5 REASONS TO VISIT 'THE GATES OF HELL'
![]() | |
MORBID REMAINS |
![]() |
SKELETON COAST |
![]() |
DAYS OF THE JACKAL |
![]() |
PARCHED TERITORY |
The coast surrounding the Namib Desert is so inhospitable that Portuguese sailors once referred to it as "The Gates of Hell."
A
brutal, inhospitable environment, the Skeleton Coast has claimed many
ships and many lives over the years. However, this once dreaded land has
now become an unlikely tourist destination.
Here's five reasons why you should make the place your travel destination for 2016:
Superhero animals
The harsh desert stretches out more than
30,000 square miles and receives less than .4 inches of rain per year.
It's a tough place to be a tourist -- and that's with a 4x4 and supplies
on hand. Now imagine being an animal and calling the place home.
And
yet many do. From lions to elephants, the extreme climate has not
deterred some of nature's finest beasts, though many have had to adapt
to survive.
Dr.
Philip Stander, a zoologist living and specializing in the Namib
Desert, says "in time, a lot of animals have an adaptation," and their
desert habitat results in "better kidney function."
He
argues that all of the desert's mammals are "strategic" when it comes
to dealing with the lack of water. "It's the super athletes that live
here. Because certainly the weak will not survive."
The "red women"
The Himba have called the Namib Desert
their home for countless generations, living in the Kunene region close
to Angola. Known for their distinctive skin and hair, colored red with
ochre, the semi-nomadic people traditionally relied on livestock, but
today they're finding new ways of living.
Some are now working in the tourism sector in luxury camps such as Serra Cafema, where they are able to educate international tourists about Himba life.
"It makes [it] easier for the other people to understand the culture," argues Kaimbi, a Himba housekeeper.
Camp
guide Dawid explains that most Himba "prefer to work and go back to
their settlements (after a few months), because they want to be and stay
in their traditional way. But if you get an opportunity to come work
for the camp, to support your family, why not?"
Unusual history tours
A visit to the Hoanib Skeleton Coast Camp
requires a lot of effort, but the rewards are manifold. Only accessible
by light aircraft, the location is so remote that food has to be
shipped in from 500 miles away.
"They say you can scream as loud as you want and no one will hear you," says the camp's general manager, Clement Lawrence.
"It is a scary thought."
But
there's more to the area than simple isolation. A short drive reveals
an unusual history tour. The coast is a living museum of the victims of
the Benguela Current, which has downed numerous ships. Visitors can see
their wrecks dotted along the shore.
Among the wreckage is a British liner called the Dunedin Star, which was beached in the 1940s
by her master after hitting a reef (although some say it was the victim
of a German U-Boat). Up the coast, an arch of whale bones marks the
graves of two crewmen from tugboat The Sir Charles Elliott, which made a
failed attempt at rescue.
For those less inclined to the macabre, two desert oases, the Klein Oase and Auses Spring, can be visited a short distance away.
Some of the clearest skies in the world
Light
pollution is almost non-existent on the Skeleton Coast -- not
surprising considering it's in one of the quietest corners of one of the
world's least populated countries. The area is a stargazer's paradise.
The
Milky Way is able to put on a majestic display against the black
backdrop, and the galaxy bursts bright and brilliant in the night sky.
If you've got a telescope, pack it -- you might even be able to see the
Tarantula Nebula, a spidery cloud of dust and gas, and one of the Milky
Way's biggest star factories.Read more: Where to stargaze in Namibia
Dune trekking
There's a lot of sand in the Namib Desert, and its few inhabitants have found some pretty fun ways to explore it.
Sandboarding
is popular, and visitors can create their own "roaring dune" if they
travel fast enough. Lawrence explains the physics:
"By
moving air down fast enough, you cause vibrations. And the air
particles start escaping the sand dune. And those vibrations make a
sound."
Or, you can indulge your
inner-Mad Max and go quadbike trekking. The latest movie in the
post-apocalyptic series was filmed in Namibia.
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar