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The
headwaters of the Ngwezumba River are amidst a mixture of woodlands,
pans and grassland centered around Nogatsaa and Tjinga Pans. In
the winter, breeding herds of elephants congregate around water
holes before disappearing back into the forests. This is also the
best region for viewing eland. Other animal species that inhabit
the headwaters include oribi, sable, roan antelope, buffalo, lion,
zebra, reedbuck, impala, duiker and steenbok.
Savuti covers an area of roughly
5000 square km, near the western boundary of Chobe National Park.
Its landscape is among the most diverse in Africa, reminiscent of
the Serengeti plains in Tanzania. The 90 metre high Gubatsa Hills
are a striking feature in an otherwise extraordinarily flat landscape.
These hills are a series of dolomitic outcrops (inselbergs) formed
980 million years ago. Savuti was once part of the giant Lake Makgadikgadi
which was connected to both the Okavango and Zambezi rivers. Lake
Makgadikgadi started to dry up some 30 000 years ago, leaving the
smaller Lake Mababe behind. This lake also dried up, leaving the
Mababe Depression. The dry Savuti channel, dotted with large, dead
camelthorn trees, winds its way through the Savuti area. Water last
flowed through the channel in 1979, emptying into the Savuti marsh:
a vast, open grassland south of Savuti.
Savuti
offers our safari guests exciting wildlife viewing opportunities.
In addition to its lion population, Savuti has a high concentration
of hyaenas, and other large predators such as leopards, wild dogs
and cheetahs are also seen regularly. The abundance of predators
is fed by equally large populations of tsessebe, wildebeest, impala,
giraffe, warthog and black-backed jackal in the marshlands, and
kudu, roan, sable and the occasional buffalo in the wooded areas.
Guests will also be thrilled by witnessing the annual zebra migrations
southward during November and December and northward back to Linyanti
between February and April, and the congregations of bull elephants
around waterholes in the dry season.
African animals are most active
in the cool hours of the day, so an early start to your game drives
in the Chobe should prove very rewarding. |