Namib
Naukluft Park

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As
an official agent of NWR (Namibia Wildlife Resorts) we have
an extensive knowledge of all parks and services offered.
LB Safaris are therefore able to pre-book all accommodations,
and other activities or services.
We also include free advice of all services offered.
Should
you be interested to include Namib Naukluft Park 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!
Namib-Naukluft
National Park is an ecological preserve and part of the Namib
Desert in southwestern Africa, thought to be Earth’s
oldest desert. The park is the largest game park in Africa,
and a surprising collection of creatures live in this very
dry region, including snakes, geckos, unusual insects, hyenas,
gemsboks, zebra, jackals and many more. Moisture comes in
as a fog off the Atlantic Ocean and occasionally falls as
soft rain, with the average 106 millimeters of rainfall per
year concentrated in the months of February and April.
The prevailing winds that bring in the fog are also responsible
for creating the park’s towering sand dunes, whose burnt
orange color is a sign of their age and iron content. The
orange color develops over time as iron in the sand is oxidized
and like rusty metal, the older the sand, the brighter the
color.
These dunes are by far the tallest in the world, in places
rising to over 300 meters (almost 1000 feet) above the desert
floor (higher than the Eifel Tower!). The dunes mostly taper
off near the coast, and lagoons, wetlands, and mudflats located
along the long shoreline attracting hundreds of thousands
of birds.


‘Namib’ means open space and the Namib Desert
gave its name to form the name Namibia meaning land of open
spaces. The park was established in 1907 during the time of
the German Colonial Administration that proclaimed the area
between the Swakop River and the Kuiseb River a game reserve.
The park's present boundaries were established in 1978 by
the merging of the Namib Desert Park, the Naukluft Mountain
Zebra Park and parts of Diamond Area 1 including relatively
small parts of surrounding government land.
The Namib Naukluft Park has some of the most unusual wildlife
and nature reserves in the world covering an area of 49,768
km² (19,215 square miles). It is an area far larger than
Switzerland, roughly the size of the US states New Hampshire
and Vermont combined. The region is characterized by high,
isolated inselbergs and koppies (the Afrikaans term for rocky
outcrops), made up of dramatic blood red granites, rich in
feldspars and sandstone. The easternmost part of the park
covers a large part of the Naukluft Mountains.

Sossusvlei
is a clay pan in the central Namib Desert, lying within the
Namib-Naukluft National Park and in the Sesriem area. Fed
by the Tsauchab River, it is known for the surrounding high,
red sand dunes, which forms a major sea of sand. Very little
vegetation surviving here, such as the camelthorn tree, is
watered by infrequent floods of the Tsauchab River, which
eventually slowly soaks into the underlying clay.
Dead Vlei is as Sossusvlei, surrounded by
the highest sand dunes in the world, some reaching up to 300
meters, which rest on a sandstone terrace. The clay pan was
formed after rainfall through a period of hundreds of years,
when the Tsauchab river flooded, creating temporary shallow
pools where the abundance of water allowed camel thorn trees
to grow. When the climate changed and drought hit the area,
the sand dunes encroached on the pan blocking the river from
the area.
The trees died, as there no longer was any water to survive.
There are some species of plants remaining, such as salsola
and clumps of !nara, adapted to surviving off the morning
mist and very rare rainfall. The remaining skeletons of the
trees, which are believed to be about over 900 years old,
are now black because the intense sun that has scorched them.
Due to the dryness the wood does not decompose and form an
eerie spectacle especially early morning or late in the day.
