​Expert Reviews – Nxai Pan NP

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Expert
Emma Gregg   –  
United Kingdom UK
Visited: May

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

Where cheetahs race through the haze
Overall rating
4/5

Nxai Pan lies immediately north of the Makgadikgadi Pans and shares many of its characteristics, but the density of animals and plants here is greater. Like Makgadikgadi, it’s stark during the dry season and grassy after the rains, but the soil here is richer and the foliage considerably lusher. The park’s most recognised landmark is a ring of baobab trees made famous by the British naturalist Thomas Baines, who painted them in 1862.

An impressive variety of herbivores including elands, impalas, springboks, oryx, zebras, giraffes, blue wildebeest and red hartebeest use this small park as a grazing ground. Naturally, these attract predators, including cheetahs, for whom the even terrain serves as the perfect running track. In my opinion this is one of the best places to see cheetahs in the wild in southern Africa. It’s also an excellent place to see bat-eared foxes, jackals and brown hyenas.

Expert
Paul Murray   –  
United Kingdom UK
Visited: May

Paul is a travel writer, author of the Bradt guidebook to Zimbabwe and is closely involved in promoting tourism to Zimbabwe.

Baines Baobabs
Overall rating
3/5

As the name suggests, the focus of this wildlife-rich park is the pan itself, a large waterhole in the centre of the park surrounded by plains. In the dry season, you’ll see little more than gemsbok, zebra and small groups of springbok but, like in Central Kalahari Game Reserve, it all comes alive in the wet season, December to April, when grazing is plentiful and most of the animals drop their young. Then you can see exceptional concentrations of plains game with their hungry attendants, lion, cheetah, both species of hyena, wild dog and jackal. Leopards are plentiful, and make sure you can tell the difference between springbok and impala because this is one of the very few places where both species exist alongside each other. A word of warning though, all this depends on the rather unpredictable rains.

The other spectacularly notable area is Kudiakam Pan with the famous Baines Baobabs, an oasis of seven huge, gnarled trees brought to life on canvas in 1862 by the explorer and painter, Thomas Baines. I’ve spent ages with my camera trying to capture the tree island with the equally photogenic gemsbok and zebra in the foreground.

Expert
James Bainbridge   –  
United Kingdom UK
Visited: September

James is a travel writer and author of many Lonely Planet guides, including senior author of the guide to South Africa, Lesotho and Swaziland.

Baobabs, big cats and salt pans
Overall rating
4/5

Between Botswana's famous Kalahari and Okavango Delta, it's well worth stopping at the extraordinary network of salt pans known as the Makgadikgadi Pans. In this surreal area, heat haze shimmers above the cracked white pans, warping the horizon and the knotted shapes of baobab trees. There are several renowned baobabs here, including Baines' Baobabs, which drew me to the Nxai Pan section of Makgadikgadi. Rising starkly from the edge of a pan, the impressive clump of trees was immortalised in pictures painted by the intrepid artist Thomas Baines in 1862.
Large herds of animals migrate across the park, and seeing predators among the acacia trees in this bleached environment is a treat. On a guided safari from Planet Baobab near Gweta (recommended), we spotted a lioness leading her cubs towards zebras, springbok and wildebeest at a waterhole. The potential pray didn't seem bothered – they knew the lioness wouldn't risk leaving her young alone.

Expert
Christopher Clark   –  
United Kingdom UK
Visited: September

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

Salt pans and endless sky
Overall rating
4/5

Nxai Pan is one of Botswana’s more remote parks and the game is certainly not as densely populated as the likes of Chobe National Park, though there are still large numbers of elephants and plains game around, and we also saw lion, jackal and bat-eared fox during our short stay here.

Nxai Pan is a striking park too, with low, open savannah and sparse, moon-like salt pans occasionally punctuated by a ring of baobabs or a crop of acacias. In the dry season game congregates around the small number of water holes. The light at dawn and dusk is spectacular; the heat in the middle of the day can be unforgiving.

Elephants are regular visitors to the generally well-maintained and shaded public camps. We were travelling through Nxai Pan with a trailer in tow, which made the 52km track of soft sand from the gate through to our camp a fairly slow and arduous undertaking.

Aside from its elephants, Nxai Pan is reputed for cheetah and wild dogs. Predators are said to be more active here in the wetter months, due to the higher numbers of migrating herbivores.

Expert
Harriet Nimmo   –  
South Africa ZA
Visited: February

Harriet is a zoologist with more than 20 years’ experience. She has the privilege of working with the world’s top wildlife photographers and photo-guides.

Salt Pans & Silence
Overall rating
3/5

Nxai Pan makes a great contrast to Botswana’s greener, wetter protected areas to the west. Pronounced “nye”, this is a vast open grassy area with scrubby vegetation (the shimmering white salt pans are further south in Makgadikgadi). After the rains there can be good numbers of herbivores, including springbok, zebra and wildebeest, followed by lion and cheetah. However during the Dry season wildlife viewing can be sparse, although there will always be the smaller animals such as bat-eared foxes, mongooses and ground squirrels year-round.
Remarkably elephants are also found here, and the private waterhole in front of Nxai Pan’s only lodge can have a non-stop procession of ghostly white elephants in the Dry season. As well as staying at this lodge, you can camp and self-drive to Nxai Pan or join a mobile camping safari.
As this is a national park you are not allowed to drive off-road, even if you stay at the lodge, which can prove frustrating for photographers.

Expert
Mark Eveleigh   –  
United Kingdom UK
Visited: December

Mark is a travel writer who grew up in Africa and has written over 700 titles for Condé Nast Traveller, Travel Africa, BBC Wildlife and others.

1 person found this review helpful.

Where delta meets desert
Overall rating
5/5

Africa’s great wilderness areas are in a constant state of flux. Harsh Dry seasons can represent a time of easy feasting for the predators while a sudden downpour brings on a period of sheer joy for the great herds. I flew into Nxai by chopper, hoping the see the zebra migration from the air, during its southbound trek. I was perhaps two days too early to catch it in full swing. However, the flight was a fine chance to set Botswana’s desert geography into context in my mind. It’s also an ideal alternative to the rather uninteresting, arrow-straight road from Maun. Within a couple of days, the relatively empty plains and pans of Nxai were being invaded by the vanguard of the great zebra migration. The migration sweeps down from the wetlands east of the Delta. I stayed at Migration Expeditions. This new African Bush Camps venue was inspired primarily to offer an opportunity to witness one of Africa’s great migrations. This was my second visit to Nxai Pan. It was an unforgettable experience to see the desiccated, mirage-wreathed pans transformed into flood-lands by the first heavy rains of the season.

Expert
Brian Jackman   –  
United Kingdom UK
Visited: March

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

2 people found this review helpful.

Botswana’s big sky country
Overall rating
3/5

Nxai Pan – forget the x unless you can master the Khoisan click language and pronounce it to rhyme with sky. An appropriate word because the flatness of the desert and its heat-hazy horizons makes for huge skies – especially in the rainy season when apocalyptic thunderclouds build up in late afternoon. Encircled by seas of fossil dunes, the pans themselves are ancient salt lakes covered in short, sweet grasses that spring up in the wake of the rains, attracting huge numbers of zebra, blue wildebeest, springbok, gemsbok, eland and red hartebeest. The herbivores in turn are followed by the big cats as shown in Roar – Lions of the Kalahari, a spectacular National Geographic movie filmed at Nxai Pan in 2003.

Apart from the game the other big attraction everybody wants to see are Baines’ Baobabs, the seven giant trees painted by Thomas Baines in 1862. In the vast expanse of the Pans they dominate the horizon for miles around, presiding over a landscape that has hardly changed since Baines himself was here.

Expert
Anthony Ham   –  
Australia AU
Visited: Multiple times

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

3 people found this review helpful.

Nxai Pan: the Elusive Horizon
Overall rating
3/5

These salt pans, like the contiguous Makgadikgadi to the south, are white worlds surrounded by islands of scrub and oases of greenery to provide some relief. There’s an epic quality to the landscape, a frontier world beyond the realm of human habitation with mirages shimmering above the white pans. The stand of vast baobabs known as Baines’ Baobab is one of the Kalahari’s most evocative sights and a fine place to camp. Whenever I’ve visited, cheetahs and lions have been relatively easy to spot, making it one of the best places in Botswana to see the former. Elephants are also common, as are gemsbok and impala. For the best wildlife watching, try the waterholes north of South Camp, or the more remote Kgama Kgama Pan away to the northwest – with few vehicles heading out this far, you’re far more likely to discover something interesting and then have it all to yourself.

Average Expert Rating

  • 3.6/5
  • Wildlife
  • Scenery
  • Bush Vibe
  • Birding

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