Accessing clean toilets was clearly a priority for Misheck. I suppose there some in that group would would have complaiuned if it hadn't been.
The ZAR150 kitty at the start was for toilets as well as porterage.
After 119 km we arrived in Uis. Misheck pointed us to a bar so bAlt and I walked in and went straight to the loos withour asking for directions. When the rest of the group came in and did ask, they were told they'd have to pay. Misheck was not happy. Not sure if he did pay, or did not.
Brandburg Mountain, I think. If I'm right, famous for The White Lady rock painting
the geography/geology on this trip has been outstanding
Regarding paying teh ladies of Ugab. This was another thing that Misheck had stressed at the intro meeting. Don’t take pictures of people without permission, especially when driving through towns. A couple of people didn’t get the message and I pulled one of them up when they were pointing their camera at some people who angrily indicated not to.
After travelling alongside a road that Misheck said has been under construction for 10 years we finally got to the part that had been finished and it was like riding on a magic carpet.
Swakopmund is one of the biggest cities in Namibia and is a few ks away from Namibia’s biggest port Walvis Bay.
It is often shrouded in a heavy mist, like Lima
This mist is what provides the moisture required by local flora and fauna. As we approached Swakopmund we drove into the mist. It was/is actually a heavy fog.
The area is known as the Skeleton Coast. The name comes from the ‘skeletons’ of the huge number of shipwrecks, apparently more shipwrecks than anywhere else on the planet.
Skeleton Coast National Park - The world’s largest ship cemetary
https://www.info-namibia.com/activities-and-places-of-interest/kaokoveld/skeleton-coast
We stopped briefly at the Zeila wreck, a modern wreck of a steel fishing boat. It was being towed to India and broke its lines during a storm as it was leaving Walvis Bay.
Hetties, I think. No green anywhere to be seen. Such a lunar landscape