Away
To Botswana

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A Comprehensive Destination Guide
for an experiential journey through Botswana

Where Wilderness Speaks in Silhouettes and Stillness
Botswana isn’t a destination—it’s a moment in time. A slow breath between lion roars, the soft glide of a mokoro canoe across the Okavango Delta, or the hush that descends over the salt pans of Makgadikgadi as the stars take their shift. One of Africa’s most pristine safari destinations, Botswana strikes a rare balance between wild majesty and refined luxury. It’s where authentic life, indigenous wisdom, deeply rooted cultural heritage, exquisite local cuisine, and world-leading boutique wilderness camps come together.

Authentic, Unique,
and Local Experiences
for a memorable
journey through Botswana.

Away Logoexperiences in Botswana

Botswana is a living tapestry of soulful moments, raw wilderness, and cultural depth. From gliding silently in a mokoro canoe across the Okavango Delta to walking alongside the San Bushmen in the Kalahari, every experience is an invitation to slow down, listen, and truly connect—with nature, with ancient stories, and with yourself. A journey to Botswana is not just travel; it’s a rare immersion into landscapes that breathe and cultures that endure.

For travelers who look beyond typical safaris, for seekers of beauty, wisdom, and authenticity, Botswana’s experiences await. Drift through mirrored waterways, break bread in village homestays, share fireside stories under velvet skies, and step lightly across the salt pans where time stands still. Whether you’re learning the art of mokoro poling, foraging Kalahari truffles, or photographing predators at dawn, Botswana’s moments are both humbling and unforgettable.

From the Okavango’s private island sleepouts to the salt flats of Makgadikgadi, from Chobe’s elephant-studded riverbanks to the sacred art of Tsodilo Hills, Botswana reveals itself slowly—each experience more profound than the last. This is a land where luxury is measured in silence, in space, and in stories that linger long after the journey ends.

Begin planning your Botswana journey today. The most transformative adventures start with curiosity and unfold in whispers of the wild.

Mokoro Poling in the Okavango Delta

Gliding across the mirrored waters of the Okavango Delta in a mokoro—a traditional dugout canoe—is a rite of passage. Your poler is often a local Bayei or Hambukushu guide whose intimate knowledge of the delta’s waterways, flora, and fauna turns this tranquil experience into a living encyclopedia of Botswana’s ecological and cultural heartbeat. Along the way, you’ll hear stories passed through generations—legends of hippos, flood rhythms, and sacred water lilies—while silently floating past reeds where kingfishers perch.

Village Homestay near Maun

A night in a rural village outside Maun strips away the safari veneer to reveal real Botswana living. Grind sorghum by hand, herd goats at sunrise, or learn to cook with morogo (wild spinach) and lerotse melon in a mud kitchen. Evenings are spent listening to local folktales under the stars, and the connections formed—raw, real, and memorable—often outlast any wildlife sighting.

Walking with the San Bushmen in the Kalahari

The San people, among the world’s oldest continuous cultures, offer an intimate experience unlike any other. A walk with them in the Kalahari is more than a trek—it’s a masterclass in survival, storytelling, and ancient knowledge. Learn how to read tracks in the sand, find water where none is visible, and understand the deeply spiritual connection they have with the land.

Photographic Safari with a Pro in Khwai

In the community-led Khwai Concession, you can spend time learning from a seasoned wildlife photographer. Use specially designed hides, learn how to shoot in low light, and capture scenes that most travellers miss—like a leopard’s yawn at twilight or the quiet tension between predator and prey.

Cultural Immersion
in Botswana

The Okavango Delta

A UNESCO World Heritage Site and one of the world’s largest inland deltas, the Okavango is a mosaic of channels, islands, and floodplains teeming with wildlife. Here, game drives give way to boat safaris, and every turn might reveal elephants chest-deep in water or painted reed frogs clinging to papyrus stalks. Many camps offer private island sleepouts—canvas domes on stilted decks where hippo grunts and lion calls become your night’s soundtrack.

Chobe National Park

Welcome to the Kingdom of Elephants. Chobe is home to Africa’s highest concentration of these gentle giants. A river cruise at sunset delivers a cinema-worthy scene: elephants crossing in single file, crocodiles sliding from banks, and pied kingfishers diving for dinner. Venture inland to Savuti, where lion prides famously hunt elephants, creating one of the continent’s most dramatic predator-prey interactions.

Makgadikgadi Pans

The otherworldly salt pans of Makgadikgadi stretch endlessly, shimmering like lunar lakes under the African sun. During the dry season, you can quad-bike across this desolate beauty and spend a night under the stars with meerkats as curious companions. Come rainy season, the pans transform into a watery stage for thousands of migrating zebra—an unexpected, yet unforgettable safari spectacle.

Tsodilo Hills

Known as the "Louvre of the Desert," Tsodilo Hills hold over 4,000 ancient rock paintings etched across dramatic sandstone cliffs. Local Hambukushu and San guides offer spiritual insight, sharing creation stories and cultural beliefs that give these sacred hills their mystical aura. Standing beneath these millennia-old artworks, you feel time dissolve into dust and reverence.

Local Dining and Regional Cuisine
of Botswana

Seswaa

Considered Botswana’s national dish, seswaa is slow-cooked, hand-shredded beef simmered for hours with minimal seasoning. Served with maize porridge (pap), it’s a dish rooted in family, patience, and celebration. The best place to try it? At a homestead lunch in Seronga, where you might sit on a reed mat, eat with your hands, and share stories with your hosts.

Morogo & Lerotse Stew

An earthy dish made from wild greens and an indigenous melon that tastes somewhere between cucumber and pumpkin. Often served at community gatherings, it represents the ingenuity of Batswana cooking, especially in the hands of grandmothers who don’t need recipes.

Kalahari Truffle Tasting

Foraged only after summer rains near Ghanzi, the Kalahari truffle is a local delicacy. Pan-seared in butter or tossed with foraged herbs, it’s Africa’s earthy answer to the black truffle—and best savoured with a good tale and a crisp white wine.

Bream Braai on the Chobe River

Fresh-caught bream, rubbed with chilli, grilled over coals on a floating pontoon—this isn’t just dinner, it’s theatre. The Chobe sunset sets the stage, fish eagles supply the soundtrack, and your tastebuds do the encore.

Bojalwa jwa Setswana (Traditional Sorghum Beer)

In a small craft brewery in Maun, sip this lightly fermented drink made with love, skill, and a little local lore. Perfect with spicy biltong or while watching the sun dip behind acacia trees.

Unique Award-Winning
Boutique Hotels

Mombo Camp – Chief’s Island, Okavango Delta

Referred to as “The Place of Plenty,” Mombo is famed for unmatched predator sightings and eco-pioneering efforts like rhino reintroduction. Its nine tented suites, all with plunge pools and sweeping views, blend understated elegance with unrivalled wild proximity.

Xigera Safari Lodge – Western Delta

Bold, sculptural architecture meets full solar power and deep sustainability ethos. With its outdoor sculpture garden, stargazing deck, and a sleep-out in a baobab treehouse, this is one of Botswana’s most artistic and luxurious stays.

Jack’s Camp – Makgadikgadi

Think 1940s safari glamour—Persian rugs, antique furniture, and vintage books under a desert canopy. It’s not just a stay, it’s a transportive journey. Wake up with meerkats, quad across salt pans, and fall asleep to desert silence.

Zarafa Camp – Selinda Reserve

A carbon-negative masterpiece, Zarafa has just four opulent tents with copper bathtubs, vintage telescopes, and panoramic views. Founded by conservationists Dereck and Beverly Joubert, it merges barefoot luxury with wildlife activism.

Sanctuary Baines’ Camp – On the Boro River

Known for its star beds that wheel out under the sky, this intimate lodge also offers the unforgettable ‘Living with Elephants’ experience, where you walk beside these gentle giants in one of the most profound wildlife interactions available in Africa.

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