We left Ombo at 8 am. After 10 km we passed Okahandja which
looks like a fairly big and well maintained town. We had road works on our way to Windhoek,
where we did some shopping. The last 20
km into Windhoek is a double carriage-way, similar as to Cape Town. Windhoek is
a sprawling city, very cosmopolitan; we even had difficulty to find parking in a main road also looking very similar to Cape
Town.
We
wanted to fill up with diesel as we left Windhoek and when we approached the
Engen filling station, we found that it was not open for business, I don’t turn around! We decided to proceed as we thought we have enough
fuel for another 200 km as well as 25 liter diesel in a can. We only realised later that we already drove
more than 800 km on this tank and that the gauge predicting 'kilometres
left' may be faulty (it showed 160 km
left).
We left Windhoek on the Gobabis Road (B6) on tar for 23 km for Gochas, around 12 noon.
We took the turn-off to Dordabis, and from there we were on a gravel road until
we reached our destination, 35 km south of Gochas on a very scenic road through Savannah-covered hills.
 |
Double road into Windhoek, from the north. |
Three km before we reached Dordabis we saw a sign saying 'fuel 3 km'. We turned off to Dordabis which were no more than a police station, 2 or
3 other government houses and a shop. We were fortunate to find diesel here.
 |
The names could have been of stars, millions of light years into a foreign galaxy. |
 |
Notice the one broken pump. And they have a two hour siesta which we were fortunate to miss by 40 minutes. |
 |
More Dordabis views |
From here we drove through a very unpopulated
region through Kalahari farms. About the last 100 km we almost drove inside a canyon
with flat top hills on the left and right.
The roads are mostly good, but some has a loose stony
topping and others a smoother surface. 80 km per hour can easily be achieved. We
reached Red Dunes, on a farm with the unfortunately name of Tranendal around 5 pm. We had accommodation on a farm
yard. The accommodation was basic, but clean.
We saw many beautiful landscapes.
 |
Nice wide roads |
 |
More nice wide roads. The grass was characteristic, here. |
 |
A blockhouse? From what war? There was no signage, only sheep lying in its shade. |
 |
Kalahari red dunes. |
 |
Impressive farm entrance. There were diesel pumps as well. |
This morning we left Red Dunes at 8am for Mata Mata in Kgalagadi National Park. It was an easy 155 km drive. About 10km before the Mata
Mata border post we had morning coffee at Kalahari farm stall which is situated
on the farm yard. It is much more than a farm stall but a coffee shop with interesting curious.
 |
Typical Kalahari Farmstead, along the road. |
 |
More views |
We saw many, many road signs! To places with weird names.
 |
Many road signs in the south are very faded. |
 |
I assume this road sign, on a single track, is for tortoises? |
We reached Mata Mata around 11am, went through Namibian customs
without any hassles and were back into South Africa. We do, however, need to go
through South Africa Customs when leaving Twee Rivieren. Custom people everywhere have this air of being the most important person in the world; doing you this huge favour, 'letting you through'.
We went to the SANParks Office and received an Entry Gate Permit. The administration for our reservation was done. We went for a scenic drive as we could go into our accommodation at 2pm, only.
 |
As soon as the gemsbok recognised me, he ran off. |
We were back in Mata
Mata at 3.30 and were pleasantly surprised
with our river view chalet. Tomorrow we will do a slow scenic drive from Mata
Mata.
It is now 7pm and we are looking from our stoep at the braai
from our chalet at 10 gemsbok at the water hole just in front of our chalet,
two fighting. A jackal is running past the water hole.
We had excellent weather so far with no need of long sleeve
shirts except for when mosquitos were slightly annoying. We chose not to use
malaria tablets or medication but took precaution by spraying Tabard or Peaceful Sleep. Although mosquitos were often present they were not too abundant. Many of
the accommodation have mosquito nets around the beds and/or screens on windows
or sliding doors.
Tomorrow, 11 May we’ll be driving south from Mata Mata to
Twee Rivieren enjoying the landscapes and hoping to see various animals.
Jisslaaik this trip is epic. The photos are they from your phone? Impressive.
ReplyDeleteThx Poppie, ja dis n wye area!
ReplyDelete