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Highlights...Makgadikgadi, Moremi, Savute
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Day to Day
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Cost
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The accommodation
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What's Included
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Day 1 Makgadikgadi National Park
Arrive at Johannesburg International Airport, where our representative will meet you in the Arrivals Hall and assist you with checking in for your flight to Maun Airport in Botswana. Upon arrival there you will be met and transferred to Meno a Kwena Lodge (about 1.5 hours away).
Midway between Botswana’s extraordinary Okavango Delta and the spectacular Central Kalahari Game Reserve, Meno a Kwena tented camp provides guests with a unique African wildlife experience.
The safari never stops at Meno a Kwena, a hidden gem, perched on a rocky cliff top above the Boteti River in Botswana.
Day 2 Makgadikgadi area
As the dry southern hemisphere winter sets in, the herds of Nxai Pan move to the Boteti River, which then becomes a precious source of water during this period. The zebras spend the months of April / May to November grazing on its banks.
The Camp is perfectly located for safaris into pristine wildlife sanctuaries including the Makgadikgadi Saltpans and the Central Kalahari Game Reserve.
From this spectacular spot, you can head off to tour the Kalahari – plus the stunning open plains and desert wildlife of the Makgadikgadi Pans National Park. At both reserves, desert-adapted meerkats and antelopes are regularly seen while lions and cheetahs can sometimes be spotted in the Kalahari.
Hop on a game drive to find desert-adapted animals that can’t be found elsewhere in Botswana. There’s antelope with comical twisted horns, and remarkable desert elephant. The rumble of hooves heralds the arrival of Africa’s second largest migration. An amazing spectacle of 30,000 zebra and wildebeest migrate across the Makgadikgadi Pans, alongside a scattering of other hooved game. As the pans dry from April onwards, the zebra complete their journey at the river in an explosion of black and white stripes, followed closely by the predators: lion with their impressive black manes, leopard and cheetah using the surrounding bushes as cover, packs of wild dog, and mischievous jackal.
Alternately, you could also enjoy fascinating walking tours with the indigenous locals – providing an amazing insight into their culture, the area’s native plants and spectacular wildlife.
Incidentally, Meno a Kwena means ‘teeth of the crocodile’ – a common sight as the reptiles lounge on the river’s banks, often near the Camp. After game drives, guests can relax in the lodge’s stunning swimming pool with views of the river – a relaxing experience that is thankfully crocodile-free.
With a glittering roster of activities, including day trips to the Makgadikgadi Pans, guided walks with the San Bushmen, and wildlife-watching boat trips, there’s plenty to do. But sometimes, the best game viewing is where you least expect it, and at Meno, it’s right in front you.
Day 3 Okavango Delta
Today you will be road transferred from Meno a Kwena Camp back to Maun Airport (1.5 hours), where you will meet the pilot who will charter you into Delta Camp, 20 minutes away across the Okavango Delta.
Your private Guide (1 Guide for every 2 guests) will meet you at the airstrip and take you to Delta Camp by Mokoro - a dug-out canoe which they pole along. Your baggage will be taken to the Camp by vehicle. (Should water levels be low, you will walk into Camp – a short distance away).
This intimate and informal safari Camp nestles on a small island, close to the south western edge of Chief's island, heart of the Okavango Delta - the vast oasis of the Kgalagadi Desert. Delta Camp overlooks the Boro, one of the primary watercourses of the Okavango.
Day 4 Okavango Delta
The entire Chiefs Island is widely regarded by many to be the very best place to view game in the entire Okavango Delta.
Born in the Okavango, raised in the Okavango, Delta Camps Guides are the essence of the place. Using only genuine, hand-made dug-out canoes, the guides will take you deep into the Okavango, through the channels and floodplains, and walking on the many islands in the area. Your guides join you on your arrival and remains exclusively yours for the duration of your stay. Armed with a lifetimes experience and eyes like a hawk, senses finely attuned to his environment, he will accompany you on all your excursions, be they brief forays from the comfort of the lodge, full-day outings with a picnic lunch, or extended camping expeditions into the Okavango. The Delta Camp experience is cultural as well as being a wildlife and wilderness one, and spending time in the company of a man who has lived his life in this wild place, and perhaps even visiting his home, is a revelation to many visitors, and a lesson in differing values and perceptions.
Game of all sorts abounds: lion, leopard, buffalo, elephant, hippopotamus, crocodile, giraffe, all manner of antelope including the rare lechwe, tsessebe and sitatunga, otters, honey-badgers, the shy pangolin, and a variety of the smaller wild cats such as civets, servals and genets are amongst the many mammal species you may see. Reptiles are well represented many species of snakes (most of them harmless) occur, as do several of tortoise, terrapin, lizard, skinks, chameleon and gecko not forgetting, of course, the Nile crocodile, of which some particularly large specimens inhabit the area. Then of course there are the birds, well over 450 species that bring the forests, rivers and flood-plains of the Okavango to life. Many rare and endangered species call the Okavango home, and keen birders come from the world over in search of them. Bird-song heralds each Okavango dawn.
Day 5 Khwai Private Reserve
After a morning activity and breakfast, you will be chartered from Delta Camp to Khwai, across the Okavango Delta, 25 minutes away.
A representative of Hyena Pan Tented Camp will be waiting to transfer you to the Camp, 30 minutes away.
This 350,000 hectare private concession falls within the Okavango Delta World Heritage Site.
Hyena Pan is a remote tented camp in a private concession in the Khwai Region of the Okavango Delta. The concession borders the Moremi Game Reserve and the Khwai River in the South and the Chobe National Park to the East. The Camp lies 12km’s north of the Khwai River, within Cathedral Mopane forest, overlooking a natural Mopane Pan. The pan is a constant water supply to many species of birds and animals year round, the rains which fall between December and March flood the area, creating an enormous water wallow for Hippo, Elephant and Buffalo and an exceptional array of water birds. As the pan's water diminishes from March through to late November, Hyena Pan pumps water into the pan from their borehole, thus providing a year round hive of animal activity.
Days 6 and 7 Khwai Private Reserve
At Hyena Pan, you will have a range of activities to choose from.
This is predator country, so your chances of spotting leopard, wild dog, lion and spotted hyena are excellent. Various other species frequent the area - kudu, waterbuck, red lechwe, eland, impala, roan, buffalo, warthog and many more.
Morning and afternoon game drives in an open 4x4 vehicle, exploring the 350 000 hectare concession, or a drive along the Khwai River, for further game exploration, is not to be missed.
Hyena Pan has an underground hide as well as a ground level, hidden view point, positioned facing an extremely private and special waterhole within the private concession area. Spectacular photographic opportunities from ground level are there for those seeking privacy. Elephant frequent this water source, as do Kudu and Roan Antelope. Giraffe and Warthog are regular visitors, whilst Buffalo and Eland are more special visitors.
A special feature of this private concession is the ability to walk; relaxed and informative game walks are an option to Hyena Pan guests.
Day 8 Savute
After a morning activity and breakfast, you will be chartered to Savuti airstrip, 40 minutes away. A representative of Ghoha Hills will meet you at the airstrip, and will drive you to the Lodge, 45 minutes away.
Ghoha Hills Savuti Camp is perched on the Ghoha Hills, overlooking the vast expanse of the Savuti area of the Chobe National Park. The elevated position of the Camp offers some of the most breath-taking views in Botswana. Ghoha Hills Savuti Camp aims to provide discerning travellers with a unique, first class safari experience in an eco-friendly and eco-sensitive environment. The Camp lies on the ledges of Ghoha Hills, some 45 minutes north of Savuti Airstrip, and it provides both privacy and exclusivity to its guests, especially as the Savuti area can get quite busy during high season.
The Lodge is situated 20km from the Savuti Channel which is currently dry after its 2008 flow, and which attracts various species.
Day 9 Savute
The Savuti has over the years developed a reputation as a prime place to view predators in Botswana, especially lion and spotted hyena. The Savuti lies within the Chobe National Park and boasts one of the highest concentrations of wildlife on the African continent. The Camp is located in an area abounding with species such as elephant, buffalo, lion, leopard, roan antelope, giraffe, spotted hyena, jackal and a variety of birdlife.
Game activities will include morning and afternoon game drives in open 4×4 safari vehicles, guided walks in the vicinity of the camp, bird watching and stargazing. Game drives are conducted in comfortable 4 x 4 safari vehicles and take guests to the nearby pans, which are exclusively located on the property's own road network and promise to provide guests with great game viewing within close proximity to the lodge. Guests will also enjoy the full Savuti experience – the marsh and the Savuti Channel. There is a bird hide only one kilometre from camp which provides guests with a peaceful haven to view great wildlife all day.
The Bushman paintings are situated on the eastern face of Bushman Hill. The paintings, not carbon dated, are thought to be between 3000 to 4000 years old. They depict various animals of present and past Savuti vintage. Eland, elephant, sable, giraffe, a puff adder and a hippo from wetter times feature on the same panel. A mixture of plant juices, and animal fat coloured with the rusty iron oxide from the rocks, was used to create this incredibly durable paint, but its exact composition is unknown. There are 22 known sites of paintings around Savuti, most being very faint due to exposure to the elements.
In the dry season thousands of dove and sandgrouse come down to drink in the mornings and are under constant surveillance by Yellow-billed Kite, Tawny Eagle and African Hawk-Eagle. Red-crested Korhaan are common in the Kalahari Apple-leaf (Lonchocarpus nelsii) veld. The marsh is the summer home for good numbers of Caspian Plover and Montague’s Harrier as well as Chestnut-backed Sparrowlark, Grey-backed Sparrowlark, Northern Black Korhaan, Rufous-naped Lark, African Pipit and Desert Cisticola. Dickenson’s Kestrel, Amur Falcon and Red-necked Falcon are found along the perimeter of the marsh.
Day 10 Chobe Houseboat
After your morning activity and brunch, you will be chartered from Savuti to Kasane Airport (55 minutes), where a representative of Chobe Princess Houseboat will meet you and assist you with the border crossing by boat, into the Namibian waters of the Chobe River.
As one boards the Chobe Princess, you will enter the accommodation deck, which offers 4 double cabins for guests. Each spacious cabin can be configured as a twin or double room, and has en-suite facilities, with sliding windows opening on to the water. Windows are spanned by transparent mosquito screens. Electricity (220V and 12V) is supplied to each bedroom, ensuring the use of shavers, hairdryers and lights. Cupboards are provided.
Day 11 Chobe Houseboat
The days are entirely yours and you are free to spend it as you like. You can laze around the sun deck just watching the constant coming and goings of the wildlife and birds around you. You can take a tender boat with a guide and go looking for up close and personal sightings of the game and get extraordinary photo opportunities. Or you can go off fishing to try and catch (and then release) the elusive Tiger fish.
Generally breakfast is served at 08h30 and lunch at 13h00 but the boat is very flexible so if you would like to re-arrange these times to suit you better you would just need to let the Managers know at dinner the night before (i.e. if you want to get up really early and then come back for brunch at 10h30 or 11h00 this would be perfectly fine with them).
Activities include;
Game Viewing: by boat into the Chobe National Park, where huge herds of elephants come down to drink, together with all manner of other game such as buffalo, giraffe, leopard, lion, kudu, waterbuck, lechwe, etc. Evening cruises offer the sublime Chobe sunset.
Bird-watching: a year round pleasure, with over 400 recorded species, including both water and woodland birds.
Fishing: the excellent guides have success in landing Tiger fish, especially when fly-fishing. Other species include Tilapia, Largemouth bream, Catfish and Squeakers. The boat has access to over 30km of Chobe River, over 120km of Zambezi River, as well as kilometres of waterways in the Kasai and Indibe wetlands. Each offers a different fishing experience. Guests have access to quality boats with large motors, including a jet boat for the rapids and rocky areas. The major fishing attraction is Tiger fish. Traditionally the best time for Tiger fish will be from September to February, with a window period during June. Bream are also caught and Barbel too, and fishing is done from the banks and rocks in the rapids. All guests are allocated a guide and boat upon arrival.
Day 12 Kasane
After breakfast, you will transfer by tender boat from the Chobe Princess Safari boat at 09h00 to the customs office on Impalila Island to exit out of Namibia. From there you will again cross the Chobe River to enter into Botswana at the Kasane immigration. You will be met here by your Guide, who will transfer you to Kasane Airport (10 minutes), in time to check in for your return flight to Johannesburg International Airport.
Arrive at Johannesburg International Airport, where our representative will meet you in the Arrivals Hall and assist you with checking in for your flight to Maun Airport in Botswana. Upon arrival there you will be met and transferred to Meno a Kwena Lodge (about 1.5 hours away).
Midway between Botswana’s extraordinary Okavango Delta and the spectacular Central Kalahari Game Reserve, Meno a Kwena tented camp provides guests with a unique African wildlife experience.
The safari never stops at Meno a Kwena, a hidden gem, perched on a rocky cliff top above the Boteti River in Botswana.
Day 2 Makgadikgadi area
As the dry southern hemisphere winter sets in, the herds of Nxai Pan move to the Boteti River, which then becomes a precious source of water during this period. The zebras spend the months of April / May to November grazing on its banks.
The Camp is perfectly located for safaris into pristine wildlife sanctuaries including the Makgadikgadi Saltpans and the Central Kalahari Game Reserve.
From this spectacular spot, you can head off to tour the Kalahari – plus the stunning open plains and desert wildlife of the Makgadikgadi Pans National Park. At both reserves, desert-adapted meerkats and antelopes are regularly seen while lions and cheetahs can sometimes be spotted in the Kalahari.
Hop on a game drive to find desert-adapted animals that can’t be found elsewhere in Botswana. There’s antelope with comical twisted horns, and remarkable desert elephant. The rumble of hooves heralds the arrival of Africa’s second largest migration. An amazing spectacle of 30,000 zebra and wildebeest migrate across the Makgadikgadi Pans, alongside a scattering of other hooved game. As the pans dry from April onwards, the zebra complete their journey at the river in an explosion of black and white stripes, followed closely by the predators: lion with their impressive black manes, leopard and cheetah using the surrounding bushes as cover, packs of wild dog, and mischievous jackal.
Alternately, you could also enjoy fascinating walking tours with the indigenous locals – providing an amazing insight into their culture, the area’s native plants and spectacular wildlife.
Incidentally, Meno a Kwena means ‘teeth of the crocodile’ – a common sight as the reptiles lounge on the river’s banks, often near the Camp. After game drives, guests can relax in the lodge’s stunning swimming pool with views of the river – a relaxing experience that is thankfully crocodile-free.
With a glittering roster of activities, including day trips to the Makgadikgadi Pans, guided walks with the San Bushmen, and wildlife-watching boat trips, there’s plenty to do. But sometimes, the best game viewing is where you least expect it, and at Meno, it’s right in front you.
Day 3 Okavango Delta
Today you will be road transferred from Meno a Kwena Camp back to Maun Airport (1.5 hours), where you will meet the pilot who will charter you into Delta Camp, 20 minutes away across the Okavango Delta.
Your private Guide (1 Guide for every 2 guests) will meet you at the airstrip and take you to Delta Camp by Mokoro - a dug-out canoe which they pole along. Your baggage will be taken to the Camp by vehicle. (Should water levels be low, you will walk into Camp – a short distance away).
This intimate and informal safari Camp nestles on a small island, close to the south western edge of Chief's island, heart of the Okavango Delta - the vast oasis of the Kgalagadi Desert. Delta Camp overlooks the Boro, one of the primary watercourses of the Okavango.
Day 4 Okavango Delta
The entire Chiefs Island is widely regarded by many to be the very best place to view game in the entire Okavango Delta.
Born in the Okavango, raised in the Okavango, Delta Camps Guides are the essence of the place. Using only genuine, hand-made dug-out canoes, the guides will take you deep into the Okavango, through the channels and floodplains, and walking on the many islands in the area. Your guides join you on your arrival and remains exclusively yours for the duration of your stay. Armed with a lifetimes experience and eyes like a hawk, senses finely attuned to his environment, he will accompany you on all your excursions, be they brief forays from the comfort of the lodge, full-day outings with a picnic lunch, or extended camping expeditions into the Okavango. The Delta Camp experience is cultural as well as being a wildlife and wilderness one, and spending time in the company of a man who has lived his life in this wild place, and perhaps even visiting his home, is a revelation to many visitors, and a lesson in differing values and perceptions.
Game of all sorts abounds: lion, leopard, buffalo, elephant, hippopotamus, crocodile, giraffe, all manner of antelope including the rare lechwe, tsessebe and sitatunga, otters, honey-badgers, the shy pangolin, and a variety of the smaller wild cats such as civets, servals and genets are amongst the many mammal species you may see. Reptiles are well represented many species of snakes (most of them harmless) occur, as do several of tortoise, terrapin, lizard, skinks, chameleon and gecko not forgetting, of course, the Nile crocodile, of which some particularly large specimens inhabit the area. Then of course there are the birds, well over 450 species that bring the forests, rivers and flood-plains of the Okavango to life. Many rare and endangered species call the Okavango home, and keen birders come from the world over in search of them. Bird-song heralds each Okavango dawn.
Day 5 Khwai Private Reserve
After a morning activity and breakfast, you will be chartered from Delta Camp to Khwai, across the Okavango Delta, 25 minutes away.
A representative of Hyena Pan Tented Camp will be waiting to transfer you to the Camp, 30 minutes away.
This 350,000 hectare private concession falls within the Okavango Delta World Heritage Site.
Hyena Pan is a remote tented camp in a private concession in the Khwai Region of the Okavango Delta. The concession borders the Moremi Game Reserve and the Khwai River in the South and the Chobe National Park to the East. The Camp lies 12km’s north of the Khwai River, within Cathedral Mopane forest, overlooking a natural Mopane Pan. The pan is a constant water supply to many species of birds and animals year round, the rains which fall between December and March flood the area, creating an enormous water wallow for Hippo, Elephant and Buffalo and an exceptional array of water birds. As the pan's water diminishes from March through to late November, Hyena Pan pumps water into the pan from their borehole, thus providing a year round hive of animal activity.
Days 6 and 7 Khwai Private Reserve
At Hyena Pan, you will have a range of activities to choose from.
This is predator country, so your chances of spotting leopard, wild dog, lion and spotted hyena are excellent. Various other species frequent the area - kudu, waterbuck, red lechwe, eland, impala, roan, buffalo, warthog and many more.
Morning and afternoon game drives in an open 4x4 vehicle, exploring the 350 000 hectare concession, or a drive along the Khwai River, for further game exploration, is not to be missed.
Hyena Pan has an underground hide as well as a ground level, hidden view point, positioned facing an extremely private and special waterhole within the private concession area. Spectacular photographic opportunities from ground level are there for those seeking privacy. Elephant frequent this water source, as do Kudu and Roan Antelope. Giraffe and Warthog are regular visitors, whilst Buffalo and Eland are more special visitors.
A special feature of this private concession is the ability to walk; relaxed and informative game walks are an option to Hyena Pan guests.
Day 8 Savute
After a morning activity and breakfast, you will be chartered to Savuti airstrip, 40 minutes away. A representative of Ghoha Hills will meet you at the airstrip, and will drive you to the Lodge, 45 minutes away.
Ghoha Hills Savuti Camp is perched on the Ghoha Hills, overlooking the vast expanse of the Savuti area of the Chobe National Park. The elevated position of the Camp offers some of the most breath-taking views in Botswana. Ghoha Hills Savuti Camp aims to provide discerning travellers with a unique, first class safari experience in an eco-friendly and eco-sensitive environment. The Camp lies on the ledges of Ghoha Hills, some 45 minutes north of Savuti Airstrip, and it provides both privacy and exclusivity to its guests, especially as the Savuti area can get quite busy during high season.
The Lodge is situated 20km from the Savuti Channel which is currently dry after its 2008 flow, and which attracts various species.
Day 9 Savute
The Savuti has over the years developed a reputation as a prime place to view predators in Botswana, especially lion and spotted hyena. The Savuti lies within the Chobe National Park and boasts one of the highest concentrations of wildlife on the African continent. The Camp is located in an area abounding with species such as elephant, buffalo, lion, leopard, roan antelope, giraffe, spotted hyena, jackal and a variety of birdlife.
Game activities will include morning and afternoon game drives in open 4×4 safari vehicles, guided walks in the vicinity of the camp, bird watching and stargazing. Game drives are conducted in comfortable 4 x 4 safari vehicles and take guests to the nearby pans, which are exclusively located on the property's own road network and promise to provide guests with great game viewing within close proximity to the lodge. Guests will also enjoy the full Savuti experience – the marsh and the Savuti Channel. There is a bird hide only one kilometre from camp which provides guests with a peaceful haven to view great wildlife all day.
The Bushman paintings are situated on the eastern face of Bushman Hill. The paintings, not carbon dated, are thought to be between 3000 to 4000 years old. They depict various animals of present and past Savuti vintage. Eland, elephant, sable, giraffe, a puff adder and a hippo from wetter times feature on the same panel. A mixture of plant juices, and animal fat coloured with the rusty iron oxide from the rocks, was used to create this incredibly durable paint, but its exact composition is unknown. There are 22 known sites of paintings around Savuti, most being very faint due to exposure to the elements.
In the dry season thousands of dove and sandgrouse come down to drink in the mornings and are under constant surveillance by Yellow-billed Kite, Tawny Eagle and African Hawk-Eagle. Red-crested Korhaan are common in the Kalahari Apple-leaf (Lonchocarpus nelsii) veld. The marsh is the summer home for good numbers of Caspian Plover and Montague’s Harrier as well as Chestnut-backed Sparrowlark, Grey-backed Sparrowlark, Northern Black Korhaan, Rufous-naped Lark, African Pipit and Desert Cisticola. Dickenson’s Kestrel, Amur Falcon and Red-necked Falcon are found along the perimeter of the marsh.
Day 10 Chobe Houseboat
After your morning activity and brunch, you will be chartered from Savuti to Kasane Airport (55 minutes), where a representative of Chobe Princess Houseboat will meet you and assist you with the border crossing by boat, into the Namibian waters of the Chobe River.
As one boards the Chobe Princess, you will enter the accommodation deck, which offers 4 double cabins for guests. Each spacious cabin can be configured as a twin or double room, and has en-suite facilities, with sliding windows opening on to the water. Windows are spanned by transparent mosquito screens. Electricity (220V and 12V) is supplied to each bedroom, ensuring the use of shavers, hairdryers and lights. Cupboards are provided.
Day 11 Chobe Houseboat
The days are entirely yours and you are free to spend it as you like. You can laze around the sun deck just watching the constant coming and goings of the wildlife and birds around you. You can take a tender boat with a guide and go looking for up close and personal sightings of the game and get extraordinary photo opportunities. Or you can go off fishing to try and catch (and then release) the elusive Tiger fish.
Generally breakfast is served at 08h30 and lunch at 13h00 but the boat is very flexible so if you would like to re-arrange these times to suit you better you would just need to let the Managers know at dinner the night before (i.e. if you want to get up really early and then come back for brunch at 10h30 or 11h00 this would be perfectly fine with them).
Activities include;
Game Viewing: by boat into the Chobe National Park, where huge herds of elephants come down to drink, together with all manner of other game such as buffalo, giraffe, leopard, lion, kudu, waterbuck, lechwe, etc. Evening cruises offer the sublime Chobe sunset.
Bird-watching: a year round pleasure, with over 400 recorded species, including both water and woodland birds.
Fishing: the excellent guides have success in landing Tiger fish, especially when fly-fishing. Other species include Tilapia, Largemouth bream, Catfish and Squeakers. The boat has access to over 30km of Chobe River, over 120km of Zambezi River, as well as kilometres of waterways in the Kasai and Indibe wetlands. Each offers a different fishing experience. Guests have access to quality boats with large motors, including a jet boat for the rapids and rocky areas. The major fishing attraction is Tiger fish. Traditionally the best time for Tiger fish will be from September to February, with a window period during June. Bream are also caught and Barbel too, and fishing is done from the banks and rocks in the rapids. All guests are allocated a guide and boat upon arrival.
Day 12 Kasane
After breakfast, you will transfer by tender boat from the Chobe Princess Safari boat at 09h00 to the customs office on Impalila Island to exit out of Namibia. From there you will again cross the Chobe River to enter into Botswana at the Kasane immigration. You will be met here by your Guide, who will transfer you to Kasane Airport (10 minutes), in time to check in for your return flight to Johannesburg International Airport.
Included:
Not Included:
- Scheduled flight from Johannesburg to Maun Airport
- Road transfer from Maun Airport to Meno-a-Kwena Camp
- 2 Nights at Meno-a-Kwena Camp in an en-suite tent, fully inclusive basis
- Return road transfer to Maun Airport
- Air charter from Maun to Delta Camp
- 2 Nights at Delta Camp in an en-suite chalet, fully inclusive basis
- Air charter from Delta Camp to Hyena Pan Camp
- 3 Nights at Hyena Pan Camp in an en-suite tent, fully inclusive basis
- Air charter from Hyena Pan Camp to Ghoha Hills Camp
- 2 Nights at Ghoha Hills Camp in an en-suite tent, fully inclusive basis
- Air charter from Ghoha Hills Camp to Kasane Airport
- Transfer to the Chobe Princess Houseboat
- 2 Nights on board the Chobe Princess in an en-suite cabin, fully inclusive basis
- Return transfer to Kasane Airport
- Scheduled flight from Kasane back to Johannesburg International Airport
Not Included:
- Travel and medical insurance
- Visa requirements
- Gratuities and items of a personal nature