The landscapes of Namibia are “monumental” in scale. You can drive across the country’s wilderness areas for hours without passing another vehicle, and yet, in recent years, “incredible” lodges have opened in some of its most remote corners. My husband and I chose a road trip around Namibia as our first “long-haul family trip”, said Gemma Bowes in The Times.
It proved to be just the sort of “big adventure” we’d been hoping for. On a ten-day loop from the capital city, Windhoek, we covered about a thousand miles, and only once found ourselves driving after dark (something to avoid as animals often lie on the “sun-warmed” roads at night). At Dead Valley Lodge, we watched the towering dunes of Sossusvlei change colour at sunrise – “crimson, straw and dried apricot” – and the children ran barefoot across them, “leaping and sliding” in sand “as soft as powdered milk”.
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