When the Kunene River runs in full seasonal flood, Ruacana Falls is one of the most spectacular waterfalls in Africa:
Impalila Island sits at the precise northeastern tip of Namibia, at the confluence of the Chobe and Zambezi rivers where
Popa Falls are not a sheer drop but something more dramatic — a series of white-water rapids, channels and cascades
The Oshana Region takes its very name from the oshanas — the network of shallow, interconnected seasonal watercourses and pans
The Okavango River at Rundu is wide, papyrus-lined and spectacularly birdy. Sunrise and sunset cruises from the river lodges pass
The Hoba meteorite is the largest known intact meteorite on Earth and it has never moved — it is simply
Namibia’s third-largest cave system, declared a national monument, on the guest farm Ghaub between Otavi and Grootfontein. The cave descends
Dragon’s Breath Cave holds a record few visitors know exists: the world’s largest known non-subglacial underground lake, nearly 2 hectares
A circular, 145-metre-deep sinkhole lake formed when an ancient cave system collapsed, 20km north of Tsumeb just off the B1.
A twin sinkhole to Otjikoto, Lake Guinas is about 40km west of Tsumeb and significantly more dramatic in its depth
