We're almost an hour into Bwabwata National Park's Mayuni Conservancy when we encounter the first traffic of the afternoon.
It's a 50-strong herd of elephants taking the well-trodden route from Angola through Namibia and into Chobe National Park in Botswana.
They seem wary of our approach and turn to face us in arrow formation, trunks raised.
Juan, our guide from Namibia Experience, says the elephants would have passed through a number of villages since leaving Angola.
Their
penchant for the farmers' crops means they're not always welcome
visitors, so one can understand why they might be a little on edge by
this stage.
A feisty young bull flaps his ears, saunters forward and sticks his trunk just inside the open vehicle. We sit dead still.
Failing
to get a rise out of us, he turns back to his herd and they evaporate
almost soundlessly into the dense, verdant bushveld.
The world's largest conservation area
After
the arid landscapes we've traversed on our way northeast through
Namibia, the green vegetation and river systems of Bwabwata and the
Zambezi Region (formerly the Caprivi) feel like a different country.
If you look at a map and brush up on some colonial history, they should be.
Today, this strange appendage to the Namibian hinterland forms part of the Kavango Zambezi Transfrontier Conservation Area (KAZA), the world's largest conservation area.
Situated
in KAZA's heart and sometimes referred to as "a people's park,"
Bwabwata is one of very few places in Africa where humans and animals
coexist inside a national park.
The park was only established in 2007 and was created from the Caprivi Game Park and Mahango Game Reserve.
Bwabwata aims to use its substantial natural resources to empower the local rural communities.
In the '70s and '80s, the area's wildlife populations were decimated by the so-called Border War and the rampant poaching that came with it.
The conflict meant tourism was also virtually extinct.
But
thanks to Namibia's community-driven conservation efforts, the
elephants, never too fazed by arbitrary national borders, are now
returning to Bwabwata in droves.
And they're not the only ones.
As
we carry on through Mayuni, named after the visionary local chief who
established the conservancy, we come to an open stretch of savannah
plains aptly known as "Little Serengeti."
The plains are covered with dense herds of different antelope species and zebra.
A
wildlife survey conducted in 1978 counted just one breeding herd of 35
elephants, a single sable antelope, one hippo and one small herd of red
lechwe.
There are now at least 277
sable, around 350 hippos, 142 red lechwe at the last count, and at
least 340 herds of elephants and thousands more that pass through the
region.
Then just 100 meters from Nambwa Tented Lodge, Juan stops abruptly and points to fresh lion tracks in the sand beside our wheels.
Nambwa
Tented Lodge is one of the small handful of new and irresistibly
exclusive eco-lodges that have opened up across Bwabwata's various
community-managed concessions.
It
is the latest development from Welsh-South African entrepreneur Dusty
Rodgers, who has been working in and around Bwabwata for more than
twenty years.
"The area has certainly changed a lot," he says.
In
2017, Rodgers is due to open a sister camp to Nambwa within Bwabwata,
the Kazile Island Lodge, which will be perched on a small, private
riverine island.
With a growing
number of international tour operators beginning to add Bwabwata to
their itineraries, Rodgers says that "the local communities have become
much more aware of the significant benefits that the wildlife and the
landscape holds for them."
Wild isolation
But
for now, much of the park's appeal lies in the very fact that it
remains largely underexplored and free of the tourist crowds that flock
to Botswana's Chobe.
Nambwa Tented Lodge certainly doesn't undermine the feeling of wild isolation.
Its
elevated wooden walkways, expansive main deck and chic tented suites
are intricately woven into a riverside forest canopy, and leave ample
room for elephants and other wildlife to move freely beneath.
We
set up camp for the night at the rustic self-catering campsite next to
the lodge, which sits directly on the edge of the languid Kwando River, a
tributary of the Okavango.
Hippo encounter
After
a technicolor sunset, a hearty meal around the campfire and a few stiff
gin and tonics, I walk towards the bathroom only to find my path
blocked by a grazing hippo.
I
remember that just two days earlier on a dugout canoe trip along the
Okavango, which forms part of the western boundary of Bwabwata, our
guide had pulled up his shorts to show us an impressive set of scars
that resulted from a hippo attack.
Many who get too close to a hippo are not so lucky.
I decide I can wait until morning for a shower, and head back to my tent.
The
next day we continue further into the park along the Zambezi Region's
main tar road, passing occasional elephant herds and dazzles of zebra as
we go.
When we stop at a petrol
station, one of the attendants shows us a photo on his phone of a pack
of critically endangered African wild dogs crossing the same main road
in broad daylight some weeks ago.
Though
sporadic poaching and human-wildlife conflict continue to be challenges
to Bwabwata and the broader KAZA project, his photo encapsulates a
feeling that's been present throughout my brief time here: hope.