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Namibia By Rail - 12 Days

Namibia By Rail - 12 Days

What better way to enjoy the incredible sights and nature of Namibia than via luxury rail through our partners at Rovos Rail. This journey takes the train from the savannahs of the Highveld to the Atlantic in the west. Departing from Pretoria, the first stop is Kimberley, centre of one of the world’s famous diamond rushes where there is an opportunity to savour the 1870s atmosphere of the mining village. The train traverses the stark vistas of the Northern Cape to the Fish River Canyon – second in size to the Grand Canyon – and Garas Park with its quiver-tree forest. Guests continue across the untamed beauty of the Kalahari Desert to a cheetah conservation project and a stop in Namibia’s capital for a tour; Windhoek is a lively, cosmopolitan city with a strong German flavour. Then it’s a short flight to Sossusvlei, a stunning pan in the Namib Desert, for an overnight stay followed by a night in the game-rich Etosha National Park. On the last morning, the train travels the Namib to the perfectly preserved 19th-century German Hansa town of Swakopmund and Walvis Bay – an unforgettable end to a remarkable journey.

 

Prices start from £7600 per person on the basis of the following departure dates:

 

2nd April 2024

30th April 2024

  • Itinerary and Specifics

    Highlights:

     

    • Cheetah conservation project visit
    • Deadvlei visit
    • Etosha game drives and overnight stay
    • Fish River Canyon visit
    • See the quiver trees at Garas Park
    • Traverse the edge of the Kalahari Basin
    • Traverse the Karoo
    • Kolmanskop visit
    • Lüderitz visit
    • Traverse the Namib Desert
    • Pretoria
    • Sossusvlei game drives and overnight stay
    • View Star Dune 45
    • Visit the Trans-Namib Museum
    • Upington walking tour (optional)
    • Walvis Bay
    • Windhoek tour

     

    Included:

    • Accommodation

    • All meals

    • All beverages on board

    • Room service

    • Limited laundry

    • Excursions with a qualified guide (where applicable)

    • Entrance fees as per itinerary

    • Government taxes

    • Flights to/from Sossusvlei

    • Overnight bag

     

    Not included

     

    • All off-train beverages
    • International sparkling wine
    • Gratuities: Gratuities for the staff are at your discretion. If you wish to show your appreciation in this manner, there will be a suitably marked envelope in your suite that you can hand directly to the Train Manager who will distribute any amounts on a pro-rata basis (share)among the staff on board. An amount between ZAR100-300 (± US$10-20) per person per night is suggested, depending on the length of your journey. At the game lodges, it is customary to tip guides and lodge staff an estimated ZAR150 (± US$10) per guest per day
    • Personal expenses
    • Visas
    • Travel insurance
    • Pre- and post-tour transfers, accommodation and flights. 

     

    Itinerary

     

    Day 1: Pretoria

     


    Please check-in a minimum of one hour before departure. Should you wish to visit our museum or do a site tour
    at Rovos Rail Station, we suggest arriving two hours prior to departure.


    11.00 Depart from Rovos Rail Station, Pretoria. Travel south across the goldfields of the Witwatersrand. Guests may freshen up in their suites before joining fellow travellers in the lounge car or observation car at the rear of the train.


    13.00 Lunch is served in the dining cars. 


    16.30 Tea in the lounge and observation cars. 


    19.30 Dinner is served in the dining cars en route to Kimberley. Dress: Formal


    Please ensure that the Train Manager or Administration Deputy is in possession of your passport.

     

     

    Day 2: Kimberley


    07.00 Breakfast is served in the dining cars until 10:00. 


    10.00 Enjoy a tour of Kimberley’s Diamond Mine Museum and the Big Hole. Capital of the Northern Cape, Kimberley is well known for the discovery of diamonds that led to its establishment in 1871. 


    13.00 Lunch is served in the dining cars. The observation car will be leading the train until after tea – a different aspect 
    that our rail enthusiasts enjoy. Travel through the Karoo, a vast semi-desert region that was once an enormous inland sea. Over millions of years, volcanic matter was ground down and deposited as silt upon the seabed to form what geologists call the Karoo system.


    16.30 Tea in the lounge and observation cars. 

    19.30 Dinner is served in the dining cars en route to De Aar, an important railway junction. Dress: Formal

     

    Day 3: Upington and The Orange River

     

    07.00 Breakfast is served in the dining cars until 10:00.

    13.00 Lunch is served in the dining cars.

    16.00 Enjoy a walking tour of Upington with a sundowner cruise on the Orange River.

    19.30 Dinner is served in the dining cars en route to Ariumsvlei for border formalities with Namibia. Dress: Formal

    The Orange River is the longest river in South Africa (2432km/1511mi). It rises in the Drakensberg Mountains in Lesotho and flows westwards through South Africa to the Atlantic Ocean. It forms part of the borders between South Africa and Lesotho and South Africa and Namibia. Except for Upington, it does not pass through any major cities. Attorney General of the Cape, Sir Thomas Upington was principally responsible for liquidating the businessactivities of all the Orange River pirates and capturing their leader, Klaas Lucas. When the desperadoes werefinally chased away in 1884, the town was founded on the banks of the Orange River and named in his honour.


     

    Day 4: Fish River Canyon

     


    07.00 Breakfast is served in the dining cars until 10:00.


    12.30 Lunch is served in the dining cars. The train travels along the southern reaches of the Kalahari Basin.


    14.00Transfer (±60 min) to the Fish River Canyon.


    19.30 Dinner is served in the dining cars en route to Aus. Dress: Formal


    The Fish River rises in the centre of the country before flowing south into the Orange River on Namibia’s border with South Africa. It has formed the great Fish River Canyon – the largest canyon in the southern hemisphere and probably only second to Arizona’s Grand Canyon in terms of size. The vast rocky landscape breaks up into a series of spectacular cliffs. Its size is impressive: 161km long, up to 27km wide and almost 550m at its deepest.

     

    Day 5: Kolmanskop and Luderitz


    06.00 Breakfast is served in the dining cars until departure.


    08.00 Transfer (±60 min) to the ghost town of Kolmanskop followed by lunch in Lüderitz. Lüderitz is known for its 
    museum, colonial architecture and wildlife including seals, penguins, flamingos and ostriches. Look out for the illusive legendary horses rumoured to roam the Namib. 


    18.00 Return to the train. Depart for Keetmanshoop. The observation car will be leading the train until after dinner.


    19.00 Dinner is served in the dining cars. Dress: Formal

     

    Day 6: Keetmanshoop and Garas Park

     


    07.00 Breakfast is served in the dining cars until departure.

    09.00 Visit Keetmanshoop and Garas Park (Quiver Trees), home to roughly 300 specimens of the Aloe dichotomy. The prehistoric trees have forked branches that reach up to 5m making for great photographic opportunities.

    13.00 Return to the train for lunch. Depart for Mariental. 

    16.30 Tea in the lounge and observation cars.

    19.30 Dinner is served in the dining cars en route to Rehoboth. Dress: Formal

     

    Day 7: Sossusvlei

     

    Please pack a small overnight bag for the stay in Sossusvlei. Tog bags have been placed in your suite for your convenience.

    07.00 Breakfast is served in the dining cars en route to Windhoek. 


    09.00 Transfer to the airstrip. Depart in a light aircraft for a one-hour flight to a Sossusvlei lodge for overnight. After check-in, enjoy lunch and an afternoon at leisure.


    16.30 Afternoon desert drive and a bush dinner after sunset. Overnight at the lodge. Dress: Casual


    The dunes of the Namib Desert were created by sand carried by the wind from the coast of Namibia. The sand here is over five million years old and is red in colour due to its iron-oxide content. As the light changes during the day, so does the appearance of the dunes’ characteristic colour allowing for interesting photographs at any time. The wind in the Sossusvlei area blows from all directions causing the sand to form a star shape with multiple arms, hence the name “star dunes”.

     

    Day 8: Sossusvlei and Windhoek

     


    Please ensure your overnight bag is ready to be collected from your suite before the drive. Bags will be stored in the lodge’s baggage area before being loaded into the aircraft. Time of drive to be confirmed. An early wake-up call with tea and coffee. Enjoy a desert drive with breakfast in the vlei. Return to the lodge to use the facilities, check-out and transfer to the airstrip. 


    11.00 Depart in a light aircraft for the one-hour flight to Windhoek. 


    13.00 Lunch at Windhoek Country Club followed by a city tour. Visit the Trans-Namib Transport Museum, the 
    Independence Memorial Museum, the Evangelical Lutheran Church (a striking landmark) and the Namibia Craft Centre in the old Breweries Building.

    18.00 Depart for Kranzberg.

    19.30 Dinner is served in the dining cars. Dress: Formal

    Situated in Namibia’s central highlands, Windhoek is an attractive city surrounded by clusters of hills and the impressive Auas and Eros Mountains. The Trans-Namib Transport Museum outlines Namibian transport history, particularly that of the railway. The Independence Memorial Museum focuses on the anti-colonial resistance and the national liberation struggle of Namibia.

     

    Day 9: Cheetah Conservation Project

     

     

    07.00 Breakfast is served in the dining cars until 10:00.

    12.30 Lunch is served in the dining cars.

    14.30 Transfer (±60 min) to a cheetah conservation project in Otjiwarongo. Founded in Namibia in 1990, the Cheetah Conservation Fund (CCF) is dedicated to saving the cheetah in the wild.

    18.00 Depart for Otavi.

    19.30 Dinner is served in the dining cars. Dress: Formal

     

    Day 10: Etosha National Park

     


    Please pack a small overnight bag for the stay in Etosha. 


    07.00 Breakfast is served in the dining cars until 10:00. 

    10.00Transfer (±60 min) to an Etosha lodge for overnight. Check-in and enjoy lunch. 

    15.00 Afternoon game drive (approximately 3 hours).

    19.30 Dinner at the lodge and overnight. Dress: Casual


    Etosha National Park (22270km2) offers great game viewing with many species of mammals, birds and reptiles. It gets its name from the Etosha pan (4760km2), which almost entirely lies within the park. Etosha is a large salt pan forming part of the Kalahari basin and means ‘Great White Place’.

     

    Day 11: Etosha National Park

    Please ensure your overnight bag is ready to be collected from your suite and proceed to checkout by 10:45. Your bag will be loaded into the vehicles. Time of game drive to be confirmed.
    An early wake-up call with tea and coffee followed by a game drive in the Etosha National Park.
    Return to the lodge for a late breakfast and check-out.

    11.30 Transfer (±60 min) to the train at Tsumeb Station.


    13.00 Lunch is served in the dining cars. The observation car will be leading the train until tomorrow.

    16.30 Tea in the lounge and observation cars.

    19.30 Dinner is served in the dining cars. The train travels southwest towards the Atlantic Ocean. Dress: “1920s” Theme or Smart Casual

     

    Day 12: Walvis Bay


    Please ensure luggage is ready for collection 15 minutes before departure and that you have your passport.


    07.00 Breakfast is served in the dining cars until 10:00. Traverse the Namib Desert towards Walvis Bay.

    12.00 Arrive at journey’s end in Walvis Bay, Namibia. The Namib stretches for more than 2000km along the Atlantic coasts of Angola, Namibia and South Africa. The geology consists of sand seas near the coast while gravel plains and scattered mountain outcrops occur further inland. The name is of Khoekhoegowab origin and means “vast place”. Having endured arid or semi-arid 
    conditions for roughly 55-80 million years, the Namib may be the oldest desert in the world.

£7,600.00Price
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