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Omaheke - Otjozondjupa

San communities, remembering the old ways of the hunter and gatherer. Baobabs and elephants in endless bushland; magical pans that attract great flocks of waterbirds.
 
The expansive landscape extending from the Kalahari-veld of Omaheke to the open thorn-savanna of Otjozondjupa is home to a significant network of communal conservancies. In the Omaheke Region, communities built around livestock herding and foraging in the Kalahari dominate: herders of cattle roam the semi‐arid plains, while San, Herero and Damara people maintain strong cultural traditions of gathering, festivals and traditional dance.

 
In Otjozondjupa, about eight conservancies operate across a region where wildlife-friendly tourism, small‐scale horticulture and cattle-based livelihoods converge. Villagers and farms alike live with a strong cattle-culture: regular auctions, festivals and communal gatherings form much of the social fabric. 


Both regions’ conservancies participate in the national community-based natural resource management (CBNRM) framework, under the auspices of NACSO (Namibian Association of Community-Based Natural-Resource-Management Support Organisations). For example, Otjozondjupa hosts conservancies such as Ondjou Conservancy (area approx. 8 730 km², population ~3 068) in this landscape.  


Thus, these regions represent a dynamic zone of communal conservation co-existing with livestock farming, sparse human populations, and wildlife utilisation, a less visited but significant part of Namibia’s conservation architecture. 

(Visit NACSO for more details on Namibia’s community conservancies.) 

When to Be There

  • The regions can be visited year-round, but conditions vary markedly.  
  • The cool, dry winter months (roughly May to September) are most comfortable for travel: fewer heavy rains, easier access to remote tracks, clearer skies.
  • During the summer and rainy season (Nov to March) the heat intensifies, and in some areas, tracks can become impassable after storms; hence less ideal for less-experienced travellers.
  • Because these regions are remote, with limited infrastructure, ensure your travel plan considers seasonal accessibility and vehicle capability.

What to Do

  • Visit and support community-managed conservancies: for example, Ondjou Conservancy offers the opportunity to see how cattle culture, wildlife conservation and community management integrates.
  • Learn about the cattle-culture in Omaheke: attend local auctions or festivals (where possible), engage with community traditions of herding and craft-making.
  • Explore the bushveld: despite being livestock dominated, these landscapes still harbour wildlife and rural wilderness, with large tracts of open savanna and Kalahari woodlands.
  • Stay in or travel with community‐based tourism enterprises (if available) which ensure the benefits go back to local members.
  • Engage with communities (San, Herero, Damara) to learn about their traditions, livelihoods and relationships with the land. 

What to Remember

  • Remoteness & infrastructure: Many conservancy areas have limited amenities, sparse cell phone coverage, few fuel stations and rough tracks. A 4×4 vehicle, extra fuel, and water are advisable.
  • Respect for culture: These areas are home to traditional communities with deep cultural practices. Always ask permission before photographing, participate respectfully in local events, and seek community-run tourism options.
  • Support livelihood and conservation: By choosing community-based lodging, local guides or craft purchases you help the models of conservancy benefit local people, not just external operators.
  • Terrain & access: The environment is semi-arid; access can be tricky after rains; check weather and track conditions ahead of time.
  • Environmental sensitivity: The bushveld and Kalahari ecosystems are fragile. Travel responsibly, stay on tracks, take out what you bring in, and respect wildlife and grazing lands. 
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Ayres's Hawk-Eagle

Black Kite

Black-Chested Snake-Eagle

Black-Shouldered Kite

Dark Chanting-Goshawk

Gabar Goshawk

Lappet-Faced Vulture

Lesser Spotted Eagle

Long-Legged Buzzard

Martial Eagle

Pale Chanting-Goshawk

Palm-Nut Vulture

Red-Necked Buzzard

Western Banded Snake-Eagle

White-Headed Vulture

African Comb Duck

Blue-Billed Teal

Egyptian Goose

Fulvous Whistling-Duck

Knob-Billed Duck

Mallard

White-Backed Duck

African Palm-Swift

Bradfield's Swift

Common Swift

Little Swift

African Hoopoe

Common Scimitarbill

Damara Red-Billed Hornbill

Southern Red-Billed Hornbill

Rufous-Cheeked Nightjar

Blacksmith Lapwing

Black-Winged Stilt

Brown Skua

Common Greenshank

Common Redshank

Crowned Lapwing

Double-Banded Courser

Lesser Jacana

Marsh Sandpiper

Pied Avocet

Red-Necked Phalarope

Ruff

Sanderling

Sandwich Tern

Spotted Thick-Knee

Wood Sandpiper

Black Stork

Marabou Stork

White-Backed Mousebird

Cape Turtle Dove

Laughing Dove

Namaqua Dove

Rock Dove

European Bee-Eater

Swallow-Tailed Bee-Eater

Dideric Cuckoo

Senegal Coucal

Thick-Billed Cuckoo

Dickinson's Kestrel

Greater Kestrel

Lanner Falcon

Rock Kestrel

Coqui Francolin

Crested Francolin

Orange River Francolin

Red-Billed Francolin

Buff-Spotted Flufftail

Common Moorhen

Northern Black Korhaan

Red-Chested Flufftail

Red-Knobbed Coot

Wattled Crane

Grey Go-Away-Bird

Kori Bustard

White-Quilled Bustard

African Pied Wagtail

African Pipit

African Pitta

African Red-Eyed Bulbul

African Reed Warbler

African Stonechat

Angola Cave Chat

Arrow-Marked Babbler

Ashy Tit

Barn Swallow

Black Cuckooshrike

Black-Chested Prinia

Black-Headed Oriole

Black-Throated Canary

Brown-Throated Martin

Brubru

Burchell's Starling

Cape Bulbul

Cape Bunting

Cape Crow

Cape Glossy Starling

Cape Penduline-Tit

Cape Sparrow

Cape Weaver

Capped Wheatear

Cardinal Quelea

Chat Flycatcher

Chestnut-Vented Tit-Babbler

Chinspot Batis

Collared Palm-Thrush

Common Bulbul

Common House-Martin

Common Myna

Dusky Sunbird

Eurasian Golden Oriole

Familiar Chat

Fan-Tailed Widowbird

Great Sparrow

Green-Capped Eremomela

Grey Penduline-Tit

Grey-Backed Sparrow-Lark

House Sparrow

Kalahari Scrub-Robin

Lesser Blue-Eared Starling

Lesser Grey Shrike

Levaillant's Cisticola

Marico Flycatcher

Namaqua Warbler

Neddicky

Nicholson's Pipit

Northern Fiscal

Orange-Breasted Bushshrike

Orange-Breasted Waxbill

Orange-Winged Pytilia

Pale Flycatcher

Quailfinch

Red-Billed Oxpecker

Red-Billed Quelea

Red-Faced Crombec

Red-Headed Weaver

Retz's Helmetshrike

Rock Martin

Rufous-Bellied Tit

Rufous-Naped Lark

Sabota Lark

Scaly-Feathered Finch

Southern Black-Flycatcher

Southern Black-Tit

Southern Double-Collared Sunbird

Southern Fiscal

Southern Grey-Headed Sparrow

Southern Masked-Weaver

Southern White-Crowned Shrike

Spike-Heeled Lark

Spotted Flycatcher

Tinkling Cisticola

White-Breasted Cuckooshrike

White-Crested Helmetshrike

White-Throated Canary

Willow Warbler

Yellow Canary

Yellow-Bellied Eremomela

Yellow-Throated Petronia

Black-Headed Heron

Cattle Egret

Glossy Ibis

Hamerkop

Grey Heron

Hadeda Ibis

Little Egret

Red-Billed Tropicbird

Acacia Pied Barbet

Black-Collared Barbet

Brown-Backed Honeybird

Cardinal Woodpecker

Greater Honeyguide

Little Grebe

Antarctic Prion

Cory's Shearwater

Soft-Plumaged Petrel

White-Chinned Petrel

Meyer's Parrot

Rosy-Faced Lovebird

Namaqua Sandgrouse

Barn Owl

Cape Eagle-Owl

Spotted Eagle-Owl

African Darter

White-Breasted Cormorant

African Pike

Straight-Tooth Tetra

Barred Minnow

Common Carp

Dashtail Barb

Straightfin Barb

Striped Topminnow

Blotched Catfish

Sharptooth Catfish

Smoothhead Catfish

Snake Catfish

Bushveld Sandman

Spotted Velvet Skipper

Common Smoky Blue

Hintza Blue

Tinktinkie Blue

Ella's Bar

Eriksson's High-flier

Obscure Sapphire

Small Orange Acraea

Large Blue Charaxinae

Banded Gold Tip

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