Safari guides are cool people, their brains ripe with knowledge they’re happy to share. The best ones are charismatic and make your days so much fun you never want them to end. But it’s not often you see one of them yoyo with excitement at something he’s just seen for the first time. Yet that’s what happened on a game drive at Desert Rhino Camp in Damaraland, Namibia.
A few years ago, we were out in an open 4x4 with our guide from Desert Rhino Camp, Bons Roman. He was a fun guy, delivering heaps of information peppered with quips and jokes. Luckily, he also knew when to switch off the engine and just sit quietly as the sense of place washed over us.
There on the Palmwag Concession in Damaraland the landscape seemed to stretch forever. Volcanic stones strewed the ground, glowing red in the late afternoon sunlight. With less than 100mm of annual rainfall this land might appear barren but it sustains an amazing diversity of life.
The previous day, a thrill of excitement had rippled through us all of us on the open safari vehicle when the radio crackled to life: the Save the Rhino monitors had found a rhino. Once the vehicle got to the area where they were quietly monitoring it – noting where it was found, what it was doing and which individual animal it was – we got out on foot to walk closer so as not to make a noise and disturb it. Watching a desert-adapted rhino quietly browsing among red rocks and welwitschia plants was a stirring moment, but not the only one here in Damaraland.
A new day and a new adventure. Redbilled spurfowl cackled at each other under a wild ebony tree and a group of Hartmann’s zebra grazed in the riverbed. A blackbacked jackal trotted over the veld, more of a hunter here in the desert than a scavenger. There were plenty springbok and gemsbok too. ‘Research has shown that they eat grass when it’s green after good rains, but in the dry season they’ll browse on leaves,’ said Bons. It’s just one way animals here have adapted to the harsh conditions.
‘Desert elephants have adapted by not pushing down whole trees as they do elsewhere,’ he added. ‘Here, they just break off branches.’
Just before sunset we found a clan of spotted hyenas with six inquisitive youngsters. They came right up to the vehicle to sniff us and nibble the tyres. Two of them lay down, one’s head on the other’s back. When a third tried to join in, a squabble broke out and the interloper got a few sharp nips for its impudence.
We heard Hartmann’s zebra hooves clattering over dark basalt rock as they trotted away to a safe distance. We smelled a midden, that rhino post office used for communication about everything from territory to females in oestrus. And we saw white bones in the veld where two bull elephants had fought to the death a few months earlier – the body of the loser quickly gobbled up by hyenas and vultures.
Bons bounced up and down like a kid at Christmas. ‘I’ve read in a book that they’ll eat these fruits in winter but I’ve never seen it for myself before,’ he said, his face glowing with pleasure.
Even when you know as much as a good guide does, there’s always something new to learn and observe.
Desert Rhino Camp was originally built in 2003 and at the end of 2023 Wilderness closed it to conjure a complete rebuild. I've seen the artist's renderings and I know it's going to be gorgeous. It reopens in July 2024, when the camp will continue to serve as a base for one of the Save the Rhino Trust tracking teams. By visiting, you make a significant contribution to protecting this endangered species because both the lease fee and a percentage of income from bed nights goes back to the Torra, Sesfontein, and Anabeb conservancies that administer the Palmwag Concession. This gives them a direct interest in the sustainability of ecotourism.
And that’s something any visitor who loves wildlife can feel good about.
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