Namibe, Angola

Incursion to the Angolan Namibe


The Grotto
in a pile
Curoca Hills
Sign of life
Namib Desert
At the top
Curoca River in Pediva
Museum of Trucks
Lixa Road
Curoca Hill
Last Address, in Curoca
hairy tree
Lagoa Arch
MPLA
Valley of the Spirit
Two Arches Stadium
Acacia
Monte Carsico II
canyon
Curoca Sunset
Discovering the south of Angola, we leave Moçâmedes for the interior of the desert province. Over thousands of kilometers over land and sand, the harshness of the scenery only reinforces the astonishment of its vastness.

We left Moçâmedes later than we expected.

Pointed to the south, we cross the inhospitable landscape, in a race against the declining sun. Imminent, the sunset gilded and beautified that great, unattractive nothingness.

When the star finally says goodbye, we climb the first of the hills on which the houses of Curoca fit.

Namesake of another Angolan municipality located on the border with Namíbia, this town adapted its name from the ephemeral river that passes through there, shortly before entering the Atlantic.

Even humble and somewhat uncharacteristic, Curoca hides its charms. We would have to return there.

Aware of how much was left to reach our final destination, we crossed the village. We continue down EN100, at the speed possible.

The temporary ground was so rough that Alexandre Rico, the guide who led us, preferred to take sandy escapes, parallel to the road.

Arrival at Gilberto Passos Orca Camp

Native to the province, son of an Angolan father and mother from Namíbia, Alexandre knew the terrain.

Despite the darkness and, at a certain point, a certain lack of definition of the path generated by the movement of the sand, 150km and more than three hours later, we arrived at the Orca camp and its famous Cave.

There we are welcomed by Mr. Gilberto Passos and his wife Isabel. Courteous, accept apologies due for delay. Then, they begin an explanatory journey.

Camp Orca is located at the northern end of immense Iona, the largest national park in Angola. Angolan, born in mix, Gilberto was the exclusive concessionaire and administrator for 15 years.

His administration lasted as long as it lasted. From 1975 onwards, the spread and worsening of the Angolan Civil War dictated the systematic capture of animals in the park, as a means of feeding troops and poaching to generate income.

The war dragged on until 2002. Even after its end, the extermination of fauna continued. It was only in 2010 that financial and operational partnerships began to be established with European Union institutions and others, in the hope that the park would recover its previous animal wealth.

In the meantime, Gilberto preserved the right to explore the Orca camp, still arranged around a hill formed by countless ocher and rounded rocks.

A few, located in front of those arriving and more emblematic, form the Grotto, the lithic and reputed hostel where we would spend the night.

Gilberto and Isabel show us different rooms, which they give us to choose from.

Afterwards, they lead the entourage to the dining room. While we inspect several photographs of meetings with personalities visiting the Grotto, the hosts finish a surprising meal.

We were well into the interior of inhospitable Namibe.

However, supported by a few employees, the couple treated us to a cataplana worthy of the best seafood restaurants, followed by delicious sweet pears.

Warm and lively night in Volta da Fogueira

At the beginning of winter in the Southern Hemisphere and Cacimbo, it is cold in the desert. Gilberto and Isabel invite us to continue the conversation next to a large fire that they light nearby.

Gilberto tells us episodes and adventures from his long life in Angola.

His career as a musician and how it allowed him to socialize with other renowned musicians and entertain and encourage the Angolan military, in different places in Angola and during the Colonial War.

Play us and sing some hits by Zeca Afonso, from Catherine Evans, Duo Ouro Negro and others.

After the journey from distant Moçâmedes, lulled by its melodies, we soon gave in to sleep.

We fell asleep without making up our minds about what was more special, that place alone, or the honor of discovering it that way.

Whatever the case, we tried to wake up before dawn.

Aurora from the Top of Mount Karst from “The Grotto”

At that time, a few employees were already working on a water pump. They show us the best way to climb to the top of the karst mountain in which the Cave was located.

We chased away a few surprised Hyraxes.

From the top, we can see, at 360º, Namibe as far as the eye can see.

Soon, we appreciate the emerging sun gilding it and its lines of acacias.

In the distance, three or four donkeys roamed the vastness in search of water.

We extend contemplation as far as we can.

When we return to the ground, on the opposite side of the climb, we find ourselves facing a kind of camp museum parking lot.

Four old trucks were lined up there, often used during the years that Gilberto was responsible for the Iona PN.

Buoyed by the expected conviviality and a lively debate about the best sequence for the itinerary we were going to follow, breakfast keeps us there until the estimated time.

We said goodbye, grateful for everything, to Gilberto and Isabel.

In search of the Curoca River and the Pediva Hot Springs

We reverse onto the EN100. For a short time. Moments later, Alexandre turns east. We entered a sandy and, by comparison, tight canyon.

This gorge takes us to a distinct stretch of the Curoca river, one of its few sections that, supplied by springs, maintained its flow.

Hot waters gushed out from there.

The small river oasis flanked by palm trees became known as Termas de Pediva. Its waters, both thermal and conventional, support an ecosystem that was once prolific.

As part of the international recovery effort, the authorities installed a ranger station on the PN Iona in the immediate vicinity.

There are two rangers on duty, in matching uniforms, who register our visit and passage.

From Pediva, we started our return, along a path, in a different part where we crossed paths with cows, donkeys, a few zebras and gazelles that were plowing through a rare undulating hay, left by recent rains.

Two annoying punctures slow us down again.

Even so, around four in the afternoon, we are back in Curoca.

Some wind ventilates the town.

It refreshes the Angolans who inhabit it, simple people, used to jeeps appearing and roaming among their houses, in search of information, supplies or, as it also ended up happening to us, one jeep to another.

The Uncommunal Hills and the Oasis of Curoca

We converge on one of the geological attractions that made the town famous, the Curoca Hills or, as they are also called, Vale do Espírito.

They are, in practice, a colossal alignment of canyons.

De canyons multicolored from which peculiar formations stand out, full of fossils that the retreat of the oceans left there.

A treasure that residents of Curoca are trying to appreciate.

We come across a trio of girls carrying piles of branches on their heads, sources of fire, heating and cooked food that replace more modern and easier ones.

We crossed the entire town.

We are astonished to see how the riverbed turns it into an oasis, broken up into small gardens and plantations that supply Moçâmedes and even, further south, Tongwa, the old colonial Porto Alexandre.

On a tertiary, sandy and narrow path, a herd of cows blocks our path.

With this additional time lost, when we arrive at Arcos, the formation is already in shadow.

Of the lagoon, too used for countless irrigations, there is no sign.

Still beaten by the sun, dozens of young people are playing a dusty soccer game at the base of opposite cliffs.

We return to Moçâmedes.

We recovered the tires and tiredness.

The following morning, we would resume our journey through Namibe, re-entering the Iona National Park through the north entrance that gives access to its immense dune area.

 

HOW TO GO

1 - Book your travel program for Namibe and other parts of Angola at Cosmos Angola – Travel and Tourism: phone/whats App +244 921 596 131

2- Or, from Lubango, rent your car at rent-a-car Southern Formula: www.formulasul.com  Tel. +244 943 066 444 or +244 937 632 348 email: [email protected]

Kalandula Waterfalls, Angola

Cascading Angola

Considered the second largest in Africa, the Kalandula waterfalls bathe the already grandiose Angola in natural majesty. Since the Portuguese colonial times when they were baptized in honor of king D. Pedro V, also Duke of Bragança, much Lucala river and history has flowed through them.
Lubango, Angola

The City at the Top of Angola

Even barred from the savannah and the Atlantic by mountain ranges, the fresh and fertile lands of Calubango have always attracted outsiders. The Madeirans who founded Lubango over 1790m and the people who joined them made it the highest city and one of the most cosmopolitan in Angola.
Kolmanskop, Namíbia

Generated by the Diamonds of Namibe, Abandoned to its Sands

It was the discovery of a bountiful diamond field in 1908 that gave rise to the foundation and surreal opulence of Kolmanskop. Less than 50 years later, gemstones have run out. The inhabitants left the village to the desert.
Lüderitz, Namibia

Wilkommen in Africa

Chancellor Bismarck has always disdained overseas possessions. Against his will and all odds, in the middle of the Race for Africa, merchant Adolf Lüderitz forced Germany to take over an inhospitable corner of the continent. The homonymous city prospered and preserves one of the most eccentric heritages of the Germanic empire.
Cape Cross, Namíbia

The Most Turbulent of the African Colonies

Diogo Cão landed in this cape of Africa in 1486, installed a pattern and turned around. The immediate coastline to the north and south was German, South African, and finally Namibian. Indifferent to successive transfers of nationality, one of the largest seal colonies in the world has maintained its hold there and animates it with deafening marine barks and endless tantrums.
Damaraland, Namíbia

Namibia On the Rocks

Hundreds of kilometers north of Swakopmund, many more of Swakopmund's iconic dunes Sossuvlei, Damaraland is home to deserts interspersed with hills of reddish rock, the highest mountain and ancient rock art of the young nation. the settlers South Africans they named this region after the Damara, one of the Namibian ethnic groups. Only these and other inhabitants prove that it remains on Earth.
Fish River Canyon, Namíbia

The Namibian Guts of Africa

When nothing makes you foreseeable, a vast river ravine burrows the southern end of the Namíbia. At 160km long, 27km wide and, at intervals, 550 meters deep, the Fish River Canyon is the Grand Canyon of Africa. And one of the biggest canyons on the face of the Earth.
Sossusvlei, Namíbia

The Namibe Dead End of Sossusvlei

When it flows, the ephemeral Tsauchab river meanders 150km from the mountains of Naukluft. Arriving in Sossusvlei, you get lost in a sea of ​​sand mountains that compete for the sky. The natives and settlers called it a swamp of no return. Anyone who discovers these far-fetched parts of Namibia always thinks of returning.
Twyfelfontein - Ui Aes, Namíbia

The Rupestrian Namibia Uncovered

During the Stone Age, the now hay-covered valley of the Aba-Huab River was home to a diverse fauna that attracted hunters. In more recent times, colonial era fortunes and misfortunes coloured this part of Namibia. Not as many as the more than 5000 petroglyphs that remain at Ui Aes / Twyfelfontein.
Walvis Bay, Namíbia

The Outstanding Shoreline of Walvis Bay

From Namibia's largest coastal city to the edge of the Namib Desert of Sandwich Harbour, there is an unrivaled domain of ocean, dunes, fog and wildlife. Since 1790, the fruitful Walvis Bay has been its gateway.
Cape Town, South Africa

In the End: the Cape

The crossing of Cabo das Tormentas, led by Bartolomeu Dias, transformed this almost southern tip of Africa into an unavoidable scale. And, over time, in Cape Town, one of the meeting points of civilizations and monumental cities on the face of the Earth.
Robben Island, South Africa

The Island off the Apartheid

Bartolomeu Dias was the first European to glimpse Robben Island, when crossing the Cape of Storms. Over the centuries, the colonists turned it into an asylum and prison. Nelson Mandela left in 1982 after eighteen years in prison. Twelve years later, he became South Africa's first black president.
Moçamedes to PN Iona, Namibe, Angola

Grand entrance to the Angola of the Dunes

Still with Moçâmedes as a starting point, we traveled in search of the sands of Namibe and Iona National Park. The cacimbo meteorology prevents the continuation between the Atlantic and the dunes to the stunning south of Baía dos Tigres. It will only be a matter of time.
Cape Ledo, Angola

Cape Ledo and its Bay of Joy

Just 120km south of Luanda, capricious waves of the Atlantic and cliffs crowned with moxixeiros compete for the land of musseque. The large cove is shared by foreigners surrendered to the scene and Angolan residents who have long been supported by the generous sea.
Jabula Beach, Kwazulu Natal, South Africa
Safari
Saint Lucia, South Africa

An Africa as Wild as Zulu

On the eminence of the coast of Mozambique, the province of KwaZulu-Natal is home to an unexpected South Africa. Deserted beaches full of dunes, vast estuarine swamps and hills covered with fog fill this wild land also bathed by the Indian Ocean. It is shared by the subjects of the always proud Zulu nation and one of the most prolific and diverse fauna on the African continent.
Braga or Braka or Brakra in Nepal
Annapurna (circuit)
Annapurna Circuit: 6th – Braga, Nepal

The Ancient Nepal of Braga

Four days of walking later, we slept at 3.519 meters from Braga (Braka). Upon arrival, only the name is familiar to us. Faced with the mystical charm of the town, arranged around one of the oldest and most revered Buddhist monasteries on the Annapurna circuit, we continued our journey there. acclimatization with ascent to Ice Lake (4620m).
Visitors in Jameos del Água, Lanzarote, Canary Islands, Spain
Architecture & Design
Lanzarote, Canary Islands

To César Manrique what is César Manrique's

By itself, Lanzarote would always be a Canaria by itself, but it is almost impossible to explore it without discovering the restless and activist genius of one of its prodigal sons. César Manrique passed away nearly thirty years ago. The prolific work he left shines on the lava of the volcanic island that saw him born.
Bungee jumping, Queenstown, New Zealand
Adventure
Queenstown, New Zealand

Queenstown, the Queen of Extreme Sports

In the century. XVIII, the Kiwi government proclaimed a mining village on the South Island "fit for a queen".Today's extreme scenery and activities reinforce the majestic status of ever-challenging Queenstown.
drinks entre reis, cavalhadas de pirenopolis, crusades, brazil
Ceremonies and Festivities
Pirenópolis, Brazil

Brazilian Crusades

Christian armies expelled Muslim forces from the Iberian Peninsula in the XNUMXth century. XV but, in Pirenópolis, in the Brazilian state of Goiás, the South American subjects of Carlos Magno continue to triumph.
Gangtok House, Sikkim, India
Cities
Gangtok, India

An Hillside Life

Gangtok it is the capital of Sikkim, an ancient kingdom in the Himalayas section of the Silk Road, which became an Indian province in 1975. The city is balanced on a slope, facing Kanchenjunga, the third highest elevation in the world that many natives believe shelters a paradise valley of Immortality. Their steep and strenuous Buddhist existence aims, there, or elsewhere, to achieve it.
young saleswoman, nation, bread, uzbekistan
Meal
Fergana Valley, Uzbekistan

Uzbekistan, The Nation That Does Not Lack Bread

Few countries employ cereals like Uzbekistan. In this republic of Central Asia, bread plays a vital and social role. The Uzbeks produce it and consume it with devotion and in abundance.
Newar celebration, Bhaktapur, Nepal
Culture
Bhaktapur, Nepal

The Nepalese Masks of Life

The Newar Indigenous People of the Kathmandu Valley attach great importance to the Hindu and Buddhist religiosity that unites them with each other and with the Earth. Accordingly, he blesses their rites of passage with newar dances of men masked as deities. Even if repeated long ago from birth to reincarnation, these ancestral dances do not elude modernity and begin to see an end.
Reindeer Racing, Kings Cup, Inari, Finland
Sport
Inari, Finland

The Wackiest Race on the Top of the World

Finland's Lapps have been competing in the tow of their reindeer for centuries. In the final of the Kings Cup - Porokuninkuusajot - , they face each other at great speed, well above the Arctic Circle and well below zero.
Composition on Nine Arches Bridge, Ella, Sri Lanka
Traveling
Yala NPElla-Kandy, Sri Lanka

Journey Through Sri Lanka's Tea Core

We leave the seafront of PN Yala towards Ella. On the way to Nanu Oya, we wind on rails through the jungle, among plantations in the famous Ceylon. Three hours later, again by car, we enter Kandy, the Buddhist capital that the Portuguese never managed to dominate.
António do Remanso, Quilombola Marimbus Community, Lençóis, Chapada Diamantina
Ethnic
Sheets of Bahia, Brazil

The Swampy Freedom of Quilombo do Remanso

Runaway slaves have survived for centuries around a wetland in Chapada Diamantina. Today, the quilombo of Remanso is a symbol of their union and resistance, but also of the exclusion to which they were voted.
sunlight photography, sun, lights
Got2Globe Photo Portfolio
Natural Light (Part 2)

One Sun, So Many Lights

Most travel photos are taken in sunlight. Sunlight and weather form a capricious interaction. Learn how to predict, detect and use at its best.
Gothic couple
History

Matarraña to Alcanar, Spain (España)

A Medieval Spain

Traveling through the lands of Aragon and Valencia, we come across towers and detached battlements of houses that fill the slopes. Mile after kilometer, these visions prove to be as anachronistic as they are fascinating.

Solovestsky Autumn
Islands
Solovetsky Islands, Russia

The Mother Island of the Gulag Archipelago

It hosted one of Russia's most powerful Orthodox religious domains, but Lenin and Stalin turned it into a gulag. With the fall of the USSR, Solovestky regains his peace and spirituality.
Geothermal, Iceland Heat, Ice Land, Geothermal, Blue Lagoon
Winter White
Iceland

The Geothermal Coziness of the Ice Island

Most visitors value Iceland's volcanic scenery for its beauty. Icelanders also draw from them heat and energy crucial to the life they lead to the Arctic gates.
Baie d'Oro, Île des Pins, New Caledonia
Literature
Île-des-Pins, New Caledonia

The Island that Leaned against Paradise

In 1964, Katsura Morimura delighted the Japan with a turquoise novel set in Ouvéa. But the neighboring Île-des-Pins has taken over the title "The Nearest Island to Paradise" and thrills its visitors.
colorful boat, Gili Islands, Indonesia
Nature
Gili Islands, Indonesia

Gili: the Indonesia's Islands the World Calls “Islands”

They are so humble that they are known by the term bahasa which means only islands. Despite being discreet, the Gili have become the favorite haunt of travelers who pass through Lombok or Bali.
Sheki, Autumn in the Caucasus, Azerbaijan, Autumn Homes
Autumn
Sheki, Azerbaijan

autumn in the caucasus

Lost among the snowy mountains that separate Europe from Asia, Sheki is one of Azerbaijan's most iconic towns. Its largely silky history includes periods of great harshness. When we visited it, autumn pastels added color to a peculiar post-Soviet and Muslim life.
Gorongosa National Park, Mozambique, Wildlife, lions
Natural Parks
NP Gorongosa, Mozambique

The Wild Heart of Mozambique shows Signs of Life

Gorongosa was home to one of the most exuberant ecosystems in Africa, but from 1980 to 1992 it succumbed to the Civil War waged between FRELIMO and RENAMO. Greg Carr, Voice Mail's millionaire inventor received a message from the Mozambican ambassador to the UN challenging him to support Mozambique. For the good of the country and humanity, Carr pledged to resurrect the stunning national park that the Portuguese colonial government had created there.
Moscow, Kremlin, Red Square, Russia, Moscow River
UNESCO World Heritage
Moscow, Russia

The Supreme Fortress of Russia

There were many kremlins built, over time, in the vastness of the country of the tsars. None stands out, as monumental as that of the capital Moscow, a historic center of despotism and arrogance that, from Ivan the Terrible to Vladimir Putin, for better or worse, dictated Russia's destiny.
aggie gray, Samoa, South Pacific, Marlon Brando Fale
Characters
Apia, Western Samoa

The Host of the South Pacific

She sold burguês to GI's in World War II and opened a hotel that hosted Marlon Brando and Gary Cooper. Aggie Gray passed away in 2. Her legacy lives on in the South Pacific.
Unusual bathing
Beaches

south of Belize

The Strange Life in the Black Caribbean Sun

On the way to Guatemala, we see how the proscribed existence of the Garifuna people, descendants of African slaves and Arawak Indians, contrasts with that of several much more airy bathing areas.

Religion
Annapurna Circuit: 5th - Ngawal a BragaNepal

Towards the Nepalese Braga

We spent another morning of glorious weather discovering Ngawal. There is a short journey towards Manang, the main town on the way to the zenith of the Annapurna circuit. We stayed for Braga (Braka). The hamlet would soon prove to be one of its most unforgettable places.
Flam Railway composition below a waterfall, Norway.
On Rails
Nesbyen to Flam, Norway

Flam Railway: Sublime Norway from the First to the Last Station

By road and aboard the Flam Railway, on one of the steepest railway routes in the world, we reach Flam and the entrance to the Sognefjord, the largest, deepest and most revered of the Scandinavian fjords. From the starting point to the last station, this monumental Norway that we have unveiled is confirmed.
Buffaloes, Marajo Island, Brazil, Soure police buffaloes
Society
Marajó Island, Brazil

The Buffalo Island

A vessel that transported buffaloes from the India it will have sunk at the mouth of the Amazon River. Today, the island of Marajó that hosted them has one of the largest herds in the world and Brazil is no longer without these bovine animals.
Visitors at Talisay Ruins, Negros Island, Philippines
Daily life
Talisay City, Philippines

Monument to a Luso-Philippine Love

At the end of the 11th century, Mariano Lacson, a Filipino farmer, and Maria Braga, a Portuguese woman from Macau, fell in love and got married. During the pregnancy of what would be her 2th child, Maria succumbed to a fall. Destroyed, Mariano built a mansion in his honor. In the midst of World War II, the mansion was set on fire, but the elegant ruins that endured perpetuate their tragic relationship.
São João Farm, Pantanal, Miranda, Mato Grosso do Sul, sunset
Wildlife
Fazenda São João, Miranda, Brazil

Pantanal with Paraguay in Sight

When the Fazenda Passo do Lontra decided to expand its ecotourism, it recruited the other family farm, the São João. Further away from the Miranda River, this second property reveals a remote Pantanal, on the verge of Paraguay. The country and the homonymous river.
Napali Coast and Waimea Canyon, Kauai, Hawaii Wrinkles
Scenic Flights
napali coast, Hawaii

Hawaii's Dazzling Wrinkles

Kauai is the greenest and rainiest island in the Hawaiian archipelago. It is also the oldest. As we explore its Napalo Coast by land, sea and air, we are amazed to see how the passage of millennia has only favored it.