Central
Kalahari Game Reserve
Should
you be interested to include the Central Kalahari Game reserve
into your intended holiday after reading the information below,
please do not hesitate to request
a free and personalized travel advice and price estimate.
As acknowledged incoming tour operator for Southern Africa
LB Safaris will gladly assist you in fine-tuning your travel
wishes!
Larger
than Denmark or Switzerland, and bigger than Lesotho and Swaziland
combined, the 52,800 square kilometre Central Kalahari Game
Reserve, which was set up in 1961, is the second largest game
reserve in the world. Situated right in the centre of Botswana,
this reserve is characterised by vast open plains, saltpans
and ancient riverbeds. Varying from sand dunes with many species
of trees and shrubs in the north, to flat bushveld in the
central area, the reserve is more heavily wooded in the south,
with mophane forests to the south and east. Rainfall is sparse
and sporadic and can vary from 170 to 700 millimetres per
year.



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back
The people commonly known throughout the world as Bushmen,
but more properly referred to as the Basarwa or San, have
been resident in and around the area for probably thousands
of years. Originally nomadic hunters and gathers, the lifestyle
of the Basarwa has gradually changed with the times and they
now live in settlements, some of which are situated within
the southern half of the Central Kalahari Game Reserve. Government
is, however, encouraging these people to move to areas outside
the reserve in order that they may be provided with modem
facilities, schools, clinics, etc. and to integrate them into
modern society.
Other fairly recent residents were Mark and Delia Owens, who
spent many years in the Deception Valley area of the park
undertaking research mainly on brown hyaena. They set up their
camp in the northern section of Deception in a prime "tree
island", however tree islands are no longer used for
camping in these days of more environmental awareness. The
Owens' book, "Cry of the Kalahari" brought the attention
of readers to this previously little-visited area and even
today many people refer to the Central Kalahari simply as
Deception. The name "Deception"
comes from a pan the dry surface of which sometimes appears
convincingly full of water until one gets right to the edge.
Wildlife
Game viewing for animals which include giraffe, brown hyaena,
warthog, wild dog, cheetah, leopard, lion, blue wildebeest,
eland, gemsbok, kudu, red hartebeest and springbok, is best
between December and April, when the animals tend to congregate
in the pans and valleys. Visitors are warned that sleeping
in the open without a tent is dangerous and foolhardy and
that they should keep their tents fastened to prevent snakes,
scorpions, etc. from gaining entry. Foodstuffs, etc. should
not be kept in the tent but should be closed into the vehicle
to avoid the unwanted attentions of lions and hyaenas.


Deception
Valley
Deception Valley is all that remains of a sprawling riverbed
that has long since dried up. Stretching across 80km of the
Central Kalahari Game Reserve's north, the valley is now covered
with short grass, dotted with the occasional island of bushy
trees. Some of the roots of the larger trees extend as far
as 50m below the surface to the water table, enabling them
to survive the dry winters.


The low canopies of these tree grove islands, usually made
up of umbrella thorn (Acacia tortilis) and buffalo thorn (Ziziphus
mucronata) provide shelter for game during the heat of the
day and one can often see lion dozing in the shade of these
thickets.
The fossil valley was first brought to the world's attention
in 1985, by the book Cry of the Kalahari written by Mark and
Delia Owens, who lived on the pan for seven years studying
the brown hyaena that live here.