Moremi Game Reserve is one of the two major game viewing
areas in Botswana, the other being Chobe National Park. Moremi runs into the
Okavango Delta, which is a flooded delta region that can only be accessed by
very expensive luxury (as in $1000 per person per night) fly-in safari
operators. We didn’t think we would get to either of these places, partly
because we’d read that they are so busy you need to book campsites up to a year
in advance. The rainy season can also make the roads impassable. It’s rainy
season now, and many areas get washed out or flooded and it can be easy to get
stuck. We have gear to get unstuck, but we weren’t keen on the idea of having
to wait overnight for someone to pull us out or doing outside work when there
could be a lion hiding under a tree. So far, we’ve had no trouble with
accommodation and most places seem quite empty. We found out the roads weren’t
too bad, so we headed off into the bush with our Toyota Hilux. We had an
amazing drive into Moremi Game Reserve in northern Botswana. There were some
pretty big puddles but nothing serious. As with many days, the weather was
constantly changing from searing sun to torrential rains. On the drive in, we
saw our first hippo, giraffes(!), zebras, and elephants, and loads of different
antelope and fantastical birds. We drove straight through a herd of Cape
buffalo, which look a bit like ladies with pigtails because of their curved
horns. They have incredibly human faces, somehow.
We were planning to camp two nights at Third Bridge campsite
inside Moremi. (I’m still amazed I even considered that idea, what with the
elephants and lions and all.) It’s tricky to camp in these places, because you
are not supposed to walk around after dark, which is at 7pm. We had heard that
you shouldn’t even walk to the bathroom a couple of campsites away, but
everyone seemed to be doing that, and it seems to be common practice in the
camping areas. It’s a bit trickier with our rooftop tent, because the truck
can’t really be driven with the tent set up. Anyway, as dusk approached, I
wasn’t excited about the idea of waking up at 3am to the sound of elephants
eating the tree next to us, and we actually slept in car (justifying it with
our plan to leave by 5:30am for a game viewing drive). Our early morning drive,
timed to correspond to prime animal activity at dawn and dusk, brought a few
more giraffes and zebras, but not super close.
After talking to the very helpful ranger, B managed to
wrangle us a stay in a safari tent the next night. This was amazing. These are
huge (the size of a hotel room), permanent canvas tents on wooden platforms
with en suite bathrooms and an attached outdoor shower. There were a few of
these at the campsite that seemed to be out of use for the low season, but they
let us stay, and it was great. There was a herd of impala grazing outside when
we showed up, and we watched a herd of elephants go by as we sat on our deck in
the afternoon. More elephants later when we took another drive around an island
in the game reserve.
On the way out the next day, we drove through an amazing
forested area (the vegetation changes a lot from place to place. There were a
few pairs of impala bucks wrestling with their antlers right next to us. We saw
the remains of a hippo that was still being picked over by vultures. The poor
thing’s head was still intact, but otherwise it was down to a huge ribcage
surrounded by scavengers. There was a sable antelope – these are one of the big
ones. Amazing.
That’s when the front fell off and things started to go
awry. We hit what seemed like a never ended series of huge water pools along
the last stretch of road toward the exit gate. We were planning to head
straight to Chobe National Park from Moremi. The challenge with these pools is
that is was impossible to know how deep they were – and they were several truck
lengths long – and impossible to know whether they were rutted and muddy at the
bottom. The road is very sandy, so we figured they were fine. We flew over a
bunch of them by flooring it and hydroplaning, but they seemed to be getting
bigger. We didn’t want to find a bad one by getting stuck in the middle of it,
so we turned back. We met a group of two other trucks going in, who decided to
try it and offered to let us go along (in case anyone needed towing out of a
hole). We considered it, but then noticed that the force of the water had
already left the front grill and bumper of the truck hanging off. It had been
loose in one place when we picked it up, but now it was really bad and we
didn’t want to loose it entirely. We decided to take a different route – longer
but apparently drier. It was drier, but not dry enough for our shaky front end,
so we had to turn back again once we were almost out of the park. We stopped at
the ranger station at the park exit and strapped on the front end with
tie-downs and high-tailed it back to Maun.
We stayed at a place called Crocodile Camp, which was one of
the first safari base camps in the area. (Maun used to be a frontier town for
people entering the park. It’s still a hub for that, but now most people fly
there and fly straight out in a bush plane.) After a few days in Maun, we
managed to rest up a bit and get the front end sort of fixed at the local Land
Rover garage. It involved a lot of glue, extra bolts, and cable ties. Most of
the flimsy plastic connection points were broken off. But, we felt pasted back
together enough to get to us through Chobe Park.
1 comment:
Hi karen and bob! Thinking of you both and loving the blog updates. Beautiful photographs. Be well! xoxo
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