Forbidden Land Shipwreck Route

Forbidden Land Shipwreck Route

Experience an exclusive 5-night, 6-day journey through Namibia’s pristine wilderness with Volker Janke and Desert Magic Tours. Limited to just 11 vehicles, this adventure offers exhilarating dune driving and exploration of shipwrecks between Luderitz and Walvis Bay. Enjoy two meals a day, with a welcoming dinner and departure lunch. Bring your own camping gear and enough water for five days. Prior dune driving experience is beneficial. Ensure you’re equipped with a minimum of 220 liters of diesel or 260 liters of petrol. Secure your spot for this unique adventure at R 15,500 per person, including concession fees.

Price:

SKU KAD-FLSR Category Tag

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Description

We have teamed up with one of Namibia’s leading concession holders and tour operators for this bucket list route between Luderitz and Walvis Bay along the awesome Namib Desert coastline. Part of this route ventures into areas closed to the public for 108 years until 2016.  This route is the highlight of the Namib Desert and involves scenery and dunes unrivalled by other Namib routes. We visit well-known shipwrecks along the route and all the awesome big bays (Spencer Bay, Oyster Cliffs, Easter Point, Franciscus Bay, Meob Bay, Conception Bay, as well as Sandwich Harbour).

Part of this exciting route ventures into unknown territory and involves some dune driving rated 4 to 5 in difficulty and clients should therefore have done at least one of the existing Namib Desert trails.  The adventure starts at Luderitz where the group assembles for dinner and briefing before venturing into the desert the next day. Venue and time will be conveyed to you beforehand.  (Participants have to organise their own accommodation in Luderitz)

Day 1:  After breakfast we leave Luderitz only as far as Kolmanskop where we obtain Diamond Area clearance and then enter the area at Kolmanskop Security Gate.  We venture through the famous Charlottental with all its diamond history until we reach Agate Beach just north of Luderitz.  We visit a shipwreck used for the growing of black mussels and then proceed along the coastline all the way to the beautiful Boats Bay.  Here the dunes start and our serious 4×4 begins to take us through the dunes until we get back on the beach to view the spectacular ‘FrotAmerica’, a +/-200m long freighter grounded on the beach in 2014.

We continue along the coastline past Ichaboe Island all the way to Hottentots Point, being the western point of the huge bay. We pass the ruins of an old crayfish factory and seek shelter for the night on the eastern side of the bay behind some huge dunes on the beach.

Day 2:  Today is another scenic day which involves tidal beach zones (scary), venture past Black Rock (‘Point of No-Return’) then Gibraltar Rock (historic border since colonial times between Diamond Area 1 and 2), travelling into Saddle Hill area all the way to Spencer Bay.  Here Mercury Island and the shipwreck ‘Otavi’ wait for us to be viewed and all the history shared. We now drive just north of Spencer Bay where we camp in a dune valley to escape the Namib south-westerly winds.

Day 3:  Todays’ driving is tricky as well as awkward dunes will await us. We cross the dunes in a northerly direction and should reach Knoll Point beach by early afternoon.  We inspect two more shipwreck remains near Oyster Cliffs and Easter Point, as well as some old diamond mine dating back a 100 years.  Driving here is fairly difficult and routes may vary according to tides and difficulty of dunes.  We pitch camp just South of Sylvia Hill or near Knoll Point.  Awesome scenery and dunes and a rush of adrenalin is for certain.

Day 4:  We move away from Easter Point through some technical dunes to Sylvia Hill. Lots of history here with a seal colony, penguin cave and some 800 year old Strandloper settlements.  After viewing them we now venture on top of the famous 230m high ‘Lange Wand’ (tall wall) with St.Francis Bay on our left.  Stunning views and roller-coaster dunes take us past Black Rock in the vicinity of Meob Bay.  Once again, the tide might alter the route and take us towards Fishersbrünn where we set up camp for the night.

Day 5:  Today we have a fairly long beach drive past Meob Bay with its historic long boats and customs station from German colonial days. We proceed past saltpans all the way to the 90m-long ‘Eduard Bohlen’ shipwreck lying +/- 800m away from the sea.  We view Conception Bay along the small ‘Lange Wand’, pass the ‘Shawnee’ (shipwrecked tugboat) all the way to Sandwich Harbour.  At this beautiful setting we pitch camp for one last night in the Desert.

Day 6:  Our last day takes us through Sandwich Harbours spectacular roller-coaster dunes until we finally reach the beach north of Sandwich Bay. This is the end of dune driving for us and we travel to the Walvis Bay Salt Refinery where we pump tyres and hand back radios.  We travel convoy-style to a restaurant in Walvis Bay where we finish the trip with a hearty lunch and cold drink.  The total distance to be covered on this route is +/- 650 km (from last fuelling point – Luderitz)

Fuel consumption guideline:

Petrol vehicles: 3km/litre and Diesel vehicles: 4km/litre.  The guide reserves the right to change / alter routes should weather- and tide conditions, vehicle- and / or driver performance or Government Ministries require so!!

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