| ||||||
| ||||||||||||||
![]() Bridge to boat launch site for Xigera Camp across papayrus swamp |
![]() Joe on the powerboat trip through the permanently flooded spillway |
|
|
|
There are no cots to sleep on at Xigera Camp, so we have to sleep on the floor of the tents with a foam pad under us. There are only short drop toilets (no flush). There are almost no mosquitoes at the camp, despite Victor warning us they would reappear here. The reason things are more "rustic" at this camp is because there are no roads into the camp. All camp fixtures and supplies have to be brought in by boat, and due to the shallow water, mokoros (dug out canoes) are the usual mode of transportation in this area of the Okavango Delta. We are staying at a tiny remote camp deep in the delta - some say this is the best water-based safari in Botswana.
William is the local guide for this camp, so he takes us on a walking safari at 5:30pm, and we see some Kudus. The camp staff setup a table in the savannah just outside camp, and serve us Sundowners. We have a wonderful lamb stew, rice & vegetables for dinner, and eat around the campfire. We don't have a mosquito problem either night at this camp, probably due to the daytime heat and the evening breezes.
This area of the Okavango Delta is permanently flooded and is very
picturesque, however there are fewer big game in this area. The game are
harder to approach, since safaris in this area are either on foot or in a mokoro
(dug out canoe). Without the use of safari vehicles, it is not easy to
find or get close to the animals. This doesn't really concern me, since
our time in Linyanti Camp,
Lechwe Island Camp, and the Chobe River
boat cruise have fully satisfied me for observing and photographing African
big game. However if you are booking safari tours in Botswana, be sure to
include camps in other areas of the Okavango Delta where safari vehicles can be
used.
October 24,
2008 - Friday - We are up at 5:30am for an early morning Mokoro safari through the waterways. We
saw a large family of
baboons playing around in a big tree near the shoreline; Red Lechwe antelope bounding through the water;
Kudu watch us from the shoreline; we see crocodile tracks
on shore; and hear some Hippopotamus a short distance away from our mokoros. We return to camp
by 9:20am - the Sun is already high in
the sky, and the daytime heat is building. We have
Brunch at 10:30am, then it is time for a siesta as the midday heat takes hold
(about 40°C in the shade). All our tents are located under the shade of
trees, so we are reasonably comfortable as we all take our siestas.
![]() Sunrise & the Moon over the Okavango Delta |
![]() Sunrise over the Okavango Delta |
![]() Morning light over Okavango Delta |
![]() Gecko on my tent |
![]() Brown bird in camp underbrus |
![]() Spotted Reed Frog in the Okavango Delta |
Xigera Mokoro Okavango Safari a 3 minute video from
Joe Carr on
Vimeo
For the best high definition video experience go
directly to the Vimeo website
by clicking here:
Xigera Mokoro Okavango Safari
Click on the little four segment symbol near the bottom
right corner of the video window
to enlarge this video to high definition size on your computer monitor.
Botswana men
normally keep their hair close cropped, but one strikingly handsome young Mokoro
poler has about 1cm long curls. I saw Victor tutoring him as he poled us through
the channels, so he is obviously studying to be a guide. Most camp staff take
their careers seriously, with many studying so they can apply for advancement
opportunities. The operator of the camps we used in Botswana is
Wilderness Safaris,
which appear to offer local people well paid careers in eco-tourism.
Later in the afternoon, I spot some very cute resident monkeys in the trees above our tents.
They play peek-a-boo with me and my video camera. The camp staff have done a
wonderful job of keeping all the food out of the way, and not tempting the
monkeys to come down from the tree canopy. We had no problems with the
monkeys as a result. We went on another mokoro safari through the waterways
between 5:30pm and 7pm, and saw some birds, a very colorful
Reed Frog, and some elephant bones on an adjacent island.
October 25,
2008 - Saturday - We get up at 5:30am for one last early morning walking safari before we leave
camp. We see two
sets of Leopard tracks, Elephants in the distance, and some Impala on the
savannah in the middle of the island we are located on.
We leave camp at 12 noon on the motor boat - once again zipping through the shallow
delta water at full throttle. It is just as thrilling as our arrival
trip! We spot a Giraffe sitting down in the bush and resting (a first), and we
also watch brown-striped Zebras graze beside the Xigera airstrip before boarding
the last local flight we will take in Botswana (from Xigera to Maun).
![]()
Next >>> Maun to Johannesburg
Lechwe Island Camp <<< Previous
| ||||||||||||||