Kgalagadi
Transfrontier Park (Botswana)
Should
you be interested to include a visit to the Kgalagadi 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!
Africa's
first formally declared trans-border conservation area - the
Kgalagadi Transfrontier Park (KTP) on the border of South
Africa and Botswana - was officially launched on May 12, 2000
by South African President Thabo Mbeki and Botswana President
Festus Mogae. The Kgalagadi Transfrontier Park is located
in Kgalagadi District approximately 865km southwest of Gaborone.


go
back
The combined land area of the KTP is about 38,000 km2 of which
28,400 km2 lies in Botswana and 9,600 km2 in South Africa.
Transfrontier parks, border parks or transboundary conservation
areas are protected areas that straddle international boundaries.
The Kgalagadi Transfrontier Park is such a protected area
in the southern Kalahari Desert. The southern Kalahari represents
an increasingly rare phenomenon: a large ecosystem relatively
free from human interference. The absence of man-made barriers
(except to the west and south of the Park) has provided a
conservation area large enough to maintain examples of two
ecological processes that were once widespread in the savannahs
and grasslands of Africa. The large scale migratory movements
of wild ungulates; and predation by large mammalian carnivores.
These processes are impossible to maintain except in the largest
of areas, and their presence in the Kalahari makes the system
of special value to conservation.
In addition to this, the Kalahari has a particular aesthetic
appeal. The harsh, semi-arid environment has placed adaptive
demands on both fauna and flora that are of considerable scientific
interest. Few other conservation areas have attracted so many
research projects. This research has revealed a widely fluctuating
environment, driven by rainfall events, which vary widely
in time and space, and produces a system that is difficult
to predict and understand without long-term study.
The significance of the Kgalagadi Transfrontier Park is that
it is the first formally declared Transfrontier Park in Africa
and it will hopefully serve as a model for conservation in
the 21st Century. The Government of Botswana is keen to make
the Transfrontier Park a success. The Peace Parks Foundation
(an NGO dedicated to promoting transfrontier parks in southern
Africa) has played an important role in the development of
the Kgalagadi Transfrontier Park and provides assistance for
the creation of other transboundary conservation areas in
the region.


To get to the park from Botswana travel from Gaborone on tarred
road for about 550km until Tsabong in Kgalagadi District,
from Tsabong travel for about 310km on gravel road. This road
is negotiable by 4 x 2 vehicles during the dry season and
4 x 4 vehicles during the wet season. The alternative route
is to travel from Gaborone to Hukuntsi on tarred road for
530km followed by approximately 171km of sand road, which
is negotiable by 4 x 4 vehicles only.