Tuesday, 10 February 2015

Desert days in Namibia 1

Sorry for big gap in postings! 

When school ended last December, we flew to Windhoek in Namibia for a week. It was a surprise to learn how few inhabitants there are in this country, only 2 million! The main airport felt tiny tiny after O.R. Tambo. 

Driving to the coastal town of Swakopmund, there were not many cars on the road. And the scenery was arid with desert, rocks, some mountains and again desert!

Swakopmund is a coastal holiday town/village, with very much German influence. Street names are German and according to the guide book you should be able to get around speaking German easier than English.

The setting is beautiful with the Atlantic Ocean on one side of the city and sand dunes on the other. Houses are low buildings and the feel is like being in a European small city on the coast of the Baltic
Sea! 

It was wonderful to be able to walk around the city centre and to restaurants in the evening, a treat we are not used to in Joburg.




We were expecting warm weather and lazy days on the beach, although we knew that the Atlantic is rather cold to swim in. We dreamt of catamaran tours watching dolphins, but the fact was that the weather was quite chilly and the wind hard, not inviting for beach time at all, especially since we didn't pack enough warm clothes!




Eating fresh fish and seafood was a treat, which we tried to enjoy as much as we could. This restaurant out on the pier was excellent, especially since we manage to book a table in a corner with uninterrupted sea views.




So we had to have some action instead to keep warm. We started off with quad biking on the sand dunes, which was great fun! As you can see from the pictures, the scenery is stunning and all of us enjoyed driving up and down hills and drifting with the bikes after getting used to them. K and J enjoyed it so much they went for repeats every day of our stay!







Sand boarding on the dunes is another must in Swakop. It reminded actually very much of snow games in Finland, with the difference that walking up the hill with the board was done barefoot and was even more exhausting than walking up the snowy slopes at home. Guess if we had sand everywhere after this! 




The hand sign on the last picture represents the shape of Namibia.






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