angola and Zambia.

Despite this, research by Elephants without Borders has shown that the elephants of northern Botswana still have the largest home ranges (24,828km2) recorded for African elephants and herds continue to move between western Zimbabwe, the Caprivi Strip in Namibia, southeast Angola and southwest Zambia.

However, Botswana’s elephant range has grown by 53% in the past 20 years and scientists worry about how this will affect the safety and livelihoods of local people living on the outskirts of wildlife and national park areas.

Initiatives like the Elephant and Bee Project that are building beehive fences to naturally repel elephants from raiding local farmer’s crops, are invaluable in protecting both humans and elephants.

Elephant are majestic creatures

As the largest terrestrial animal on earth, elephants eat up to 300kg of food a day and play a fundamental role in shaping their environment. The large herds of Chobe have put enormous pressure on the riverine forests lining the banks of the river, and it is common to see fallen tree trunks and battered broken branches tossed about the ground.

This would be devastating if it weren’t for the arrival of the summer rains when the elephants disperse, allowing the land much-needed time to recover. Elephant’s destructive habits have equally positive effects and are responsible for creating hideaways for smaller creatures and helping browsers, like kudu and bushbuck, to reach nutritious leaves.

Predators like lions and leopards often choose to hide their cubs in the safety of fallen logs, and elephant’s well-worn paths through the bush are used by many species. During drought, elephant’s dig for water in dry pans, helping to form waterholes that other animals can drink from.

Elephant herds are plentiful in Botswana

While Chobe’s waterfront is the place to see large family herds, Savute is known as the domain of the large elephant bull. These lonely tusked giants float over the horizon or swagger around the dusty peripheries of small waterholes, drinking and moving off again. Chobe really is a “Land of Giants’ ‘, an ultimate destination for elephant-lovers.

Throughout Africa, elephants are not thought of as lion prey, with only three exceptions; the pride manages to separate a small calf from its mother (a rare occurrence), an elephant is very sick and weak, or the lion belongs to Savuti’s notorious Marsh Pride.

This fearless pride of lions, which once numbered 30 +, killed 74 elephants during a three year period (1993 – 1996), a phenomenon recorded by filmmakers Beverly and Dereck Joubert.

The Joubert’s film, Ultimate Enemies (National Geographic) tells the story, as well as the more recent Planet Earth Series: Great Plains (BBC). This outrageously risqué behavior on the part of the lions happens mainly between August and November, peaking in October.

An aerial view of a pride of lion

According to scientist Richard John Powder, the lions may be reverting to a role they once had during the Pleistocene era as hunters of megaherbivores.

The behavior could also be rooted in Savuti’s long history of drought periods where near-starved elephants were easy to bring down, helping the lions hone their elephant-killing tactics.

The introduction of artificial waterholes could have also played a role by encouraging elephants to become permanent residents (rather than migrating to other regions), and so readily available to feed unusually large lion prides. Today, the lion prides of Chobe are more fragmented and lions prey on elephant less frequently, but the legacy remains.

It’s good to know that Botswana’s Wildlife Reserves and National Parks are not fenced, so it’s possible that wandering wildlife and domestic animals will wander onto the main roads and in and around towns.

Important Botswana travel advice is that public bathrooms on a Botswana safari are mostly basic and might lack items such as toilet paper and hand soap. If you’re traveling through the country by road and exploring the parks on a self-drive basis, it’s wise to pack bathroom essentials.

It’s not permitted to leave your vehicle inside the parks unless you’re at a designated stretch point or picnic spot. It’s important to note that even those areas aren’t protected from roaming wildlife, so you should remain vigilant when walking around campsites, stretch points, and ablution blocks.

Botswana's national parks and reserves aren't fenced

When entering a national park as an independent traveler (i.e., without a guide), some advice would be to have adequate cash to pay park fees. These include entrance fees per person and vehicle fees per day. In addition, you’ll need a printed voucher indicating that accommodation/campsite has been booked in your name.

Part of the beauty of Botswana’s wild areas is that they remain that way and have not been tampered with. Lodges and camps in Botswana are environmentally friendly and have a low impact on the surroundings. Some are so lightweight that they can pack up and close during seasonal floods in the Delta and reopen in April until October.

Campsites in the parks are remote and can be the best part of a day’s drive away from a town. Packing camping essentials such as fuel, water, food, ice, and firewood must be considered before embarking on your journey.

There are only a handful of countries whose residents require tourist visas to enter Botswana (you can find this list here). At the same time, every traveler must ensure that they hold valid, permanent passports with at least three blank pages remaining.

Most tourists in Botswana come from the United States, second-most is the United Kingdom, and third is Germany. Visitors from these countries do not need visas for 90 days, after which they can get an extension from immigration. Emergency or temporary passports aren’t accepted without an accompanying visa.

Those traveling with minors (children under 18) must provide a certified copy of the minor’s unabridged birth certificate and their valid, permanent passport to gain access to Botswana. If the minor travels without one or both of their parents, an affidavit from absent parent/s consenting to their child’s travel is required.

The easiest and fastest way to travel to Botswana for safari is a connecting flight from Johannesburg International Airport (O.R Tambo) in South Africa. However, connecting flights from Cape Town and Windhoek (Namibia) are also available. Currently, there are no international carriers that fly directly to Maun Airport.

Transport on a Botswana safari is relatively efficient. Getting to your lodge or destination is as easy as jumping on an air shuttle service or a safari vehicle. It’s really up to you, based on your requirements, time, and budget. Fly or be driven. Each option comes at a cost, private air charters being the most expensive, while guided road transfers are more affordable. It’s also worth noting that some more remote camps and lodges are only accessible via aircraft or boat.

Kasane International Airport

The best way to get to Botswana is to fly to Maun or Kasane. These two towns have international airports in northern Botswana, close to popular national parks and main roads. These airports facilitate the arrivals and departures of domestic flights to airstrips in the Okavango Delta, Moremi Game Reserve, and Central Kalahari. Self-driving travelers can easily access Botswana through the border posts from neighboring countries. Time allowances must be made for the time spent on the road.

Maun Airport

Maun International Airport is the central hub for all flights entering Botswana as a safari destination. The airport is located within the town itself.

Gaborone Airport

Sir Seretse Khama International Airport is located just 10km/6mi north of Gaborone, offering daily one-hour flights from Johannesburg and three weekly two-hour flights from Harare.

Kasane Airport

Kasane International Airport is located around four kilometers / two and a half miles south of the town of Kasane and lies just a short distance from the Chobe National Park.

Paved highways connect Botswana’s major towns. Most are in good condition, but some sections are badly potholed. You’ll need to keep an eye out for these, as well as for both wild and domesticated animals. Stray cattle and donkeys are common near villages. Donkeys can be particularly dangerous. They tend to stand in the middle of the road, refusing to move and forcing cars to stop and drive around them.

Botswana’s traffic police are active on the highways and often set up radar speed traps after villages and vet fences. Don’t be tempted to accelerate back to highway speeds until you see the appropriate signage.

Away from the highways, road conditions deteriorate rapidly. There’s not much in the way of secondary roads, and you can go from tarmac to thick sand in a few hundred meters. Especially sandy sections include the access roads around Mabuasehube Game Reserve and the Kgalagadi, the Xade Gate road into the Central Kalahari, the main entrance road into Nxai Pan National Park, the road north of Maun to Moremi, and pretty much everything from the Savuti region to the Chobe River.

elephant strolling on the highway between the cars

An unusual route, and perhaps the sandiest of all, is the north-south track between Khutse Game Reserve and the Central Kalahari. It’s about 230km/142mi of deep sand from Khutse to Xade Gate and shouldn’t be attempted lightly.

Botswana is well equipped for self-drivers , but there are long distances between parks, lodges, campsites, and towns, so traveling by road can be time-consuming. Fortunately, much of northern Botswana is land dedicated to conservation. Even when driving outside the national parks, wildlife roams free, so the opportunities to see animals en route between locations are abundant.

Fly-in safari goers will save plenty of time as they use Botswana’s many scheduled flights and air transfers, but this method of travel is more expensive. Road transfers from the major towns offer a more affordable way to get from A to B and, although more time-consuming, allow more time for game spotting.

The currency in Botswana is Pula, a Tswana word meaning “rain”. Pula is used throughout the country and is the accepted form of payment in restaurants, shops, hotels, or lodges. Most places in Maun, Kasane, Francistown, Gaborone, and other major towns accept international bank cards.

ATMs are located in the towns mentioned above, and you can withdraw cash before heading into the parks and reserves, where there are unlikely to be card facilities. Foreign currency is often accepted as a tip or gratuity to helpful staff and safari guides, but not as payment for something in commercial facilities. The current exchange rate is 1 BP = 0,10 USD.

Botswana is considered one of the safest countries in Africa to travel in. Tourism is welcomed and valued by the locals in general, as it brings opportunities and income. There is no reason for you to feel unsafe anywhere in Botswana, as there have been very few reported incidents of petty theft or other opportunistic crimes.

It’s always a good idea for you to know where your valuable items are stored while traveling and not to neglect common sense when safeguarding your possessions. The most likely place an incident would occur would be near a town and not in the national parks, so the areas to remain vigilant would be at petrol stations or parking lots where opportunists might linger.

Visitors to Botswana should never forget that they are traveling to a country that cherishes its natural surroundings and pays enormous attention to conservation and the environment’s health. Botswana’s land is primarily dedicated to wildlife and sustaining a small population of people, so environmental impact is low.

It’s essential to respect the effort gone to protect the wild areas and to maintain a sustainable tourism infrastructure. Remember that waste disposal, water, electricity usage, and sewage systems are likely sensitive. A good rule when staying in lodges is to conserve water, e.g. short showers, and reusing towels and sheets.

A great idea when visiting Botswana for safari is to learn a few words or greeting terms in the local language, Setswana. To be able to greet your guide, cashier, or driver in their local language is an effortless way to show interest and appreciation for Botswana’s culture and customs.

Safari lodges and camps in Botswana serve an array of internationally recognized food for breakfast, lunch, and dinner. Dietary requirements can be catered for with ease when given prior notice. Beef and chicken are popular meats eaten locally and served in many ways in restaurants and the dining rooms at lodges, so travelers can expect to enjoy foods they know when being catered for in the country.

Local dishes include beef seswaa, bogobe (pap), and morogo, which are eaten throughout Botswana and surrounding countries. Beef seswaa is slow-cooked beef (usually filet), which is then shredded and cooked as a pot stew with an onion and pepper gravy.

Bogobe is ground cornmeal boiled with water and salt until it becomes a porridge-like consistency. It’s served as the starch with meat and veg. Bogobe is often accompanied by a tomato and onion relish or cooked spinach in a dish known as morogo.

Beef seswaa, bogobe (pap), and morogo. A delicious local meal served in Botswana.

Meat is also traditionally grilled on open coals, as are large, white mielies (corn on the cob), which are farmed on a small, subsistence level.

These are often seen on the roadside, where vendors are set up with grills serving the passing local public. The local beer is a St. Louis, and it goes down a treat!

White mielies (corn) are a Botswana staple

Tipping practice in Botswana can be compared to anywhere else in Africa. A general guideline for tipping servers at restaurants is to add 10% of your bill as a gratuity if you feel you’ve received a good standard of service. As always, this amount is at the client’s discretion.

When tipping your Botswana safari guide, a standardized approach is to tip an amount of 10% of the daily rate per person per day and pay it directly to your guide at the end of the stay.

It’s encouraged to show gratitude after an excellent safari experience by tipping well in either Pula, or the guest’s home currency.

Housekeeping and kitchen staff, backup guides, mokoro pollers, and boat drivers, are also eligible for tips, and there is often a deposit box for staff tips. Individual tips should be paid to the individuals themselves.

Travelers greeting local Batswana will notice that the spoken “dumela rra/mma” (man/woman) is accompanied by a handshake with the right hand while the left-hand moves to grasp your right forearm gently. This greeting is commonly shared between locals, and tourists are welcome to participate in the tradition.

Many people from Botswana (and indeed southern Africa) belong to a religion called Zionism, which is based on a fusion of African traditions and the Christian faith. Members of the ZCC (Zion Christian Church), by religious guidance, do not eat pork, drink alcohol, or consume drugs, while some solely consume the white meat of chicken and fish, eradicating red meat from their diets altogether.

Zionists can be recognized by some items of clothing, which on days of worship consist mostly of yellow and green. At the same time, most members often wear a lapel or badge of green cloth adorned with a metal badge indicating which branch of the church they belong to. Men also wear hats to show their religious affiliation.

Another thing to note is that it’s not in alignment with the Botswana custom to wash other peoples’ undergarments, and guests at lodges will notice that laundry service is provided for all clothing items, excluding personal underwear.

Every major town in Botswana has at least one shopping centre or mall, which includes major supermarkets, liquor stores, clothing, furniture, homeware, and electronic shops, in addition to local banks and ATMs. In terms of gift stores and curio shops, some safari lodges stock their own locally made woven baskets, jewellery, wooden carvings and bowls, and these items are usually sourced from communities in the area.

A number of safari operators and lodges offer village visits as an opportunity to meet local people, learn about their culture, and understand their way of life, and these are often opportunities for travellers to purchase some locally crafted items. Be warned, these local markets are expensive and it is likely that similar items can be sourced in gift shops in Maun or Kasane at a cheaper price.

The national language of Botswana is Setswana, spoken by the Tswana people in the region. English is recognized as a second official language and is spoken widely throughout the country.

People in remote and rural areas that tourists do not frequently visit are not likely to speak English well, so some basic Setswana will go a long way in communicating here.

There are also about 20 unofficial dialects spoken by people belonging to less dominant tribal groups, such as Hambukushu, Seyei, Herero, and Kalanga, while only about five of the original 13 Bushman dialects remain, known collectively as SeSarwa.

Local Culture in Botswana

“Pula” is a word that is revered in Botswana. Not only does it appear on the national coat of arms, but it embraces other meanings too. In its literal sense, it means ‘let there be rain’ – in a primarily semi-arid country, rainfall is precious and considered a blessed event.

The local currency is Pula, and it’s also the country’s motto and rallying cry (in this context it means ‘shield’) and is shouted out by crowds at football matches whenever the national team, ‘The Zebras’, scores a goal.

A holiday in Botswana means being exposed to the elements daily, as game drives, bush walks, mokoro cruises, horseback safaris , and other outdoor activities take guests into the wild. No matter the time of year, it is important to pack lightweight, neutral-colored clothing, closed shoes, sunblock, and other sun protection.

During summer, when it rains and is very warm, it’s essential to take precautions against mosquitoes, whether that means being on prescribed malaria prophylaxis or merely using mosquito repellent every day.

Camping is a great option in Botswana

During the rainy season, it’s also advised to bring waterproof gear, such as a raincoat, poncho, or water-resistant jacket. A water-resistant bag for camera gear and other equipment will be handy in the rain. Still, most safari lodges utilize game vehicles with canvas roofs and drop-down sides to protect guests against unexpected rainfall. Most lodges also provide waterproof ponchos.

In winter, temperatures can drop to under 10°C/50°F, making morning game drives quite chilly. Packing a warm jacket, scarf, and beanie is highly recommended. In places like the Kalahari, desert temperatures are extreme, and in winter it can get icy, so travelers should ensure they’re well prepared for the cold.

Suggested items to pack in general include:

  • Basic medical aid, such as:
  • Antihistamine
  • Pain killers
  • Any prescribed medication you may require

Outdoor gadgets that come in handy include:

  • A head torch or handheld torch
  • A power bank or solar charger for mobile phones and camera batteries

There are no mandatory vaccinations required for entering Botswana. Still, it’s essential to consider the surrounding countries that might require vaccinations if travelers will be crossing borders during their stay, e.g. Victoria Falls holiday.

Zambia requires vaccination against Yellow Fever. Regarding hepatitis and tetanus, vaccinations aren’t needed, but travelers are encouraged to consult their doctors for advice in these areas.

The same applies to malaria prophylaxis. It’s not essential, but it’s advised that visitors get an opinion from their doctors. It’s suggested that travelers spending time in high-risk areas (towns and areas with a high human density) consult their doctors for a prescription of Coartem to treat malaria.

Botswana has some remote and far-away places. Many of these places are likely to be where tourists are headed because they contain some of the country’s best wildlife and most pristine natural areas. There are a couple of highly rated emergency response teams equipped for both land and air rescue in Botswana.

If travelers are on a guided safari tour in Botswana , they will have their local guide to rely on, who will have first aid qualifications and a medical response protocol to follow in an emergency.

Safari lodges and camps are equipped with satellite telephones, Wi-Fi, or an accessible mobile phone network to contact the necessary medical facilities in an emergency.

Elephant mother and baby

If travelers have opted for the self-drive route, it’s advisable to have purchased a SIM card for one of Botswana’s mobile networks or to use international roaming in order to make calls domestically.

In an emergency, Medical Rescue International (MRI) is one of the country’s leading ground and aerial ambulance response services and is available all day, every day and can be contacted on the following numbers: 992 (toll-free from any local network) or +267 3901601 (international).

Patients can request to be flown to Milpark Trauma Hospital in Johannesburg, South Africa. If the patient, or anyone else in the party, cannot speak, the MRI responders will transfer the patient to the hospital appropriate for their medical condition. Milpark Trauma Hospital is the region’s best and most frequently used hospital.

The public sector dominates the healthcare system in Botswana – operating most of the care facilities. However, there is a considerable gap between public and private medical provisions, and you’re advised to purchase private health insurance for the trip to Botswana.

As in much of Africa, the public healthcare system mainly serves a lower-income bracket, while ex-pats and those who can afford it use the private healthcare system.

It’s always recommended that visitors use travel insurance and medical aid services supplied by their providers at home, which will ensure that they can benefit from treatment in the private healthcare facilities in Botswana. Citizens of Botswana pay a very small fee for healthcare in public hospitals and mobile clinics, as the healthcare they receive is mainly subsidized.

Private healthcare providers are geared towards catering to tourism and provide a good service. Medical Rescue International and Okavango Air Rescue are recommended medical services for tourists in Botswana.

Comprehensive insurance is encouraged for anyone traveling through Botswana or other African countries. It’s no secret that these adventures of a lifetime come with their associated risks, i.e. wild animals, challenging terrain and road conditions, and poor public health services.

Taking out travel and medical insurance covering specific area-related medical emergencies, or unexpected incidents, is the safest and most recommended way to go.

Before embarking on a Botswana tour , you should ensure you have comprehensive medical cover for specific activities you might like to partake in while on holiday. For example, bush walking, game viewing, horseback riding , bungee jumping, etc.

You should be covered for any incidents relating to wild animals and have authorization for a medical evacuation to take the necessary measures in an emergency in a remote area. Taking out insurance to protect cash, camera equipment, and baggage is also advisable and should fall under comprehensive cover.

It is recommended that, before departure, travelers have a copy of their medical and travel insurance policies and an emergency phone number to call, so that this information is available when fellow travelers, guides, lodge staff, or emergency personnel might need it.

You should also take out travel insurance to cover yourself in case of an unexpected change in holiday itinerary or an unforeseen cancellation. Ensure that you have access to money via credit card or an electronic funds transfer, as it’s likely that payment for medical treatment will have to be paid upfront and then claimed back from the insurance company later.

Botswana is an expensive safari holiday destination compared to the neighboring safari country, South Africa. Lodges and camps charge high prices, and additional activities, private guides, exclusive use of lodges, or game vehicles come at a fair price too.

Domestic flights and national park fees add to costs. That being said, the value of the experience is superior given the pristine wilderness that Botswana possesses and the level of expertise with which staff runs the lodge operations.

A great holiday in Botswana would last about a week to ten days, giving travelers enough time to see at least two of the country’s best natural areas, perhaps the Okavango Delta, Savuti Marsh, and Chobe River.

Booking to visit during peak season would also ensure the best wildlife experience and the most comfortable weather conditions. However, this would also up the price of the visit. A week-long holiday visiting the three destinations mentioned here (during peak season) could cost about US$8000 per person.

Another highlight of Botswana is its people. Botswana is a mesh of many different tribes with unique origins and beliefs. The dominant group is Tswana (79%) whose language Setswana (or Tswana) is the spoken by 90 % of Batswana.

The Tswana have a deeply entrenched system of chieftainship and a rich cultural heritage rooted in deep traditional values, reflected in proverbs such as “we are people because of other people”.

The San Bushmen have a rich heritage in Botswana

The first inhabitants of Botswana were the Basarwa (3%) (Often know as San Bushmen). The traditional Basarwa lifestyle of hunter-gathering has sadly diminished over the years with the historic homelands of the Basarwa replaced by National Parks and towns.

Basarwa people, who can further be divided into several groups with distinct ‘click’ languages, are no longer able to live the traditional nomadic life of their ancestors. Walking with bushmen is a fascinating activity that attracts visitors over and again to regions like the Central Kalahari and the Makgadikgadi salt pans.

The baYei are another very interesting tribal group who arrived in the Okavango region from the Barostse floodlands of the Zambezi and lived in harmony with the Basarwa (known as Bukakhwe in the area). The baYei introduced the ‘mokoro’ dugout canoe, still used widely today as a way of transport and for fishing along the delta channels from village to village.

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Wir zeigen Ihnen Afrika.

Botswana safaris.

Afrikas bestgehütetes Geheimnis: In Botswana werden Ihnen viele Tiere begegnen, aber nur wenige Touristen. Die Regierung lässt Tourismus nur begrenzt und zu relativ hohen Preisen zu. Das Land zwischen Okavango und Kalahari ist traditioneller Schwerpunkt im Reiseprogramm von Outback Africa. Dabei reicht das Angebot von rustikalem Wildnis­Camping bis zu exklusiven Lodges.

Wählen Sie Ihren Safari-Typ:

Individuelle Safariabenteuer nach Wunsch! Sie bestimmen, wohin es geht und wie lange sie bleiben möchten. Wer möchte, kann von einer Station zur anderen fliegen. 

Abenteuer pur! Sie reisen in einer kleinen Gruppe mit erfahrenem Guide und erleben Botswanas Wildnis hautnah im Zelt. Lagerfeuerromantik und Sternenhimmel gibts gratis dazu. 

Das Camp mit stehhohen Zelten und Betten wird von einer Begleitmannschaft an herrlichen Plätzen vorab errichtet. Ein Koch fährt mit. Camping mit Komfort und Stil.

Abenteuerliche Rundreisen in Botswanas tierreicher Wildnis mit ein bisschen Komfort in festen, aber rustikalen Unterkünften. 

Etwas mehr Komfort, aber nicht weniger Abenteuer. Bei diesen Reisen genießen Sie nicht nur die Wildnis Botswanas, sondern auch schöne Lodges.

4 Angebote für Privatreisen und Flugsafaris

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Kundenmeinungen

Dies war zwar nicht unsere 1. Afrikareise, jedoch unsere erste Reise mit Outback-Africa und somit kennen wir auch manchen Unterschied. Wir möchten Ihnen daher aufs Allerherzlichste für diesem wahrgewordenen Urlaubstraum danken: vom ersten Kontakt über die vielen Telefonate und Mails – für Ihre Unterstützung bei organisatorischen Fragen – für Ihre ständige Erreichbarkeit und Ihre Geduld – bis hin zu den vorzüglichen, umfangreichen Reiseunterlagen und wertvollen Tipps sowie letztlich auch für die (zum Glück nicht benötigten) Kontakte für Eventualfälle. Es hat einfach alles rundum gepasst.

Wir haben uns in der gesamten Planungsphase sehr wohl und während der kompletten Reise bestens aufgehoben und betreut gefühlt. Für uns steht eines definitiv fest: Wenn Afrika, dann nur noch mit Outback-Africa!

Alexandra und Adi Krones, Augsburg, 08.12.2022

Reise-Infos Botswana

Reiseziele und nationalparks.

Okavango-Delta Moremi Game Reserve Chobe Nationalpark Khwai Region Boteti River Nxai Pan Salzpfanne Makgadikgadi Nationalpark und Salzpfannen Linyanti-Wildreservat Savuti Wildreservat Kwando Wildschutzgebiet Santawani Konzession Selinda Game Reserve Chief’s Island Chitabe Island Jao Schutzgebiet Zentralkalahari

Klima und beste Reisezeit

Botswana ist ein ganzjähriges Reiseziel. Die Regenzeit (Sommer) dauert von November bis April. Die Tagestemperaturen erreichen dann bis über 40 Grad Celsius. Im Winter (Mai bis September) klettert das Thermometer tagsüber auf 25 bis 30 Grad.

Telefon und Internet

Die Landesvorwahl aus Deutschland nach Botswana ist 00267. In den größeren Städte und den Hotels gibt es Internetanschlüsse und -cafés.

Botswana ist der mitteleuropäischen Zeit (MEZ) um eine Stunde voraus. Bei mitteleuropäischer Sommerzeit gilt in Botswana die gleiche Uhrzeit wie in Deutschland.

Die Landeswährung ist Pula. Sie ist in Wechselstuben und an Geldautomaten im Land erhältlich. Kreditkarten werden nur in größeren Orten und bei Safarifirmen akzeptiert,

Die meisten Verbindungen gehen via Johannesburg nach Maun oder Kasane. Alternativ können Sie zu den nicht weit von der Grenze Botswanas gelegenen Flughäfen Victoria Falls (Simbabwe) und Livingstone (Sambia) anreisen. Direkte Flugverbindungen von Deutschland nach Botswana gibt es nicht.

Voraussetzung ist ein Reisepass, der noch ein halbes Jahr über das geplante Reiseende hinaus gültig ist. Deutsche, Österreicher und Schweizer benötigen kein Visum. Im Pass müssen noch mindestens zwei freie Seiten für Einreisevermerke/Stempel vorhanden sein.

Land und Leute

Die Republic of Botswana hat eine Fläche von rund 581.730 Quadratkiloemter rund zwei Millionen Einwohner. Rund die Hälfte der Einwohner hat eine traditionelle örtliche Glaubensrichtung, die meisten anderen sind Christen.

Wir zeigen Ihnen Afrika.

Outback Africa wurde gegründet, weil wir unsere Begeisterung für Afrika mit möglichst vielen Menschen teilen wollen.

Outback Africa wurde gegründet, weil wir selbst von Safaris begeistert sind und Afrika im Herzen tragen. Diese Begeisterung möchten wir mit Ihnen teilen.

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Safari-Finder starten

Osten oder Süden Afrikas? Camping oder Lodge? Finden Sie in 6 Schritten heraus, welche Safari zu Ihnen passt:

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Reiseart wählen

Von Lagerfeuerromantik bis Luxushotel: Bei Outback Africa bestimmen Sie, wie Sie Afrika erleben:

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Über uns

Outback Africa wurde gegründet, weil wir unsere Begeisterung für Afrika-Safaris mit soviel Menschen wie möglich teilen wollen.

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Safari Rustikal

Abenteuerliche Kleingruppenreisen. Oft mit Zelt, Schlafsack und gemeinsamem Kochen am Lagerfeuer. Natur hautnah.

Safari Rustikal

Safari Komfortabel

Hotels, feste Lodges oder große Hauszelte – Sie wohnen immer bequem, mit Restaurant und Bar und teils Swimmingpool.

Safari Komfortabel

Safari Individuell

Diese Reisen werden für Sie maßgeschneidert. Entweder haben Sie Ihren eigenen Fahrer oder Sie fliegen zu kleinen Lodges und Camps.

Safari Individuell

Safari und Baden

Kombinieren Sie intensive Tierbeobachtungen in Ostafrikas Nationalparks mit einem erholsamen Strandurlaub.

Safari und Baden

Lassen Sie uns reden.

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Wir rufen Sie zurück

Jede Reise beginnt mit einem ersten Schritt. In unserem Fall mit einem ersten Gespräch. Dafür nehmen wir uns gern Zeit und reservieren einen Termin Ihrer Wahl für Sie.

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Secluded Botswana Safari

Botswana explorer, botswana: kalahari, the delta & beyond, family botswana safari.

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Botswana & namibia photo expedition.

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Island Safaris

An Oasis in Maun

A lush bush setting overlooking the river.

Located on the banks of the Thamalakane River, Island Safari Lodge is a cool and welcoming oasis in the heart of Maun. Shaded under a huge canopy of large trees, the lodge overlooks the river and floodplain beyond.

Island Safari Lodge is set on a 300 acre private island reserve, just 10 km from Maun Airport. The protected reserve has several walking trails running through the bush, perfect for a nature walk.

Relax by one of the two swimming pools or head to the restaurant and bar for the river view.

With a long history dating back to 1973, Island Safari Lodge has a rich and famous heritage and is a household name in Maun.

"Relaxing and convenient setting on the banks of a picturesque river. A great experience for a reasonable price with one of the best settings around Maun."

Comfortable & Cool Accommodation

Enjoy comfortable chalets and rooms nestled in a lush garden or set up camp in the spacious campsite , shaded by large leafy trees.

Island Safari Lodge Heritage chalet

Enjoy comfortable accommodation nestled in a lush garden and relaxing dining with river views.

Camper at Island Safari Lodge campsite

Set up camp in a spacious campsite, nestled under a shady canopy with its own large swimming pool.

Great Value, More to Do

Boat speeding down the Thamalakane River

Boat Cruises

Enjoy a relaxing boat cruise viewing the diverse aquatic and bird life.

Mokoro excursion from above

Mokoro Excursions

Glide through the Okavango Delta in a traditional dugout canoe.

Leopard

Exciting day excursions bring you close to nature in lush wildlife areas.

Cyclists on island trail

Island Trails

Explore the 300 acre island reserve along three bush trails.

Shongololo activity

Guided drives through the island in an open go-cart type vehicle.

Exciting Mobile Safaris Into the Wild of Botswana

Island Mobile Safaris offers exciting excursions and mobile safaris into the wild of botswana.

Enjoy thrilling day trips to the Okavango and Moremi by boat, mokoro and vehicle.

Immerse yourself in the African bush on a mobile safari, the ultimate way to experience the natural grandeur of Botswana.

Featured Mobile Safaris

Moremi heritage safari, 11 day adventurer safari, okavango encounter – mokoro excursion, adventurer safari – south bound.

Experience the breathtakingly vast and diverse ecosystems of Botswana.

From the immense Okavango Delta to the vastness of the world’s largest wildlife areas between Chobe National Park and the Central Kalahari, Botswana is a world of wonders.

The astoundingly prolific wildlife of Botswana makes it the premier safari destination in Africa.

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Empowering Botswana Through Tourism

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Destinations, explore our, choose from our, itineraries, witness the power of nature.

Established in 1982, Desert & Delta Safaris is one of the most successful safari operators in Botswana. Today we own nine premier safari properties all managed by local citizens. Our longstanding operation ensures that our properties are located within Botswana’s prime wildlife destinations famous for the diversity of experiences. At the heart of what we do as a company is offer genuine, warm hospitality delivered by local citizens empowered through our organisation.

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Our latest news

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Botswana’s “Holy Grail” Bird Nesting in Camp: The Pel’s Fishing Owl

Mark Muller, an expert birder from Botswana, asserts that among avid birders in Southern Africa, there's unanimous agreement on the most thrilling species to encounter: the Pel's Fishing Owl, and we’re lucky enough to have a resid...

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All Eyes on Savute Safari Lodge

Come 1 June 2024, we’ll be welcoming you to a newly built and furnished Savute Safari Lodge. What you’ll discover is a refreshed haven from which to experience the best of the Savuti region.

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Nxamaseri Island Lodge Unveils Refurbishment

Nxamaseri Island Lodge Unveils Refurbishment and Launches the First Wellness Spa in the Okavango Pan Handle Desert & Delta Safaris is delighted to announce the upcoming extensive refurbishment of Nxamaseri Island Lodge,...

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The foundation on which Desert & Delta Safaris is built, highlighting our core values in developing human potential and building a sustainable tourism model.

“ As Botswana's top safari operator, Desert & Delta Safaris is proud to hold several Travel & Tourism Accolades and enjoy a variety of press features. ”

Talk to us now: [email protected] +267 680 1494

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Dumela!

SAFARI IS IN OUR SOUL

Kickstart your day the wild way, experience the thrill of the hunt, enjoy a serene sunrise on the deck, pull in a feisty tiger, coffee below the branches, a bumper breakfast, meet the mighty mosi oa tunya, soak up the african sun, lunch beside the chobe river, take a time out siesta, all aboard, explore the elephant capital, evening game drive, dinner on the deck.

Decompress with an unforgettable feast PLAY NOW

BOTSWANA’S FINEST HERITAGE STAY

Established in 1959, decades of hosting adventurers in Kasane make Chobe Safari Lodge the best expedition base for Chobe River boat cruises, day trips to Victoria Falls and more!

Chobe Safari Lodge at a glance

OUR LODGE AT A GLANCE

Accommodation in chobe.

True to our legacy of pioneering hospitality, every airy room offers the utmost comfort and convenience: including Wi-Fi, satellite TV, mosquito covering, a mini-fridge, air-conditioning and a balcony. 

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A TRAVELLERS FAVOURITE FOR DECADES

Chobe national park activities.

12 THINGS TO DO IN CHOBE

Hippo in the Chobe River

Tel: (+267) 625 0383 / 2480 [email protected]

KWANDO SAFARIS CHOBE SAFARI LODGE NATA LODGE

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Botswana Safari

Botswana gilt als Heimat der Elefanten, die vor allem im Chobe Nationalpark zu finden sind. Ob das Moremi Reservat oder das weltberühmte Okavango Delta: Auf einer Botswana Safari hast du die Gelegenheit, neben den Dickhäutern zahlreiche Löwen, Flusspferde, Zebras und Antilopen ganz nah zu beobachten. Ob Campingtour oder Komfort-Safari: Unsere Reisen führen dich zu den schönsten Orten Botswanas.

Elefanten an einem Wasserloch bei Sonnenuntergang

Alle Safaris in Botswana

Du hast Fragen zu Botswana Reisen? Wir sind für dich da!

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Botswana Safari: Weitere Reisearten zum Entdecken

So vielfältig wie die Natur und Kultur in Botswana sind, so vielseitig sind auch die Möglichkeiten, deinen Safari-Urlaub in Botswana zu verbringen. Von Overlandtouren bis zu Selbstfahrertouren wird eine ganze Bandbreite je nach Vorstellungen, Budget und Abenteuerlust angeboten:

  • Overlandtour : Wer mit dem Overland-Truck durch das südliche Afrika reist, kommt auf seiner Overlandtour nicht an Botswana vorbei. Auf diesen internationalen Gruppenreisen führt die Reiseroute ins berühmte Okavango Delta, zum Chobe Nationalpark oder auch zum Khama Rhino Sanctuary ganz im Süden. Manche Overlandtouren verbinden erlebnisreiche Safaris mit einem Badeurlaub an den weißen Sandstränden Sansibars.
  • Mietwagenrundreise : Wenn du gerne individuell ohne Gruppe unterwegs sein möchtest und selbst am Steuer sitzen willst, dann kannst du auf einer Selbstfahrer-Rundreise die Naturschätze Botswanas entdecken. Eine gelungene Mischung aus Offroad-Abenteuer im 4x4 Geländewagen und Tierbeobachtungen in atemberaubender Landschaft.
  • Reisen für junge Leute : Begebe dich auf ein Abenteuer mit international zusammengewürfelten Mitreisenden und entdeckt gemeinsam die atemberaubende Natur Botswanas.

Overlandtouren

Mietwagenrundreisen

Reisen für junge Leute

Alle Reisen in Botswana

Das sagen unsere Kunden

Safari-reise botswana.

Botswana als „Afrikas bestgehütetes Geheimnis“ fasziniert mit großem Tierreichtum und beeindruckenden Landschaften. Mit Reisen nach Botswana erlebst du eine gelungene Mischung aus Natur, Kultur und Abenteuern:

  • Okavango Delta : Eines der größten Naturparadiese in Afrika ist das Okavango Delta. Es zählt zu den bekanntesten Sehenswürdigkeiten in Afrika . Hier befinden sich unter anderem das Moremi Reservat und das Savuti Schutzgebiet. Deren dort beheimatete Tierwelt kann in einer Fahrt im Einbaumboot namens Mokoro am besten entdeckt werden.
  • Chobe Nationalpark : Dieser Park ist das Elefantenmekka schlechthin. Mit seinem höchsten Vorkommen an Elefanten weltweit lädt er zu spektakulären Tierbeobachtungen ein. Auch eine Bootstour auf dem Chobe ist ein unvergessliches Erlebnis.
  • Das Volk der San : Ihre Traditionen haben sich die San bis heute bewahrt. Die Begegnung mit den Buschmännern bleibt lange im Gedächtnis.
  • Tsodilo Hills : Die Vorfahren der Buschmänner haben sich vor mehr als 20.000 Jahren mit Zeichnungen auf den Tsodilo Hills verewigt. Dieser, für die San heilige Ort, wurde zum UNESCO Weltkulturerbe erklärt.
  • Makgadikgadi Salzpfannen: Je nach Jahreszeit verändert sich das Bild der Salzpfannen: Von gleißendem Weiß in der Trockenzeit zu einem fruchtbaren Lebensraum in der Regenzeit.

Wann ist die beste Reisezeit für einen Botswana-Urlaub?

Für einen Urlaub in Botswana gelten die Monate der Trockenzeit von Mitte / Ende April bis Oktober als beste Reisezeit . Das subtropische Savannenklima und blauer Himmel laden zu einer Safari-Tour ein. Die ausgetrocknete Vegetation sorgt in dieser Zeit für beste Beobachtungsmöglichkeiten in freier Wildbahn und an den Wasserstellen. In der Regenzeit verwandelt sich das Land in ein üppiges Grün und gilt als Paradies für Vogelbeobachtungen. Allerdings sind viele Orte in der Regenzeit nur per Boot erreichbar.   

Botswana Safari - Lodges oder Camping?

Botswana Reisen lassen sich vielfältig gestalten : Egal, ob eine komfortable Lodge-Safari in festen Unterkünften oder eine abenteuerliche Camping-Safari unter freiem Sternenhimmel. Für jeden ist die passende Reiseart dabei, um aus seiner Safari-Reise in Botswana das Beste zu machen.

Botswana Safari mit Lodge buchen

Luxuriöse Lodges mit Restaurant und teilweise Swimmingpools laden in der weiten Landschaft Botswanas zu einem Safari-Erlebnis mit Komfort ein. Festinstallierte Safari-Zelte (tented camps) mit eigenem Badezimmer bieten nach spannenden Pirschfahrten Platz für Erholung. Oft an Wasserlöchern oder Lagunen gelegen, lassen sich Tierbeobachtungen mit einer Erfrischung in der Hand praktisch vor der (Zelt-) Tür fortsetzen .

Eine ganz besondere Art die Weite der Kalahari zu entdecken, ist eine exklusive Flug-Safari . Fantastische Aussichten aus dem Flugzeug auf den fernen Horizont, die Savanne oder auf die geschlungenen Kanäle des Okavango Deltas sind garantiert. Botswana hat für jeden Geldbeutel das passende Angebot.

Abenteuer-Safari mit Camping

Für eine abenteuerliche Safari-Reise in Botswana eignen sich Camping-Safaris besonders gut. Bei Übernachtungen in Zelten auf Campingplätzen oder in abgelegenen Buschcamps mitten in der Wildnis erlebst du Afrika hautnah. Gemeinsames Kochen und Auf- und Abbauen der Zelte gehören oft zu einer Camping-Safari , ebenso wie Lagerfeuerromantik und Fahrten im Safari-Truck.

Botswana: Safari buchen mit moja TRAVEL

Du bist interessiert an einer Botswana-Safari? moja TRAVEL bietet dir eine große Auswahl an Botswana-Reisen . Wähle zwischen Camping-, Lodge- oder Selbstfahrertouren – Für jeden Geschmack ist etwas dabei. Nutze eine der zahlreichen Kontaktmöglichkeiten auf unserer Webseite und für dein Botswana-Safari-Erlebnis.

Bereit für dein persönliches Abenteuer?

Dann warte nicht länger und buche deinen Botswana Urlaub, der dir Land und Leute näherbringen wird.

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FAQ - Häufig gestellte Fragen

Wann ist die beste reisezeit für botswana.

Grundsätzlich ist Botswana das ganze Jahr über zu bereisen. Dennoch gelten die Monate von April bis Oktober als die beste Reisezeit, da es in der Trockenzeit wenig Niederschlag gibt und die Temperaturen angenehm sind. Für Tierbeobachtungen eignet sich dieser Zeitraum besonders gut.

Wie komme ich nach Botswana?

Am besten und schnellsten erreichst du Botswana mit dem Flugzeug. Da es keine Direktverbindungen gibt, kommst du mit Umstiegen in Südafrika oder Namibia ins Land. Internationale Flüge landen in der Hauptstadt Gaborone oder den Städten Francistown, Kasane und Maun.

Welche Impfungen braucht man für Namibia und Botswana?

Für Auskünfte über Impfungen und Impfempfehlungen in Namibia und Botswana verweisen wir auf die Seite des Auswärtigen Amtes und auf die Hinweise und Empfehlungen der Deutschen Gesellschaft für Tropenmedizin, Reisemedizin und Globale Gesundheit (DTG).

Ist Botswana ein sicheres Reiseland?

Botswana gilt als sicheres Reiseland. Da sich die Lage und Situation ändern können, beachte bitte die stets aktuellen Hinweise und Empfehlungen des Auswärtigen Amtes . So bist du am besten vorbereitet.

BOOKINGS FOR XAKANAXA, SOUTH GATE & IHAHA

Kwalate safaris, maun, welcome to kwalate safaris campsites, your moremi game reserve entrance is through south gate and kwalate safaris maqwee campsite, maqwee (south gate), xakanaxa campsite is ideal to explore the moremi game reserve., xakanaxa campsite, ihaha campsite is on the chobe riverfront overlooking a hippo pool in the dry season., ihaha campsite, kwalate safaris activities, boat cruiser's.

Overnight trips are charged per day regardless of what time the boat is returned

e.g 1 night = 2 days charged.

3 nights = 3 days charged

Game Drives

  • 1. All trips include short breaks
  • 2. 3 hour morning game drive within the park starts at 06:30am till 10:00am
  • 3. 3 hour evening game drive within the park starts at 03:30pm till 06:30pm
  • 4. A full days game drive starts at 06:30am till 06:30pm with short breaks along the river for breakfast and lunch on own account.
  • 5. The vehicle is quipped with a fridge for your refreshements and perishables.

Our Clients

We had read many bad things about this site so we were quite anxious about staying there, The staff have clearly put in a great effort to improve things and must take a great pride in their work, The site and ablutions were really good. Hot water via solar was a bit hit & miss but bearing mind where you are it was a luxury to get a good clean shower at all. We certainly stayed in privately run sites that were no better than this !

Bedford, United Kingdom, 2022

Trip Advisor

We stayed 2 nights at South Gate. Animals were amazing, saw our first elephants even before the gate! Had nightly visits from a honey badger and he came close enough for the kids to get a good look! We had a nice stand, away from the bustle, but close enough to the bathrooms. Bathrooms well maintained, with solar geysers.

Centurion, South Africa. 2018

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Nambu Camp

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Camp Savuti epitomises the Botswana safari experience. From rewarding game viewing opportunities to the authentic, tented accommodation, this is the traditional way to spend time in one of Africa's most superb wildlife regions.

Camp Savuti is an understated camp beautifully decorated with African-inspired woodwork, cattle skin rugs, and arts and crafts that give the camp an authentic feel. There are 5 Meru-style tents built on elevated wooden decks overlooking the expansive Savuti marsh and channel area.

The Savuti region became famous for its exceptional game viewing opportunities, in particular for its lions that prey and hunt on elephants, which are found in abundance in the area. Award-winning documentaries have been shot in the Savuti area, cementing its reputation as a prime wildlife destination.

At Camp Savuti, guests will experience the thrill of getting close to top predators and watch them in their natural habitat. Activities include two guided game drives a day, which take place in the Savuti region.

From rewarding game viewing opportunities to the iconic Chobe accommodation, this is a sublime way to spend time in one of Africa's most superb wildlife regions.

Camp Savuti is located in the Savuti channel in a remote corner of the Chobe National Park and is surrounded by the Savuti Marsh area. Travelling to Camp Savuti involves a light air transfer from Maun or Kasane (depending on guests' itinerary) to the Savuti airstrip in Chobe National Park.

It is an approximate 40-minute flight from either of the towns and the view from the aircraft over the beautiful Chobe becomes a part of the experience.

Upon arrival at Savuti airstrip, guests will be met by a representative from Camp Savuti and driven the last 20–40-minute journey to the camp.

This road transfer could be considered more of a game drive, as it traverses through the Chobe National Park and there is a likely chance of spotting any number of animals before even arriving at camp.

Find helpful information about rates, when to travel, wildlife you can expect to see and details about the accommodation.

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If you have any questions or you'd like to speak to one of our expert travel consultants, please complete the following form.

The Sun Destinations portfolio is a growing representation of some of Southern Africa's most coveted, yet preserved wildlife areas; a careful selection of authentic bush camps and supreme safari lodges to be discovered. From riverside boma fires, to uninterrupted views of the stars, our lodges are selected based on their location, their owner-managed intimacy, and excellence in wildlife encounters. This is the home of marketing and reservations for a collection of Africa's Hidden Secrets.

African on Foot

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Capture Botswana's Natural Beauty on Our Signature Camping-Style Photography Safari

Venture deep into the fabled heart of Botswana's pristine, untouched wilderness. Sleep and sumptuously dine in one of Africa's most breathtaking unfenced nature reserves. Photograph giraffes, elephants, crocodiles, and zebras in their native habitat alongside an experienced native guide . . .

Some of our notable features

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Grab Your Camera and get Ready for the Adventure of a Lifetime!

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Most people don't realize that in the 1990s, Botswana adopted a sustainable tourism policy. This forward-thinking strategy ensures future generations will get to enjoy Botswana's precious and diverse ecosystems by promoting eco-tourism and cultural conservation.

Botswana has dedicated over 40% of its lands as national parks and conservation areas. These measures restrict the number of designated campsites, and only one safari company is allowed to use a campsite at any given time, subsequently limiting the number of tourists while at the same time giving guests an exclusive, intimate experience.

With an extremely low population of 2.5 million people, Botswana's environment-and it's wildlife-has retained its "natural" identity, making it ideal for photography safaris.

Our mission is to guide our guests on a once-in-a-lifetime photographic adventure by bringing them face-to-face with nature's most majestic and beautiful animals.

We take you to them . . .

Not in fenced-in parks. Not in zoos but in their home where they live, breathe, and raise their young.

You'll experience everything firsthand and capture it on film!

You won't be far above in a helicopter. You won't be tucked away in a lodge or a tour bus. You'll be next to our experienced native guides, cruising in the open air in our specially designed photography field vehicles. You'll have an unrestricted view as you click photo after photo.

You'll inhale the fertile African air. Sleep in spacious, comfortable tents complete with your own private ensuite bathroom. Our gourmet "in-field" chef will carefully prepare all your meals. You'll sip our local beers and choice imported wines as you stare up at the open, star-filled night sky.

What our adventurers say . . .

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"We were treated like royalty."

"Each day, we visited different areas of the bush & got to see some fantastic sights such as elephants, lions, giraffes & zebras up close (to mention but a few) in their natural environment."

  • C. Hegarty Cork, Ireland

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"We rarely saw other people."

"We were always the first on the scene of something exciting like wild dogs, a hunting lioness, mating hippo . . . I can't wait to travel with Wild for Game Safaris next year."

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"Being on safari in Botswana with my family was the experience of a lifetime."

"We all felt the magic of Africa and the wonder of waking in the bush to a day of adventure

-Jennifer Ternan, USA

From the Second You Get Off the Plane to the Second You Walk Back on, We're With You Every Step of the Way

All you need to do is pack your bags, camera, and sense of adventure. we'll do the rest..

To better understand your awaiting Botswana safari adventure, here's precisely how the eight days and seven nights that will recharge your soul and revitalize your spirit will unfold.

Or what we like to call The Delta Miracle Trip.

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The Delta Miracle Trip Itinerary

Day one: maun to moremi game reserve.

Your trip begins as you fly over herds of elephants while on your short charter flight from Maun International Airport north to Moremi Game Reserve.

We're there to meet you as you step off the plane into the game reserve, located inside the famous Okavango Delta, the largest inland delta in the world. There is more animal diversity in the Okavango Delta than in any other part of Botswana.

Days Two, Three, and Four: Xakanaxa & Moremi Game Reserve

You'll spend several days exploring the Moremi Game Reserve and camping in the Xakanaxa region on the northeastern side of the Moremi Game Reserve. The Reserve is considered to have some of the best wildlife viewing areas.

You'll quickly fall under the enchantment of the seasonal flood plains, large lagoons, wooded islands, riverine forests, and, most of all-the wildlife!

Keep your camera close at hand as Moremi is Africa's best game reserve for viewing the endangered African Wild Dog, not to mention at least four lion prides and multiple herds of elephants. Lechwe antelopes are also commonly found in the area.

Day five: Xakanaxa to Khwai

The fifth day is a day filled with adventure! Following an early morning breakfast, you'll take a slow drive through Moremi Game Reserve northeast towards the Khwai Community Area, complete with an open-air picnic.

The day's journey follows the Manuchira Channel, which is known as the Khwai River at its easternmost extremity. The path weaves from the riverside and floodplains into the Mopane tree woodlands that make Khwai one of the most scenic areas in the Okavango Delta.

Just keep your hand on your camera because, on our way to the Khwai Community Area, you'll pass the magnificent Dombo Hippo pools in the morning, stopping to enjoy the scenery and the antics of the resident Hippo.

The eastern Mopane forest is also home to breeding herds of elephants. Bull elephants hang along the riverside most of the year and revel in the cool water of the Khwai. While drinking and bathing, they are far more approachable here than among the breeding herds.

The river also has a high density of hippos, as well as crocodiles, leopards, lions, and cheetahs. Both Xakanaxa and Khwau are included in the home ranges of different packs of wild dogs. You may also notice Southern Giraffes, Burchell Zebras, Greater Kudu, Tsessebe, Waterbuck, and Sable Antelope.

Days six and seven: Khwai exploration (with a Mokoro safari)

You'll spend your time between the Leadwood and Camel Thorn woodlands, savannahs, the riverside, and the marshy backwater of the Khwai. Khwai is a predator-rich area known for having a high concentration of all types of wildlife and is one of the best places on the Okavango Delta for elephants.

The river also draws a healthy population of other animals, such as Red Lechwe, Impala, Hippo, and Zebra. Buffalo use this area seasonally, with large herds moving in during the dry season.

The Khwai is also an ideal location for a Mokoro (shallow canoe) safari. You'll have a chance to explore the Okavango and go to places only accessible by Mokoro. You'll be able to photograph aquatic birds, plants, and water lilies at eye level as you'll be low to the water. During this excursion, you'll be guided by an expert "poler" (a guide at the rear of the boat that moves it along with a long pole) through the bulrushes (plants) and marshes.

(*Note: Mokoro excursions are dependent on the water level in the channel. If the water isn't high enough, then all our activities will be game drives.)

Day eight: Khwai to Maun

Today is a travel day. You'll work your way back to the airstrip and your charter flight back to Maun International Airport (or other destination).

But it's not over yet . . .

After Breakfast, you'll take one final game drive to give you an opportunity to photograph whatever you wish on the open-air drive back to the airstrip. You'll have one last chance to snap as many pictures as you can of elephants, hippos, zebras, and any other wildlife around the delta.

At the airstrip, we'll help you load and get situated for your short charter back to Maun . . .

Northern Explore Itinerary

Day 1: maun to moremi game reserve, days two and three: xakanaxa / xini (moremi game reserve).

You'll spend several days exploring the Moremi Game Reserve and camping in the Xakanaxa region on the north-eastern side of the Moremi Game Reserve. The reserve is considered to have some of the best wildlife viewing areas.

You'll quickly fall under the enchantment of the seasonal flood plains, large lagoons, wooded islands, riverine forests, and, most of all - the wildlife!

Keep your camera close at hand as Moremi is Africa's best game reserve for viewing the endangered African Wild Dog, not to mention at least four Lion prides and multiple herds of Elephants. Lechwe antelopes are also commonly found in the area.

Day Four: Xakanaxa to Khwai

The fourth day is a day filled with adventure! Following an early morning breakfast, you'll take a slow drive through Moremi Game Reserve northeast towards the Khwai Community Area, complete with an open-air picnic.

The eastern Mopane forest is also home to breeding herds of Elephants. Bull Elephants hang along the riverside most of the year and revel in the cool water of the Khwai. While drinking and bathing, they are far more approachable here than among the breeding herds.

The river also has a high density of Hippos, as well as Crocodiles, Leopards, Lions, and Cheetahs. Both Xakanaxa and Khwai are included in the home ranges of different packs of Wild Dogs. You may also notice Southern Giraffes, Burchell Zebras, Greater Kudu, Tsessebe, Waterbuck, and Sable Antelope.

Days Five and Six: Khwai exploration (with a Mokoro safari)

You'll spend your time between the Leadwood and Camel Thorn woodlands, savannahs, the riverside, and the marshy backwater of the Khwai. Khwai is a predator-rich area known for having a high concentration of all types of wildlife and is one of the best places in the Okavango Delta for Elephants.

The Khwai is also an ideal location for a Mokoro (shallow canoe) safari. On day six only, you'll have a chance to explore the Okavango and go to places only accessible by Mokoro. You'll be able to photograph aquatic birds, plants, and water lilies at eye level as you'll be low to the water. During this excursion, you'll be guided by an expert "poler" (a guide at the rear of the boat that moves it along with a long pole) through the bulrushes (plants) and marshes.

Day Seven: Khwai to Savuti

On a moving day like today, you’ll grab everything you want to bring along with you for the whole day out in the bush because after your early morning breakfast and morning game drive, you’ll travel north to Savuti.

The entire drive takes place through game-rich areas and varying landscapes, and is therefore an extension of your daily game drives. A picnic lunch will be served en-route. Finally, when the sun sets, you’ll arrive at your new camp to find everything already set up and waiting for you to enjoy.

The Savuti region is located within the heart of Chobe National Park, offering a unique mix of marshlands, open savannahs, and more. It’s most well-known for its high concentration of predators, particularly Lions, as well as its abundant Elephant population.

Savuti offers dramatic game viewing and a somewhat eerie atmosphere. It is also well known as one of the best areas for big cat viewing.

Day Eight and Nine: Savuti

On both days you’ll wake up before sunrise for a quick, light breakfast then head out for your early morning game drive.

You’ll explore Savuti’s enchanting landscapes with opportunities to enjoy up-close-and-personal encounters with an exciting mix of Elephants, Zebra, Giraffe, Leopard, Cheetah, Wild Dog, Lion, and more. There’s also an abundance of bird life.

The Savuti Lion pride has earned a fearsome reputation for hunting Elephant, but other predators like Leopard, Wild Dog, Spotted Hyena and even Cheetah are also abundant in the area.

You’ll have the best chance of seeing a hunt during the cool morning hours when most animals are more active. As the sun rises higher and the day heats up, you’ll have the choice of heading back to camp for lunch or staying out on your game drive.

A picnic lunch will be served at a scenic spot chosen by your guide. Continue on your game drive thereafter, and enjoy a blissful sunset as the animals once again take advantage of the cooler weather to become more active.

You’ll head back to camp at sunset to enjoy an evening around the campfire. Share your experiences with your fellow safari guests, enjoy a delicious meal prepared by the safari chef, and then get a great night’s rest in preparation for the next day.

Day Ten: Savuti to Kasane

Wake up early on your final morning for a light breakfast before heading further north – this time to Kasane, a town located in the northeastern corner of Botswana, near the borders with Namibia, Zambia and Zimbabwe.

Once again this will be in the form of a game drive as you will be driving through the Chobe National Park - believed to be the best “year-round wildlife photography destination in Africa”, until you reach Kasane. Around lunch time, you’ll stop for a cold meal out in the bush before continuing on your journey. 

After a long drive you’ll arrive at your lodge in Kasane in time for a sunset boat cruise on the mighty Chobe River. A highlight is to see a whole herd of Elephants splashing across the river, followed by an entertaining mud bath and dusting rituals. However, it’s not just the Elephants that keep us busy on a safari on the Chobe River.

Herds of Buffalo, Red Lechwe, Waterbuck and Puku inhabit the floodplains during the dry season – along with Hippos, Crocodiles, Water Monitors and an astonishing variety of birds. When predators like Lion or Leopard come down to drink, the biggest advantage of being on a boat is that you can photograph them head on and at eye level, which always produces a wonderfully intimate portrait.

Catch a glimpse of the majestic Chobe River sunset and hear the echoing calls of African Fish Eagles, before heading back to the lodge to enjoy a hot meal overlooking the Chobe River. Retire to your comfortable rooms for a good nights’ rest.  

Day Eleven: Kasane and end of safari

On your final day with Wild for Game Safaris, a light breakfast will be served before the early morning game drive.

Early morning game drives are always full of surprises - our knowledgeable guides continually find new and interesting sightings, and help clients achieve their best photographs and experiences.

Having spent the morning exploring the surrounding wilderness in search of Botswana’s hidden treasures, you will return to camp for breakfast before your transfer to Kasane International Airport to catch your flight to your next destination.

More of What our Adventures Say

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Want to know exactly what's included with your safari? Check out our WHAT'S INCLUDED page.

Want to know more info about the trip, such as what to bring and what to wear? Check out our WHAT TO BRING page.

Have other questions? Check out our FAQ page.

Ready to take the plunge and experience something few people ever will? CLICK HERE .

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Bush Ways | ADVENTURE JOURNEYS TO THE HEART OF AFRICA

ADVENTURE JOURNEYS TO THE HEART OF AFRICA

Welcome to bush ways, since its establishment in 1996, bush ways has been offering exceptional bush experiences and safari adventures with a difference. we take you on authentic safaris reminiscent of the traditional african expeditions of olden days., experience the wild in its purest form. immerse yourself in the most pristine surroundings. get closer than ever to untouched nature. discover those unique cultures for whom wilderness is home. explore one of the last natural havens on our planet and observe its thriving wildlife. , join the clan.

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7-Day Luxury All-Inclusive Epic Safari

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$3,240 to $3,867 pp (USD)

Tanzania: Private tour Luxury Lodge & Tented Camp

You Visit: Arusha (Start) , Tarangire NP, Lake Manyara NP, Serengeti NP, Ngorongoro Crater, Arusha (End)

Lion King Adventures

5.0 /5  –  1018 Reviews

14-Day Combine Serengeti Safari -Zanzibar Beach Holidays

14-Day Combine Serengeti Safari -Zanzibar Beach Holidays

$7,698 pp (USD)

You Visit: Arusha (Start) , Lake Manyara NP, Ngorongoro Crater, Ngorongoro Highlands, Central Serengeti, Tarangire NP, Stone Town (Zanzibar) , Zanzibar (Beach) , Zanzibar Airport (End)

Gosheni Safaris Africa

4.9 /5  –  418 Reviews

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7-Day Journey of the Wildebeest - Luxury

$4,120 to $5,600 pp (USD)

You Visit: Arusha (Start) , Lake Manyara NP, Ngorongoro Crater, Central Serengeti, Serengeti NP, Arusha (End)

Unlimited Expeditions: The Soul of Tanzania

4.9 /5  –  438 Reviews

6-Day Authentic Luxury Safari

6-Day Authentic Luxury Safari

$2,860 to $3,493 pp (USD)

You Visit: Arusha (Start) , Tarangire NP, Serengeti NP, Ngorongoro Highlands, Lake Manyara NP, Arusha (End)

African Big Cats Safaris

5.0 /5  –  359 Reviews

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5-Day Fly in Serengeti, Ngorongoro Crater & Lake Manyara

$3,135 pp (USD)

You Visit: Zanzibar (Start) , Serengeti NP, Ngorongoro Crater, Lake Manyara NP, Zanzibar (End)

Safari Soles

5.0 /5  –  246 Reviews

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3-Day Masai Mara Group Safari - Emayian Luxury Camp

$880 to $1,353 pp (USD)

Kenya: Shared tour (max 7 people per vehicle) Luxury Tented Camp

You Visit: Nairobi (Start) , Masai Mara NR, Nairobi (End)

Mamu Travels and Safaris Kenya

5.0 /5  –  16 Reviews

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5-Day Botswana Luxury Tour

$3,346 to $5,317 pp (USD)

Botswana: Private tour Luxury Lodge & Tented Camp

You Visit: Kasane (Start) , Chobe NP, Okavango Delta, Maun Airport (End)

Wayfairer Travel

4.9 /5  –  149 Reviews

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4-Day Unwrapped Luxury Kenya Safari

$2,552 to $3,640 pp (USD)

Kenya: Private tour Luxury+ Tented Camp

Kameraz of Afrika

4.8 /5  –  98 Reviews

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7-Day Tanzania Wildlife Luxury Safari

$3,153 pp (USD)

You Visit: Kilimanjaro Airport (Start) , Tarangire NP, Mto wa Mbu (Town) , Serengeti NP, Central Serengeti, Ngorongoro Crater, Arusha (End)

Ozon Light Tours

5.0 /5  –  71 Reviews

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3-Day Akagera Wildlife Safari and a Boat Cruise

$1,189 pp (USD)

Rwanda: Private tour Luxury Lodge

You Visit: Kigali (Start) , Akagera NP, Kigali (End)

Hermosa Life Tours and Travel

5.0 /5  –  102 Reviews

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5-Day Unforgettable Luxury Safari in Tanzania Wilderness

$2,442 pp (USD)

Tanzania: Private tour Luxury Lodge

You Visit: Arusha (Start) , Tarangire NP, Ngorongoro Crater, Serengeti NP, Lake Manyara NP, Arusha (End)

Habitat Adventures Travel

5.0 /5  –  37 Reviews

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3-Day The Famous Mara - Luxury

$1,150 to $1,690 pp (USD)

Kenya: Private tour Luxury Tented Camp

Spirit of Kenya

4.9 /5  –  484 Reviews

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4-Day Kwazulu Natal Safari in Nambiti at Nambiti Plains

$1,119 pp (USD)

South Africa: Private tour Luxury Lodge

You Visit: Durban (Start) , Nambiti GR, Durban (End)

Indigo Safaris

4.8 /5  –  126 Reviews

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3-Day Luxury Fly in Tour to Serengeti and Ngorongoro

$2,512 to $2,981 pp (USD)

Tanzania: Private tour Luxury Tented Camp

You Visit: Arusha (Start) , Central Serengeti, Serengeti NP, Ngorongoro Highlands, Arusha (End)

EATL Tour Company

5.0 /5  –  9 Reviews

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9-Day Mid Luxury Tanzania Safari and Zanzibar Island

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You Visit: Arusha (Start) , Tarangire NP, Serengeti NP, Ngorongoro Crater, Zanzibar (End)

Brilliant Adventures and Safaris

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7-Day Best of the Wild Luxury Safari

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6-Day Four Season Lodge Safari Special to Best Parks

$3,729 to $4,716 pp (USD)

You Visit: Arusha (Start) , Tarangire NP, Serengeti NP, Ngorongoro Crater, Arusha (End)

Tanzania Roadside Expeditions

5.0 /5  –  250 Reviews

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9-Day Luxury Bush and Beach Safari

$2,770 to $3,542 pp (USD)

Kenya: Private tour Luxury Lodge & Tented Camp

You Visit: Nairobi (Start) , Masai Mara NR, Lake Nakuru NP, Amboseli NP, Diani Beach, Nairobi (End)

Apodiformes Adventures

4.8 /5  –  174 Reviews

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4-Day Exploring the Bush and Relaxing on the Beach

$660 pp (USD)

You Visit: Nairobi (Start) , Amboseli NP, Tsavo East NP, Diani Beach (End)

Explorers Wild Adventures

4.9 /5  –  88 Reviews

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5-Day Luxury Tour, Manyara, Serengeti & Ngorongoro

$2,895 pp (USD)

You Visit: Arusha (Start) , Lake Manyara NP, Serengeti NP, Ngorongoro Highlands, Ngorongoro Crater, Arusha (End)

Savannah Explorers

5.0 /5  –  485 Reviews

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COMMENTS

  1. 407 Botswana Safaris (Offered by 64 Tour Operators)

    7-Day Last Minute Deal - Kalahari / Linyanti / Okavango. $4,752 to $4,884 pp (USD) Botswana: Private tour Lodge & Tented Camp. You Visit: Maun (Start), Linyanti, Okavango Delta, Central Kalahari GR, Maun Airport (End) Savanna Safaris and Tours. 5.0 /5 - 16 Reviews.

  2. Botswana Safaris

    10 Day Magical Botswana & Zambia Safari. Green Season Special. 3 nights at Khwai Leadwood. 3 nights at Linyanti Bush Camp. 3 nights at Thorntree River Lodge. All inter-camp transfers (Starting in Maun and ending in Livingstone) View safari to see all inclusions.. $ 840 USD.

  3. Botswana Safaris & Vacations

    Makgadikgadi Pans in Botswana. Moremi Game Reserve in Botswana. Moremi Game Reserve, the only officially recognized wildlife reserve in the iconic Okavango Delta, is also often considered the most stunning for Botswana safari tours. The most diverse habitats and animal populations can be found in Moremi Game Reserve.

  4. Desert & Delta Safaris

    These encapsulate a large variety of ecosystems which can be enjoyed in a comprehensive safari package. All of the nine Desert & Delta Safaris properties are connected by light aircraft flights operated by Safari Air, allowing us to create all-inclusive safari packages covering every aspect of your journey from the moment you arrive in Botswana.

  5. Botswana Reisen

    21 Tage Camping-Rundreise ab Kapstadt/bis Victoria Falls. Rustikale Aktiv-Camping-Safari. ab € 2.740,- zzgl. Flug. Auswählen. Kapstadt - Victoria Falls - Johannesburg Campingsafari. 24 Tage Campingsafari durch Namibia, Botswana und Simbabwe, ab Kapstadt/bis Johannesburg. Rustikale, aktive Rundreise. ab € 3.399,- zzgl.

  6. 127 Botswana Budget Safaris (Offered by 32 Tour Operators)

    11-Day Expedition Safari to Botswana. $2,530 to $2,970 pp (USD) Botswana: Shared tour (max 6 people per vehicle) Budget Camping. You Visit: Maun Airport (Start), Moremi GR (Okavango Delta), Khwai (Okavango Delta), Savuti Channel (Chobe NP), Chobe NP, Kasane (End) Okavango Exploration Safaris. 5.0 /5 - 6 Reviews.

  7. Desert & Delta Safaris

    As one of the original safari operators in Botswana, the Desert & Delta Safaris circuit covers Botswana's top destinations including the Chobe Riverfront and Savute Region of the Chobe National Park, the Okavango Delta and Okavango Panhandle, the world-renowned Moremi Game Reserve and the Boteti River on the border of the Makgadikgadi Pans ...

  8. Natural Habitat Adventures

    Secluded Botswana Safari. Our flagship Botswana safari—for just seven guests! A truly exclusive wilderness immersion in the Okavango Delta's best private wildlife reserves and beyond, plus Victoria Falls. 12 Days / Apr-Nov. From $16495 (+air) ~7. Botswana & Zambia. Photo Expeditions Available. Make it Custom.

  9. Botswana Safari: 5-Day Botswana Luxury Tour

    5-Day Botswana Luxury Tour. Experience two of Botswana's best safari destinations, Chobe National Park and the Okavango Delta. During this five-day whirlwind wildlife-watching tour, you'll encounter herds of elephants and Cape buffalo meeting to drink at the Chobe Riverfront. You'll spot big cats lurking along the waterways in the rich wetlands ...

  10. Island Safari Lodge, an Oasis in Maun and a Gateway to Adventure

    Island Safari Lodge is set on a 300 acre private island reserve, just 10 km from Maun Airport. The protected reserve has several walking trails running through the bush, perfect for a nature walk. Relax by one of the two swimming pools or head to the restaurant and bar for the river view. With a long history dating back to 1973, Island Safari ...

  11. Desert & Delta Safaris

    Established in 1982, Desert & Delta Safaris is one of the most successful safari operators in Botswana. Today we own nine premier safari properties all managed by local citizens. Our longstanding operation ensures that our properties are located within Botswana's prime wildlife destinations famous for the diversity of experiences.

  12. Chobe Safari Lodge

    Set on the banks of the elephant-rich Chobe River and neighbouring the world-famous Chobe National Park, Chobe Safari Lodge occupies the best riverfront position in Kasane. Explore Botswana's most accessible wilderness or hop across the border to witness the majesty fo Victoria Falls. 12 THINGS TO DO IN CHOBE. +. +.

  13. Botswana Safari buchen beim Profi [2024/2025]

    Botswana Safari mit Lodge buchen. Luxuriöse Lodges mit Restaurant und teilweise Swimmingpools laden in der weiten Landschaft Botswanas zu einem Safari-Erlebnis mit Komfort ein. Festinstallierte Safari-Zelte (tented camps) mit eigenem Badezimmer bieten nach spannenden Pirschfahrten Platz für Erholung.

  14. Kwalate Safaris

    Kwalate Safaris based in Maun, Botswana. Kwalate operate the campsites in Xakanaxa and Maqwee (South Gate) in Moremi and Ihaha in Chobe. Each campsite has an ablution block with hot and cold showers. Xakanaxa campsite is pleasantly situated overlooking a grassy plain next to the river whilst Maqwee is conveniently located at the entrance gate to Moremi.

  15. Botswana Travel Guide

    Premier Parks, Reserves & Wildlife Areas. Okavango Delta - Canoe and classic safaris. Moremi - Classic safaris. Chobe - Boat and classic safaris. Central Kalahari - Classic safaris, animals scarce. Makgadikgadi Pans - Classic safaris, animals scarce. Nxai Pan - Classic safaris. All 14 Botswana Parks & Reserves.

  16. Safari in Botswana buchen

    Safari mit edler Lodge in Botswana buchen. In allen vorgestellten Naturgebieten stehen Übernachtungsmöglichkeiten für Gäste bereit. Abenteuerlich ist die Nacht in einem Camp mitten in der Wildnis. Dabei sind die Safari-Zelte mit jeglichem Komfort ausgestattet, manche verfügen sogar über eine eigene Terrasse. Während einer Safari durch ...

  17. Home

    Camp Savuti epitomises the Botswana safari experience. From rewarding game viewing opportunities to the authentic, tented accommodation, this is the traditional way to spend time in one of Africa's most superb wildlife regions. ... Southern Africa's most coveted, yet preserved wildlife areas; a careful selection of authentic bush camps and ...

  18. Wild For Game

    Sollte ich nochmals nach Botswana kommen würde ich wieder Lucas als Guide buchen. Kann ich jeden der so etwas er leben will nur empfehlen. Das ist Afrika pur. Kristine V . 2024-01-01. Botswana Safari Adventure Botswana has always been our number one bucket list country to visit. Not just because of the wildlife and flora, but the fact that the ...

  19. Rockingsafari

    Together with my friend Tshibot we drive and cook for you through the national parks of Botswana, and also set up the wild camp (bush toilet and shower). ... - Private Guide und top ausgestattetes 4x4 Safari Fahrzeug - Alle Transfers (Flughafen und weitere) - Eintritte und Parkgebühren ... (ich muss Fahrzeug und und Nationalparks buchen und ...

  20. Botswana Safari From Maun

    7-Day Last Minute Deal - Kalahari / Linyanti / Okavango. $4,752 to $4,884 pp (USD) Botswana: Private tour Lodge & Tented Camp. You Visit: Maun (Start), Linyanti, Okavango Delta, Central Kalahari GR, Maun Airport (End) Savanna Safaris and Tours. 5.0 /5 - 16 Reviews.

  21. Bush Ways Safaris Botswana

    Since its establishment in 1996, Bush Ways has been offering exceptional bush experiences and safari adventures with a difference. We take you on authentic safaris reminiscent of the traditional African expeditions of olden days. Experience the wild in its purest form. Immerse yourself in the most pristine surroundings.

  22. Home

    The true bush experience for a safari in Botswana . English ; Login Email: [email protected] Telephone: +267 686 3685. Home What we do What is a mobile safari ... Bush Ways has been offering exceptional bush experiences and safari adventures with a difference. We take you on authentic safaris reminiscent of the traditional African ...

  23. All-inclusive African Safari

    Compare 1,780 all-inclusive African safaris offered by 271 specialized tour operators. Find the best deals using the largest marketplace for African safaris. ... Safaris & Tours. Botswana (340) Congo (DRC) (33) Eswatini (11) Ethiopia (122) Kenya (1,963) Madagascar (38) Malawi (20) Mozambique (22) Namibia (174) Rwanda (365 ...