A Visit to Etosha National Park with World Teach Volunteers h3>

Wow! Animals at Every Turn

August, 2014

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Wow! We were done teaching, so no lesson plans to worry about. Our in-country director, Bret McSpadden, met us at Backpacker Unite with a small van. We ferried gear we wouldn't need for the next week to his apartment for storage, then piled in our personal camping gear for the week. There were nine of us -- eight summer volunteers, Bret, and Damaras. Bret was doing the driving and Damaras, a 2012 volunteer, was doing most of the navigating, so we didn't need to pay too close attention to where we were going. We could sit back and relax and enjoy the countryside. I settled in with my camera and my nose to the window. Dona passed out chocolate chip cookies she had baked just before we left Ohangwena. We headed north and soon left Windhoek behind.

WT Etosha Van Dona Cookies
Dona handing out Cookies in the Van

On the way north we spotted some Springbok, Kudu, and lots of Warthogs alongside the road. We got to Etosha National Park about sunset, and as we drove to our campsite at Hilali we saw Burchell's Zebras, Giraffes, Black Faced Impala, Ostrich, and an Augur Buzzard. Then, as we were nearing camp, a Rhino and Elephants greeted us. Not bad for just getting to camp!

WT Etosha Rhino
Rhino

WT Etosha Sunset
Etosha Sunset
WT Etosha Sunset

WT Etosha Elephant WT Etosha Elephant
Elephant

It was dark when we got to camp. Campsites at Hilali are first-come, first-served, and most were taken. We had a little trouble finding a place, then figuring out how to pitch the tents which we weren't familiar with. We had cooking groups set up, so four of us went to work while the rest sat back and enjoyed a cold brew and snacks. It was a perfect temperature, with no biting bugs.

Braai (barbcue) is a bigger pasttime in Namibia than it is even in the U.S., and we indulged. Yum! Lamb and Boerewurst, Taters and Onions, Salad, Fruit Salad, rolls ... We were full. Full-full.

WT Etosha Waiting For Dinner WT Etosha Fixing Dinner Diane Dona Fletcher WT Etosha Fixing Dinner Dona
Waiting For Dinner Fixing Dinner; Diane, Dona and Fletcher Dona Fixing Dinner

Man, was that dinner good! My stomach is growling just thinking about now, four months later! Yum! I don't have the barbcue gene, so we don't do it a lot at home. Bret has it big-time, so we did it a lot on this short trip. Thanks, dude! Yum!

WT Etosha Dinner
Dinner

Hilali campground is located adjacent to a prominent waterhole. Since it was the dry season, we could pretty much count on animals of all sorts showing up at some time. It's too commercialized for my taste, with some seats and a roof set up on some rocks above the waterhole, and the area is lit up at night for easy viewing. We wandered over there after dinner and were treated to a big Rhino that came down to drink.

WT Etosha Night Water Hole Rhino WT Etosha Night Water Hole Rhino
Rhino at Night at the Water Hole

At sunrise the next morning, there wasn't a lot of activity other than a few birds. But someone said there had been lions there during the night.

WT Etosha Waterhole Morning
Waterhole in the Morning
WT Etosha Bird Familiar Chat WT Etosha Bird Cinnamon Breasted Bunting
Familiar Chat Cinnamon Breasted Bunting

WT Etosha Bird Guinea Fowl
Guinea Fowl

WT Etosha Bird Pale Winged Starling WT Etosha Bird Pale Winged Starling WT Etosha Bird Pale Winged Starling
Pale Winged Starling

After a bit some Kudu and Black-Faced Impala showed up, along with some Banded Mongeese.

WT Etosha Kudu WT Etosha Kudu F
Kudu

WT Etosha Banded Mongoose
Banded Mongoose

WT Etosha Banded Mongoose
Banded Mongoose

WT Etosha Black Faced Impala WT Etosha Black Faced Impala WT Etosha Black Faced Impala
Black Faced Impala

Then we headed out in the combi to see what we could find elsewhere.

WT Etosha Giraffe WT Etosha Giraffe
Giraffe

We saw this small brown fuzzball alongside the road, but it disappeared as soon as we drove up. I'm still not sure what it was. At first we thought it might be a Honeybear, but they are nocturnal and the coloring wasn't right.

WT Etosha Xxx WT Etosha Xxx
Xxx

WT Etosha Bird Namaqua Dove
Namaqua Dove
WT Etosha Burchells Zebras
Burchell's Zebras
WT Etosha Burchells Zebra WT Etosha Burchells Zebras
Burchell's Zebras

WT Etosha Burchells Zebra Backs
Burchell's Zebra Backs
WT Etosha Burchells Zebra Backs
Burchell's Zebra Backs

WT Etosha Burchells Zebras Springbok WT Etosha Springbok
Springbok
WT Etosha Giraffes
Giraffes

WT Etosha Giraffe WT Etosha Giraffe Eating Thorns
Giraffe Giraffe Eating Thorns

WT Etosha Kudu WT Etosha Kudu WT Etosha Kudu WT Etosha Kudu
Kudu

WT Etosha Bird Xxx
Bird Xxx

WT Etosha Wart Hog
Wart Hog

WT Etosha Bird African Red Eyed Bulbul WT Etosha Bird Namaqua Sand Grouse WT Etosha Bird Namaqua Sand Grouse
African Red Eyed Bulbul Namaqua Sand Grouse

WT Etosha Xxx Black Backed Jackal
Black Backed Jackal

We saw some Kori Bustards, the largest (heaviest) bird that can still fly. But I have yet to see one actually fly. They have a really cool courtship display, where the males puff up their neck feathers like a big cold-weather neck-warmer. We didn't see them do that on this trip, but Dona and I saw some do it in February in Tanzania.

WT Etosha Bird Kori Bustard WT Etosha Bird Kori Bustard WT Etosha Bird Kori Bustard
Kori Bustard

WT Etosha Bird Pied Crow WT Etosha Bird Xxx Dove
Pied Crow Xxx Dove

We spent some time around mid-day at the Okakujeo Water Hole. Not a particularly good time for game observation, but we saw a few birds and the usual larger animals.

WT Etosha Bird Shaft Tailed Whydah WT Etosha Bird Shaft Tailed Whydah
Shaft Tailed Whydah

WT Etosha Elephant
Young Elephant and Springbok

WT Etosha Elephant WT Etosha Elephant Splashing
Young Elephant ... Cooling Off

WT Etosha Oryx WT Etosha Oryx
Oryx

Then we drove around to check out a few other waterholes. It wasn't a particularly good time to be out and about, but there is so much wildlife in the park and it is so concentrated around the waterholes that you can't help but see stuff.

WT Etosha Elephants Sky WT Etosha Elephants Sky
Elephants under the big Namibian Sky
WT Etosha Elephant WT Etosha Elephant
Elephant

We found a few sunbirds and Secretarybirds out in the grass between waterholes. Secretarybirds are renouned as snake-eaters, killing even adders and cobras. I was hoping to see a match between a Secretarybird and a snake, but no such luck.

WT Etosha Bird Secretarybird WT Etosha Bird Secretarybird
Secretarybird
WT Etosha Bird Xxx Sunbird
Xxx Sunbird

As evening settled back in, we headed again to the waterhole at Hilali.

WT Etosha Bird Xxx WT Etosha Bird Blacksmith Lapwing
Bird Xxx Blacksmith Lapwing

After a while a rhino showed up, and then another. They appeared to have some sort of courtship going.

WT Etosha Rhino
Rhino at the Waterhole
WT Etosha Rhino WT Etosha Rhino
Rhino at the Waterhole

WT Etosha Rhinos WT Etosha Rhinos Touching Horns
Rhinos Getting Acquainted Touching Horns

WT Etosha Rhinos Touching Horns
Rhinos Touching Horns

WT Etosha Rhinos WT Etosha Rhinos

WT Etosha Rhino Drinking WT Etosha WT Etosha Rhinos

WT Etosha Rhinos WT Etosha Rhinos Touching Horns

There's a pretty nice grandstand on the Kopje at the Hilali waterhole, and unfortunately I felt sort of like I was at the zoo. But with the number of people who visit it's a pretty effective way of doing crowd control.

WT Etosha Waterhole People Rhinos
People at the Waterhole

WT Etosha Rhinos
Rhinos

Just after dinner a Honeybear showed up, looking for leftovers in the rubbish bins.

WT Etosha Honeybear
Honeybear

Dona and I decided to spend the night at the waterhole, so we hauled our pads and sleeping bags up there. We didn't stay awake all night, but we were awake for a lot of it. After dark two lionesses showed up and pretty much scared everything else away, except for a larger solitary rhino. The rhino and the lionesses seemed to have come to some kind of Mexican standoff type agreement. Just before daylight I saw a Caracal, but it was too dark to get a picture.

WT Etosha Waterhole Lioness WT Etosha Waterhole Lioness
Lioness at the Waterhole

WT Etosha Waterhole Rhino WT Etosha Waterhole Rhinos Lion
Rhino Rhinos and Lion at the Waterhole

WT Etosha Waterhole Sunrise
Sunrise at the Waterhole
WT Etosha Waterhole Sunrise WT Etosha Waterhole Sunrise

I never tired of the birds hanging around the campground.

WT Etosha Bird Pale Winged Starling WT Etosha Bird Southern Red Billed Hornbill
Pale Winged Starling Southern Red Billed Hornbill

I'm still not used to seeing flowers and only tiny remnants of leaves dwarfed by huge thorns on the shrubs.

WT Etosha Flower On Thorny Shrub
Flower On Thorny Shrub

We packed up and headed out, on our way through Damaraland to Swakopmund.

WT Etosha Rhino
Rhino

WT Etosha Brid Dusky Sunbird F WT Etosha Brid Dusky Sunbird F
Dusky Sunbird (Female)

We found a male lion at a waterhole on the way; everything else gave him lots of room, and all the water he wanted.

WT Etosha Lion
Lion

It's difficult to imaging the landscape of the Etosha Salt Pan; I find it's easiest to think of a barren planet and modify that by adding grass and a hot sun. It's a cool place, but a hard place to survive.

WT Etosha Salt Pan
Etosha Salt Pan