​Expert Reviews – Namib-Naukluft NP

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Expert
Dale R Morris   –  
South Africa ZA
Visited: Multiple times

Dale is a multi-award-winning writer and photographer with more than 500 published magazine articles featured in magazines such as National Geographic, BBC Wildlife, Travel Africa, and CNN Travel.

1 person found this review helpful.

Alone in the desert
Overall rating
4/5

Most visitors to the Namib-Naukluft National Park will head straight to Sossusvlei, where enormous mountains of sand rise hundreds of meters above the desert floor. Here, you can witness magnificent vistas of a seemingly endless dune sea, whilst nearby, you will find the iconic location of Deadvlei, where twisted trees, long dead, rise from the sands as if they were zombies.

It’s a scenically stunning area, but alas, the empty ambiance I crave from a desert is hard to find due to the sheer density of tourists who visit this particular region. They're like ants scurrying up and down the tallest of dunes, snapping shots of the trees, and generally stripping the place of its wilderness vibe.

That isn’t to say you shouldn’t go to Sossusvlei; you should. It’s iconic and beautiful, but the Namib-Naukluft National Park covers more than 49,000 square kilometers of desert, and therefore, there are plenty of places where solitude is assured.

Some of my highlights have been taking a scenic flight over the dune sea at dusk and walking along lonely sections of the coast. I have done game drives to see oryx and springbok, and I have gone on night tours to find geckos, scorpions, and spiders.

The best experience though was when I went on a guided five-night 4x4 adventure through the least accessible areas of the park. Sometimes it felt like we were on Mars; at other times, the landscapes resembled the moon. At night, we slept in the open beneath a sky full of stars made all the brighter by a complete lack of light pollution.

It was beautiful beyond compare.

Expert
Mary Fitzpatrick   –  
United States US
Visited: Multiple times

Mary is an acclaimed travel writer and author of many Lonely Planet guidebooks, including South Africa, Tanzania, East Africa and Africa.

Soaring Dunes, Desert & Star-filled Night Skies
Overall rating
4/5

With its vast, seemingly empty spaces and soaring dunes, Namib-Naukluft is not a classic safari destination, with a visit just as much about seeking the microscopic amidst the great expanses as about spotting larger wildlife. Geckos, desert beetles, scorpions (best spotted at night with a small UV light) and a multitude of other small creatures inhabit the sands, and the sparseness of the environment somehow makes coming across even a single oryx just as magnificent as seeing a large herd of animals in a more traditional safari setting.

Namib-Naukluft’s centre point is the area around Sossusvlei and Deadvlei, where ochre-coloured dunes soar into cloud-free blue skies and the skeletons of long-dead acacia trees etch dark shadows on the white clay. The most visible animals are stately oryx, which you may see silhouetted against the dunes, as well as springbok. Along the coast at Sandwich Harbour, where the dunes cascade into the sea, highlights are the flamingos, pelicans and other water birds that frequent the lagoon.

While the Sossusvlei area gets many visitors during the high season, the enduring impression of a visit to Namib-Naukluft is the park’s overwhelming sense of space. By day, the sands stretch towards the purple shadows of the Naukluft Mountains on the horizon, while at night, clear, dark skies wrap themselves around you in a planet-studded arc. If you have a choice, visit Namib-Naukluft during the cooler months, as the heat in December and January can be extreme.

Expert
Anthony Ham   –  
Australia AU
Visited: September-October

Anthony is a photographer and writer for travel magazines and Lonely Planet, including the guides to Kenya and Botswana & Namibia.

2 people found this review helpful.

Namib-Naukluft: The World’s Most Beautiful Desert?
Overall rating
4/5

If you love deserts as I do, you’ll love the Namib-Naukluft. Within the borders of this vast park lie vast tracts of the Namib, the oldest desert on earth and perhaps the most beautiful. The sand dunes here, sculpted by the winds down through the millennia are stunning and also happen to be some of the tallest examples of their kind on the planet. To stand high on a sand summit and see the razor-sharp ridgelines rippling out to a horizon that never seems to end is breathtaking in the truest sense of the word. It’s a very well established stop on the Namibian safari circuit and Sossusvlei can feel like the antithesis of a desert wilderness in high season. But the accommodation is outstanding and varied, and the desert is sufficiently large to mean that it is easy to find a corner with not another soul around. Deadvlei, too, is simply gorgeous with its orange dunes and silhouetted tree trunks. And for real solitude, try hiking the gorges of the Naukluft Mountains, watching for leopards and klipspringers as you go.

Expert
Kim Wildman   –  
Australia AU
Visited: September

Kim is a travel writer who authored and updated over 15 guidebooks, including Lonely Planet's South Africa and Bradt's Tanzania guides.

Of deserts, dunes and dust
Overall rating
4/5

Mesmerising, striking, evocative, remarkable – it’s hard to choose one word to sum up the Namib-Naukluft National Park. Encompassing part of the Namib Desert and the Naukluft mountain range, the landscape here is as strikingly varied as it is uniquely beautiful. At the heart of the park are the towering dunes of Sossusvlei. Arguably, Namibia’s most spectacular and best-known attraction, it’s a dream location for budding landscape photographers. Here under the watchful eye of a brilliant blue sky, enormous undulating red dunes stretch endlessly to the horizon. Best captured in the low light at dusk or dawn, the dunes’ colour changes dramatically from a dusky pink to sizzling red to vibrant orange and back again. It’s impossible to resist the urge to hike — or as in my case slowly plod — up at least one of the dunes. Big Daddy as it is aptly known is the tallest standing at about 325 metres, but others make for easier climbing. Sitting atop one of the dunes, it’s easy to get caught up in the romance and solitude of this remote place. That is, if you managed to beat the crowds! But don’t linger too long, there’s much more to discover. Hidden behind the sea of dunes is the eerily surreal Dead Vlei. A dried-out salt lake, its parched clay basin is punctuated by the scorched remains of dead trees, some more than 900 years old. May to October is the best time to visit. The desert heat builds rapidly. So sunhats, sunscreen and water are a must.

Expert
Christopher Clark   –  
United Kingdom UK
Visited: April

Christopher is a British travel writer and has contributed to various Fodor's guidebooks and a range of travel magazines.

4 people found this review helpful.

A desert dream
Overall rating
4/5

The highlight of this barren but breathtaking national park is the majestic dunes of Sossusvlei, which rise like giant waves above the parched salt pans that punctuate the desert floor. At sunrise and sunset the changing colours and contours are truly special and it’s not hard to see why Sossusvlei is often cited as the most photographed natural wonder in the world.

What most of the photos omit are the droves of tourists that you’ll see traipsing up and down the dunes like long lines of ants, and the big tour buses hammering along the main road through the park.

Nevertheless, every time I get to the top of Big Daddy or Dune 45 (you can walk up both) and look out over the endless sea of sand, none of that really matters. The sheer beauty of the place drowns it all out.

Not surprisingly given the unforgiving environment, there isn’t a lot of wildlife around, though you can get spectacular shots of the occasional ostrich or Oryx with the dunes behind them. Or if you’re exceptionally lucky, you might spot the endangered desert lions that somehow continue to eke out an existence across Namibia’s driest areas.

Expert
Sue Watt   –  
United Kingdom UK
Visited: Dry season

Sue is an award-winning writer who specializes in African travel and conservation. She writes for national newspapers, magazines, Rough Guides and Lonely Planet.

3 people found this review helpful.

Desert and dunes: A photographer’s dream
Overall rating
4/5

Sossusvlei is a landscape like no other, with dunes and desert a palette of colours ranging from deepest orange to palest gold. Stay at the campsite within the park to get a vital 15 minute advantage over those staying outside for the best sunrise shots. We came across Deadvlei at dawn almost by accident (due to a lazy lack of research). The unexpected beauty of the silver-white pan against the backdrop of burnt orange dunes with long-dead trees like wizened fingers reaching up to the sky was unforgettable. And the iconic Dune 45 is perfect for sunrise or sunset photo-shoots if you can make the half-hour walk to the top. But this isn’t an area to come for wildlife unless you’re fascinated by smaller creatures and desert survival.

Less well-known but also scenically dramatic are the mountains of the Naukluft Park. With its spectacular gorge of psychedelic rocks in shades of pinks and purples and dotted with quiver trees, the 10km Olive Trail is far more beautiful than the 17km Waterkloof Trail, although that has stunning views from the plateau. Take plenty of water though – the walks can be hard-going in the heat.

Expert
Stephen Cunliffe   –  
South Africa ZA
Visited: Multiple times

Stephen is a travel writer and avid conservationist whose work appears in prestigious magazines such as Africa Geographic and Travel Africa.

8 people found this review helpful.

Seas of Sand
Overall rating
4/5

Sprawling across southwestern Namibia, the Namib Desert is a scenically spectacular and thirsty realm whose seas of sand stretch all the way from the west coast of Africa to the Naukluft Mountains. Capable of sustaining life despite very arid conditions and home to some of the most bizarrely beautiful landscapes on earth, it is a place of endless rolling dunes, solitude, wide-open spaces and deafening silence. I forewarn every first-timer that the Namib will probably be the most impressive landscape they’ll encounter during their travels around Namibia: a bold claim in a country renowned for its gobsmacking scenery and breathtaking natural beauty. But it’s true; the immense awe-inspiring landscapes, juxtaposition of colours, towering red dunes at world-renowned Sossusvlei and spellbinding scenery will leave you dumbfounded. The only small criticism I can level at this iconic desert park is that its deserved and growing popularity means Sossusvlei is getting busier and this is slowly eroding some of its incredible wilderness vibe; but, for the most part, the Namib is a very soulful and special place indeed. Don’t come here for wildlife, but if you’re a connoisseur of stunning landscapes and appreciate arid beauty, then this place should definitely top your agenda.

Expert
Philip Briggs   –  
South Africa ZA
Visited: Wet season

Philip is an acclaimed travel writer and author of many guidebooks, including the Bradt guides to Uganda, Tanzania, Kenya and South Africa.

Gemsbok on the Dunes
Overall rating
4/5

Although I wouldn’t rate Namib-Naukluft as a great safari destination per se, I regard it to be one of the most special places in Southern Africa, thanks to its scenic immensity. The scenic highlight is Sossusvlei on the park’s western border. Here, the world’s tallest dunes – rippled apricot mountains formed by red sand blown across from the Kalahari – tower above a series of parched seasonal pans that are spectacular at any time, but especially on the rare occasions when they fill up with water, as they did on our most recent visit. for a month once or twice per decade. The Namib supports a low volume of wildlife: in my experience the handsome oryx antelope is the most common large mammal, often to be seen filing nobly across the crest of a dune. An unforgettable attribute of the Namib is the pure beauty of its panoramic night skies, whose embalming silence is broken only by the occasional chatter of a barking gecko or distant whooping of a jackal or a hyena.

Expert
Mike Unwin   –  
United Kingdom UK
Visited: November

Mike is an award-winning wildlife writer, former editor of Travel Zambia magazine and author of the Bradt Guide to Southern African Wildlife.

1 person found this review helpful.

Desert delights
Overall rating
4/5

My single visit to this enormous park – Africa’s largest – remains one of my most satisfying wilderness experiences. The towering apricot-coloured dunes at Sossusvlei are world famous, both as a spectacular tourist playground and a haven for desert wildlife, but there is much more to this park than sand. In three days of wild camping at Bloedkoppie, not another soul passed though our campsite; just the jackals that left their tracks around our tent each night, and the springbok and ostrich that trekked past by day. At Sesriem I had my only ever sighting of a striped polecat, as it popped out from the roots of a camelthorn, and awoke at night to find a magnificent gemsbok just metres from my tent, horns glinting silver under the desert moon. And hiking the rugged trails of the Naukluft, to the east, I watched mountain zebra cresting a distant ridge and Verreaux’s eagles hunting dassies along the escarpment.
This is not a park for big game – though naturalists can seek out such unique desert-adapted oddities as the welwitschia plant and fog-basking beetle – but no visitor should leave Namibia without experiencing the sheer power of its landscapes. Memorable moments are guaranteed.

Expert
Emma Gregg   –  
United Kingdom UK
Visited: Multiple times

Emma is an award-winning travel writer for Rough Guides, National Geographic Traveller, Travel Africa magazine and The Independent.

6 people found this review helpful.

Cinnamon dunes and skeleton trees
Overall rating
4/5

Picture Namibia in your mind and you’ll probably conjure up an image of giant sand dunes in gorgeous shades of ochre, ginger and gold, under huge blue skies. The place you’re imagining is the Namib-Naukluft National Park. I’d say this is the quintessential Namibian park.

The place most people head for is Sossusvlei. To me, this place feels pretty touristy – it has enough accommodation to house coachloads of visitors – but this is, of course, all relative, since nowhere in Namibia ever feels as crowded as the really popular safari destinations elsewhere in Africa. And come dusk, when the geckos start calling and the stars come out, you get a true sense of being enveloped in the desert.

By day, you can float over the sands by hot air balloon or set out by vehicle to admire the spectacular dunes and possibly climb one or two. Getting to the top can be a struggle if it’s hot but I love the exhilarating feeling of running down again. You’ll also see dramatic salt pans dotted with sculptural, skeleton-like camelthorn trees, and fairy circles (mysterious bare patches in areas of pale, tufty grass).

Expert
Brian Jackman   –  
United Kingdom UK
Visited: Dry season

Brian is an award winning travel writer, author of safari books and regular contributor to magazines such as BBC Wildlife and Travel Africa.

8 people found this review helpful.

The Big Empty
Overall rating
4/5

The Namib – it means open space – is a region of superlatives. Not only is it the world’s oldest desert, but it is also the biggest park in Africa, covering an area larger than Switzerland. Originally created to protect the rare Hartmann’s mountain zebra, it was enlarged in 1970 and extended again in 1979 when the area south of the Kuiseb River was added, including the dramatic Sesriem canyonlands and the blood-red dunes of Sossusvlei. Soaring into the blue for almost 1,000 ft, their spectacular crests are the world’s tallest sand hills. Besides spotting mountain zebra you could be rewarded by the sight of springbok, gemsbok, kudu and klipspringer, and a list of 200 bird species including black eagles and lanner falcons. But most visitors come for the wilderness experience itself in a desert whose mountains, kloofs and endless moonscapes are seldom less than stunning – especially in the first and last hours of daylight. In complete contrast to the desert itself with its gravel plains and weird welwitschia plants is the coast itself at Walvis Bay, just south of Swakopmund, where huge numbers of flamingos and pelicans share the lagoons and salt flats with thousands of plovers and sandpipers.

Expert
Ariadne van Zandbergen   –  
South Africa ZA
Visited: Wet season

Ariadne is a renowned African wildlife photographer whose work is featured in many well-known guidebooks and magazines.

Sossusvlei, a photographer’s dream
Overall rating
4/5

Namib-Naukluft Park is a place of exceptional beauty. The starkness of a desert-scene is not everybody’s cup of tea. You either love it, or you hate it, but I think it would be difficult for anybody not to be in awe of some of the more spectacular areas of this park. I wasn’t prepared for the sheer beauty of the dunes when I first arrived in the famous Sossusvlei area. This area has been photographed to death, which would normally put me off, but not this time. I couldn’t get enough looking for different angles of the curves and shadows on these giant sand heaps. In an exceptionally wet year, Sossusvlei sometimes fills up with water, which makes for an amazing scene where the dunes reflect in the water below. This place is a photographer’s dream. There isn’t much wildlife around, but ostrich, gemsbok and springbok are easily seen. For hiking, the less spectacular but much less visited Naukluft part of the park has many trails available.

Expert
Lizzie Williams   –  
South Africa ZA
Visited: Multiple times

Lizzie is a reputed guidebook writer and author of the Footprint guides to South Africa, Namibia, Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda and Zimbabwe.

One of the world’s oldest and most scenic deserts, famous for its majestic giant dunes
Overall rating
5/5

I am always blown-away by the beauty of Sossusvlei; the Namib Desert’s towering rust-red sand dunes blown into razor-sharp ridges by the wind is easily one of the most spectacular and powerful landscapes in Africa. The best time to visit is at sunrise, when the constantly changing play of light gives the desert remarkable tints and textures. Climbing one of the dunes is a must, and it doesn’t matter how many other people are scrambling up the sandy walls; for me, the essence of timelessness and the sense of solitude is an unforgettable experience. If you’ve got the cash to splash, other alternatives are a scenic flight from Swakopmund or a hot air balloon from Sesriem for an aerial perspective of the endless rippling sea of dunes. On the rare occasions when it rains, the desert responds amazingly quickly, producing a miracle of sprouting grasses.

Average Expert Rating

  • 4.1/5
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  • Scenery
  • Bush Vibe
  • Birding

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