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The ‘River of Life’ journey breaks down the border for a rewarding safari experience: every week travel

The ‘River of Life’ journey breaks down the border for a rewarding safari experience: every week travel

Wildlife in Africa is not tied to the border and is not a traveler in Kavango Zambezi Transfrontier Area (Kaza). The five countries recently asked a brief question after seeing a joint border. What should I do if I put down the fence?

The answer to the question is the world’s largest preservation area. Angola, Botswana, Namibia, Zambia, and Zimbabwe have created an ecosystem of 200,000 square miles that elephants can freely move across the international border, and safari participants can follow the same group in three countries without feeling as if they have left their destinations.

This border vision is now captured by KAZA’s new “Rivers of Life” tourist brand. All five partner countries are adjusted to present this extensive wilderness as a single adventure for travelers looking for more than classic game drives.

NYAMBE NYAMBE of the KAZA Secretariat said that this is not another game park with artificial boundaries, but a living ecosystem in five countries. Kaza does not have a traditional safari crowd, making Kaza much more intimate.

Crowd control

Kenya’s Masai Mara is crowded and Tanzania’s Cerente tee sees an endless car, while Kaza provides something more and more rarely. This is especially related to Kenya’s nose after July 21 in the Kogatende area. The video scene showed that tourists dismissed from Safari vehicles and physically blocked the free migration of Wildebeest.

The best way to understand the smooth characteristics of Kaza is to go through the real border schedule that shows how travelers can easily move the country while following the water and the water.

Kavango Zambezi, who discovers the destination platform, is easy to tie this experience with several sample journeys. One of these routes, a journey to less known aisles, begins at Caprivi Mutoya Lodge, Namibia, located near the largest Karma Mindukbug breeding colonies in South Africa. From August to November, up to 4,000 bright red birds create a public display that competes with famous migration in Africa. Visitors can interact with local families, meet children, and enjoy traditional foods while walking for 2-3 hours.

About 180 miles of operation to Divava Okavango Resort and SPA shows the beauty of Kaza along the river system that connects the entire area. The 20 high -end chalets in Divava Resort are looking down at the Okavango river near Popa Falls, and the Mahango National Game Park is just 10 minutes away. The boat trip allows travelers to see hippopotamus, crocodiles and amazing algae through downstream trips, and Sunset Cruise offers cruises upstream with POPA Falls.

HARTEBEESTS, Lions and Wild Dogs

Here, the route is a cowom national park in Northeast Namibia, a venture, which requires 384,000 hectares of serious 4X4 technology. This underprivileged park offers a meeting between Tsessebe, Roan Antelope, Red Hartebeest, and important lions and wild groups. Khaudum shows a true wilderness challenge that can be the only vehicle that traces wildlife in Fossil River Valleys because there are almost no signs and few visitors.

The cultural highlights of this trip come from the Living Museum of JU/’Hoansi-SAN, which continues in the traditional rebuilt villages in JU/’ Hoansi-San’s Living Museum. The local SAN community presents almost forgotten culture in traditional clothing, showing thousands of years of survival technology.

TSODILO HILLS, crossing Botzana, is sometimes called “Louvre of the Desert” with over 4,500 SAN paintings in a small part of the Kalahari desert. These paintings remain in their original state and have recorded human activities for more than 100,000 years. Currently, the SAN guide interprets this gallery to share the story and traditional knowledge that connects the past and the present.

NXAMASERI Island Lodge offers a distinct African experience on the private islands of Botzana Oka’s Defense Delta. One of the oldest lodges in Delta shows the beauty of permanent swamps and realizes the value of indigenous people. Here, Mokoro crosses the Namibia waters in Botswana, where visitors can go beyond international borders to traditional dugout canoe.

This circuit returns to Namibia from Mohembo Border-Post and continues to complete BWABWATA National Park and Kazile Island Lodge. Located on the park itself, Kazile is one of the two lodges that are originally located inside BWABWATA. The 13 Meru tents look down at KWANDO RIVER and vast flooding sources, and can be directly accessible to some of Africa’s last unprecedented wilderness corridors.

This route naturally is naturally connected to Kaza’s three UNESCO World Heritage Sites, Okavango Delta and Tsodilo Hills and placing travelers within the easy reach of Victorian Falls. But these are not an isolated spot. They are tied together by rivers that form cultural calendars in hundreds of communities across Kaza, as well as migration routes.

KAZA’s Mokoro Safaris allows travelers to cross the international waters from Boat and Namibia, but to make traditional dugout canoes. Photo Credit: Discover Kavango ZAMBEZI

Every year, the raining flood of Angola Teachers takes four months to travel to the system, pouring the river of the Namibia for the first time, making a famous Delta flood of Botswana, and finally feeding Victorian Falls. The annual water cycle changes the entire environment and creates a variety of wildlife views and aqueous activities, depending on the time the visitors arrive.

FAMS talks about

The recent FAM trip for international tour operators has shown Kaza’s potential as an integrated destination. Amanda England of Ethos Marketing, which handles KAZA’s international promotions, emphasized changes in tourism marketing in the region. “Previously, we focused on individual protection areas such as Victoria Falls. These familiar journeys can help to encourage international agents with experience with this gap.”

Traditional safari destinations and conscious travelers with excessive pressure seek true conservation stories. KAZA provides a true alternative. Tourism income is directly funded for wildlife corridors, allowing more than 130,000 elephants, 75% of the African population, to follow the ancient migration path between 36 national parks without human interference.

The “Rivers of Life” brand provides a convincing story of what can be a complex multilingual experience, proving to create a tourism potential that no one can achieve alone when the state cooperates.

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