Tours Travel

Naukluft Namibia Hiking Trail – 8 Days Through Wonderful Desolation

Imagine a place so remote that you don’t see another human being for days. Imagine a path through desolate valleys, mountains, and vast plains of sand, rocks, and clumps of dry grass. The Naukluft hiking trail in Namibia takes you through such a place.

It all starts in an old house on top of a small hill in what is known as the Namib-Naukluft Park in southwestern Namibia. Hikers Haven is the base camp for this amazing trail. Here you can enjoy a last beer, a grilled steak and a hot shower. This is followed by 8 days lugging a heavy backpack through some of the most beautiful and desolate areas Namibia has to offer.

Normally, one needs to get up around 5 in the morning to be able to hit the trail at 7. The first day is no exception and covers a distance of 14 km. There is a beautiful viewpoint at “Panorama” as one begins to ascend into the mountains a few kilometers into the hike. Spend some time here and enjoy the view of the plain below.

From here the trail climbs steadily up into the Naukluft Mountains. A good place for lunch is “Fontein Kloof”. There are some big trees for shade and the spring is often flowing.

As with most overnight shelters on this trail, the “Putte” shelter for this night is simply a square stone structure with a wall about 1.2m high, on which stands a tin roof with some steel pipes. The floor is gravel. Approximately 150 m from the refuge is a well with a large steering wheel that must be turned to obtain water.

The second day is 15 km long and takes you to the famous Ubusis Kloof or ravine. The descent into the ravine is carried out with the help of a series of chains, some of which reach 30 m in length and help to descend the cliffs. As one descends further down, a geological time capsule is exposed in the rock layers to the sides. The landscape is quite impressive.

The Ubusis cabin is the only “normal” accommodation on this trail. This cabin used to be a small vacation home many years ago when the area still consisted of farms. Water is supplied by means of a wind pump and well.

The third day takes one out of Ubusis Kloof by the same path that he traveled the day before. At the top, once Bergpos is reached, the trail turns north through the Kudu Plains. This day is only 12 km long and is considered the easiest of all days.

At the end of the Kudu Plains is the Adlerhorst night refuge, which can be reached in the early afternoon. This leaves plenty of time to admire the scenery and relax a bit. Water is again supplied through a well with a handle at the top of the pipe.

When we got there, the opening of the well pipe was covered with hundreds of bees desperately waiting for someone to turn the handle and pump some water for them. No one was stung once. It seems as if they realized that the humans who came to this place were their only hope of getting water.

Day four tends to be a bit tricky and is quite long at 17km. The hard part comes when one has to descend a waterfall into a dry river bed with the help of a long chain. The angle of the rocks makes it difficult to descend.

Further on there is another steep descent down the side of a mountain of loose slate. In the past, this has been the cause of hikers’ injuries from slipping on the blackboard.

The Tsams-Ost night shelter contains a large water tank on a perch receiving water from a well and a wind pump. It is possible to have a cold shower standing under the tank.

The next day, day five, begins with a tough climb up the mountain behind the Tsams-Ost overnight hut, covering another 17 km.

A few hours later you reach the Melkbos plain. This plain involves many kilometers of walking on sandy roads and through dry riverbeds. It is here that you are most likely to see herds of antelope such as Eland or Kudu grazing on the sparse grass and vegetation.

The Die Valle night refuge is surrounded on three sides by mountains, and the sun tends to set quite early behind these mountains. The water is left here in a small water tank which may not hold much water, especially at the end of the hiking season, so washing is very limited on this day.

The sixth day tends to be the longest and most difficult of the entire tour. Although it is only 10 miles long, one spends most of the day going up.

Immediately after leaving the Die Valle night refuge, there is a 200m vertical ascent to the top of a waterfall. There, after, follows a gorge and a stream that feeds this waterfall for most of the day, always climbing upwards.

It is along this gorge that one comes across some interesting geological formations called Toba. The tuff is a sedimentary rock that contains a large amount of carbonates that are deposited by water. It often forms in waterfalls or streams. Here, in this gorge, the tuff looks like a gigantic solidified waterfall. Higher up is a huge fig tree whose roots extend along a small cliff.

Once at the top of the gorge, there is a small flat plateau to cross before beginning the long descent along an old jeep track to the Tufa night refuge. Pay attention at the foot of the track as the refuge is almost hidden among some bushes to the left. Water is supplied again in the form of a well next to a dry stream bed about 150 m from the refuge.

Day 7 covers 14km and takes you to the highest and usually coldest point of the trek at Kapokvlakte.

From the Tufa night shelter, the trail crosses some very large boulders as it heads back towards the mountains. At the base of the mountains that eventually lead to Kapokvlakte, there are some chains to help up some of the more difficult cliff faces.

Once at the top, the trail follows a dry creek bed that rises steadily until it crests at World’s View. The name is quite appropriate, as can be seen many miles in the distance. It is a good place to stop for a while and admire the view of the plains below and the mountains on the other side. From here the terrain is quite flat and the going is easy.

The Kapokvlakte night refuge usually arrives in the early afternoon. The refuge is hidden behind a clump of bushes that are pretty much the only larger vegetation in the area. The rest of the plateau is covered with short grass and the occasional small shrub. Kapokvlakte can get very cold at night, and the use of a down sleeping bag is a must here.

The last day has finally arrived. By now everyone dreams of fat steaks and beer, but there’s still 10 miles to go. A few miles across the top of the plateau, and the trail makes its long descent along a winding gorge to Hikers Haven.

As the day gets warmer, more and more insects and other small creatures can be heard in this lonely gorge. Be careful to pick up rocks. Very often there are scorpions hiding under them.

As one descends the trail, there are small pools lined with large trees that make good resting places. A few hundred yards from Hikers Haven, there is a campsite. Here one can meet the first other humans again after having spent so many days in the desert. By now you can also see the roof of the old house in Hikers Haven. Just a few more hundred meters and one is back. What a time it had been!

Now one can finally take a hot shower again! For those who brought vacuum-packed meat and managed to keep it fresh in their cars during this period, there will be a party tonight!

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