Green Botswana

Botswana green season safari image of young Lions

The vast open plains of the Central Kalahari Game Reserve attract an abundance of plains game and the predators that follow. © Giovanna Fasanelli

Botswana safari green season image of African Wild Dog

Each African Wild Dog has its own unique coat pattern of black, brown and white patches, making them easily identifiable as individuals. © Jonathan Rossouw

Botswana green season safari photo of African elephant in tall grass

Botswana has the largest elephant population on the African continent. Elephants are found in a wide range of habitats, but prefer to stay near water and can smell the presence of water across vast distances. © Giovanna Fasanelli

Japan winter tour photo of Red-crowned Cranes feeding

The single largest concentration of Wattled Cranes occurs in the Okavango Delta. This pair is feeding on the tubers and rhizomes of submerged sedges and water lilies. © Jonathan Rossouw

Best time to visit Botswana photograph of Leopard in tree

Leopards are solitary animals and skilled climbers, preferring to rest in the branches of trees, where their spotted coat provides camouflage. © Jonathan Rossouw

Botswana safari green season photo of Victoria Falls, Zimbabwe

Marvel over the sheer size of the world’s largest sheet of falling water, the impressive Victoria Falls. © Marco Tonoli

Botswana safari image of two Hippos fighting

When a territorial struggle arises, male Hippos can behave quite aggressively to establish which one is strongest. © Jonathan Rossouw

Botswana Green Season Safari

Botswana’s green season—when the air is cleaner, the colors are richer, and the babies are everywhere. After the rains, life explodes in the once-monochrome, semi-desert landscape of the Kalahari. Flowers spring forth from the sand, and crusty saltpans turn into shimmering wetlands full of honking water birds and colorful migratory species. Gemsbok and Eland swarm the plains of Deception Valley as new grass shoots sprout. Droves of wildebeest and zebra wind their way through the Makgadikgadi grasslands. Water-adapted antelope take to the floodplains of the Okavango Delta. And with all this game, predators are never far away. The legendary Kalahari Black-maned Lion, Black-backed Jackal, Leopard, Cheetah and African Wild Dog are all on the hunt, making the green season the best time to watch the great “circle of life” in action. Join Apex on our Botswana Green Season Safari as we take in the sheer abundance of life during Botswana’s most productive and vibrant time of year.
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Destinations

    • Travel by Air
    • Travel by Road
    • Travel by Boat
    • Travel by Bullet Train
    • Travel by Rail
    • Travel by Dog Sled
    • Arrive Johannesburg

      Arrive in Johannesburg, South Africa. Meet your expedition leaders and fellow travelers at a welcome dinner and overnight at the InterContinental O.R. Tambo Airport Hotel.

    • Maun / Central Kalahari Game Reserve

      Transfer to the airport this morning for your scheduled flight to Maun, Botswana. Once through customs and immigration, board your light aircraft flight to Tau Pan Camp, located in one of the most remote parts of the Central Kalahari Game Reserve (CKGR).The CKGR is the largest conservation area in Botswana and, at 12 million acres, one of the largest in the world. Thanks to a diversity of habitats—grassy plains, seasonal pans, wooded Acacia islands, fossil riverbeds—healthy game populations move through the area all year long.But this time of year, new grass shoots in the pan systems draw Kalahari Springbok, Gemsbok and Blue Wildebeest by the hundreds and thousands. This abundance of plains game, many with defenseless babies in tow, attracts predators such as the Kalahari Black-maned Lion, Black-backed Jackal, Leopard, and Cheetah. In the green season, Botswana’s birding goes from superb to sensational, as characteristic residents such as the African Openbill, Bateleur and Lilac-breasted Rollerare joined by migratory counterparts like Abdim’s Stork from equatorial Africa, Steppe Eagle from Asia and European Roller from Europe. Dinner and overnight at Tau Pan Camp.

    • Central Kalahari Game Reserve

      Tau Pan Camp is quite unusual for flat Botswana, as it stands on the elevated ridge of an ancient sand dune, affording guests amazing panoramic views over the famous Tau Pan, recognized for its stark beauty and remoteness. From this vantage point, it is likely that you’ll spot animals from the breakfast table. However, morning and evening game drives, and optional “Bushman walks” will get you even closer to the wildlife. Track massive herds of Oryx, desert-adapted Springbok and Wildebeest around Tau, Sunday, Piper and Passarge Pans. Look for the rare Brown Hyena in Deception Valley, lurking alongside smaller predators such as Honey Badger, Bat-eared and Cape Fox, and the endearing Meerkat. Keep an eye out for such bird specials as Lanner Falcon, Double-banded Courser and Kalahari Scrub-robin. Dinner and overnight at Tau Pan Camp.

    • Makgadikgadi Pans National Park

      This morning, head to the airstrip for a flight to San Camp at the eastern edge of Makgadikgadi Pans, the world’s largest saltpan landscape. Normally a stark white desert, it fills with grass and wildflowers during the green season, inviting Africa’s longest zebra migration, as well as Oryx, Springbok, Aardwolf and Brown Hyena. Dinner and overnight at San Camp.

    • Makgadikgadi Pans National Park

      Rise early and spend the morning alongside the habituated, and incredibly friendly, Meerkats of San Camp. Watch as they stick their noses out of their burrows to sniff for signs of danger, then emerge and position themselves with their chests to the rising sun to shake off the night’s cold. Sit with them long enough, and they may use your head as a sentry point to watch for eagles, their greatest predator. Later, take a game drive to Nwetwe Pan, admiring the magnificent ancient Baobabs along the way. Nwetwe is one of southern Africa’s most important Lesser and Greater Flamingo breeding sites. Pink clouds of flamingoes fill the air this time of year, as Ostriches, korhaans and Secretary Birds scour the grass below.  See great herds of Wildebeest, zebra and Impala grazing, while Lion, Cheetah, Leopard, Jackal and hyena lurk nearby, awaiting their opportunity. Dinner and overnight at San Camp.

    • Okavango Delta

      As an exercise in contrasts, fly today to the wondrous wetland within the Kalahari, known as the Okavango Delta. Produced by seasonal flooding, the delta is comprised of nearly 6,000 square miles of water channels, lagoons, and islands. Declared one of the Seven Natural Wonders of Africa in 2013, it boasts some of the densest wildlife concentrations on the continent. Large numbers of more widely distributed mammals and birds occur alongside specialties that are rarely encountered elsewhere in Africa, such as the charismatic and endangered African Wild Dog, Zambezi Sitatunga, and Wattled Crane. Wilderness Chitabe Camp is located in a private concession bordered on the north by the famed and unfenced Moremi Game Reserve. The dramatic mix of Kalahari and Okavango habitats boasts consistent predator-prey interaction. Dinner and overnight at Wilderness Chitabe Camp.

    • Okavango Delta

      Enjoy morning and late afternoon game drives. The area will be rife with palatable grasses and productive Mopane and Acacia woodlands, which lure many species of plains game, including elephant, giraffe, zebra, Sitatunga, Red Lechwe, Tsessebe, Impala, Hippo, and, on rare occasion, White Rhino. The large prey densities make Chitabe a stronghold for African Wild Dog, Lion, Cheetah and Leopard. The variety of bird life is impressive, with woodland specialties such as Bateleur Eagle, Red-crested Korhaan, Southern Yellow-billed Hornbill, Dickinson’s Kestrel, Meyer’s Parrot and the glamorous Crimson-breasted Shrike, and a vast array of wetland birds, such as the highly localized Slaty Egret, African Skimmer, Pel’s Fishing Owl and Black-chested Snake-eagle on the waterways. Dinners and overnights at Wilderness Chitabe Camp.

    • Linyanti Reserve

      It is farewell to the Okavango as you fly north to one of Botswana’s most remote and inaccessible regions, skirting its northern border with Namibia. The Linyanti is a vast private reserve on Chobe’s western boundary, covering over 30,000 acres of lagoons and steadily flowing rivers flanked by riverine forests of majestic Jackalberry and Sausage Trees merging into open grasslands. The main attraction this time of year is the staggering density of the elephant population. The Linyanti also has high concentrations of giraffe, which love to feed on the abundant Acacia trees along the floodplains. Rarer species such as Sable and Roan Antelope are regular sights here, while Cheetahs find the open areas of the Savuti Channel perfect for running down their prey. The Savuti Channel, which undergoes intermittent wet and dry periods, has been flowing anew since 2008, attracting Hippos, crocodiles, and myriad birds, including dainty African Pygmy Goose, Rufous-bellied Heron and Hartlaub’s Babbler. Dinner and overnight at Linyanti Tented Camp.

    • Linyanti Reserve

      Take two full days to soak up the Linyanti’s exquisite scenery and commune with the elephants. Along with morning game drives to seek out the area’s Lion, Leopard, Cheetah, and African Wild Dog, night drives will reveal a whole separate array of nocturnal species such as Lesser Bushbaby, Spring Hare, Large Spotted Genet and, if you’re lucky, the elusive Aardwolf or Serval. The birding is spectacular, with such specialties as Slaty Egret, White-rumped Babbler, and Wattled Crane. A special feature at Linyanti is the log-pile hide where you can sit quietly and watch hundreds of buffalo and elephants moving along the waterways. Meals and overnights at Linyanti Tented Camp.

    • Victoria Falls

      After breakfast, fly due east to Kasane, then hop into vehicles for an hour-long drive that takes you across the border to Zimbabwe. Settle into Old Drift Lodge, perched on the banks of the Zambezi River, upstream from Victoria Falls. A glance across the Zambezi may well reveal great pods of hippo or herds of elephant gathered at the water’s edge. This evening, board a boat for a river safari to see a staggering number of Hippos and Nile Crocodiles. Listen for the grunts of Hippos, the trumpet of elephants and the call of fish eagles as you drift off to sleep tonight. Dinner and overnight at Old Drift Lodge.

    • Victoria Falls

      Before breakfast, take in the grandeur of Victoria Falls, or Mosi-oa-Tunya (The Smoke That Thunders) in the local Tonga language. Venture close enough to feel its spray, and marvel over the sheer size of the world’s largest sheet of falling water. This afternoon, enjoy a game drive through the park, looking for elephant, buffalo and Lion, a healthy Leopard population, herds of Sable, Eland, Kudu, Waterbuck and Impala. Birds to look for include bee-eaters, darters, eagles and storks, as well as many species of kingfisher—Pied, Giant, Woodland, Malachite and Brown-hooded—are all common here. This evening, gather with your expedition leaders and fellow travelers for a farewell dinner. Dinner and overnight at Old Drift Lodge.

    • Depart Victoria Falls

      This morning, transfer by vehicle to the Victoria Falls Airport for your flights home.

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    binocular icon show facts about Green Botswana

    Heightened senses

    Largest of the terrestrial animals, elephants have several impressively heightened senses. Their keen sense of smell can detect water sources up to 12 miles away but recent studies have found that elephants are capable of detecting an approaching rainstorm up to 150 miles off thanks to their excellent hearing skills. Elephants can hear sounds at very low frequencies, something thunderstorms produce. Scientists aren’t sure whether it’s rumbling thunder or the sound of rain hitting the Earth but they know the animals can detecting some signature component of oncoming rain.