With its expansive landscapes and formidable animal life, the world's
second-biggest continent is arguably the best for photographers.
Throw in that sense of being in a place that hasn't changed for centuries and sometimes millennia, and you get some of the most inspiring, and inspired, spots on the planet.
It's not the river they need to worry about.A
photo won't capture the thunder of hooves on dirt as more than a
million wildebeest and several hundred thousand zebra make their annual
migration, but still, this is one for the top of the pile.
The migration is actually a year-round event as the animals move from Tanzania's Ngorongoro Reserve in January, up through the Serengeti around June and hit Kenya's Masai Mara around September, before journeying south again.
We've got the table, the wine, all we need's the company. Table Mountain makes Cape Town, one of the world's best beach cities, also one of the world's most photogenic.
Cable car rides are available to the top of the mesa, giving great views, fantastic sunrises/sunsets and a great photo. Challenge: try and limit yourself to 50 pics.
World's most mesmerizing market. The
world’s most exciting town square, Djmaa el Fna reminds you you're in
Africa. In the heart of the old city of Marrakech, snake-charmers,
henna-painters, story-tellers, date-sellers and orange juice vendors set
up their stalls in the sleepy heat of the afternoon.
As night falls, the vendors are joined by tribal drummers, ladyboy dancers and mobile restaurateurs selling delicious grilled meats, bread and salad as the smoke rises above their stalls till past midnight.
Who knew sand could be so stunning?Sossusvlei
means "the gathering place of water” but you'll need to bring your own
if you don't want to dehydrate at this, Namibia’s most outstanding
attraction.
The dunes have developed over millions of years, the result of material flowing from the Orange River into the Atlantic, carried north and returned again to land by the surf.
Climbing the dunes yields breathtaking views, including the Deadvlei, a ghostly expanse of dried white clay punctuated by skeletons of ancient camelthorn trees.
Looks like this baby's had a late night. A close encounter with the mountain gorillas of the Rwandan rainforest will stay with you for a lifetime.
Various operators run tours tracking silverbacks and their troupes in the dense forest.
Liquid awesome.One
of the world’s most majestic water spectacles, Victoria Falls (also
called Mosi-oa-Tunya, or "The Cloud That Thunders) -- were reportedly
first seen by a European when Scotsman David Livingstone journeyed here
in 1855.
Since then thousands have enjoyed the spray from the 108-meter high cascade, which was once recorded flowing at 12,800 cubic meters per second -- double that of Niagara's highest flow.
Namibia -- home of the beautiful desert.The Spitzkoppe feature various granite peaks in Namibia's Namib Desert, with the highest peak hitting nearly 1,800 meters.
Activities in the area include bouldering and rustic cave camping as well as multi-day safaris.
Whether you're running it or gawking at it, you'll be impressed.The
most user-friendly part of the Sahara is accessible from the northern
edge of Morocco. You can trek with Berbers from the town of Zagoura,
or camp out in Tazzarine where runners from all over the world complete
the week-long Marathon des Sables every spring.
The foot of the Merzouga Dunes is the ultimate location for star-gazing, totally free of light pollution.
And you thought building your garden wall was hard work.
The most famous of the structures at Giza, near Cairo, the Pyramid of King Cheops was built around 2650 BC from 2.5 million blocks of limestone.
Its sides are oriented exactly to the north, south, east and west.
The Chephren pyramid, built by Cheops’ son, is similar in size and incorporates the entrances to a burial chamber which still contains the large granite sarcophagus of King Chephren.
The pyramid of Mycerinus is smaller than both and all three are surrounded by other smaller pyramids and dozens of tombs.
Malawi calling. Your dream escape awaits. Nyika,
Malawi’s largest park, is one of the most unusual in Afric with a
plateau cut by numerous rivers that reach Lake Malawi by way of
waterfalls off the eastern edge of the mountains.
The eastern border of the plateau forms the wall of the Great Rift Valley.
The great domes of hills have gentle slopes, making Nyika perfect for both trekking and mountain biking as well as Jeep exploration.
Antelope and zebra abound, and the park has one of the highest densities of leopard in Central Africa.
More salt than all the world's microwave meals combined.It's
said you can hear your own blood flow in this vast area of dried-up
salt pans in the Kalahari Desert, a forbidding landscaped formed by a
huge lake that dried up millennia ago.
But it can transform in an instant during winter, if rains have been good enough to make lush grass sprout, bringing a stampede of wildlife to break the silence including zebra, wildebeest and flamingos.
Never thought we'd say this, but date palms and kasbahs make a surprisingly good team.Between
the Atlas Mountains and the dunes of the Sahara lies one of Morocco’s
most splendid and rewarding landscapes: the Draa, a mass of date
plantations punctuated by kasbahs made of rammed red earth rising
against the sky.
Zagora, at the southern end, makes a good base with decent hotels and restaurants. Allow five hours to reach the Draa from Marrakech via a spectacular route across the Atlas mountains -- it’s best not to self-drive.
Not looking too shabby for nearly 9,000 years.This
colossal temple is on the way down to Egypt’s Valley Temple of King
Chefren. The body of a lion with a human head is a 70 meters long and 20
meters high -- as tall as a six-story apartment block.
Although the Sphinx has been thought of as female, many scholars believe the face is that of King Chefren.
If the view's good from down here, wait till you get up there.At
around 3,000 meters, the Mulanje Massif is the highest mountain in
central Africa. It's split in two by the Fort Lister Gap, a broad pass
eroded by the Phalombe and Sombani rivers.
The mountain is distinguished by giant basins of rock and narrow gullies cut by fast-flowing streams. A strenuous trek leads to magnificent viewpoints.
En route, expect to encounter monkeys, hares, voles and a carpet of enchanting wildflowers after the rain. Large numbers of butterflies are another feature.
Hoofing it up the savannah.The best way to experience Kenya’s zebras? From the back of a horse.
Travelers can gallop alongside the stripey beasts in the Masai Mara, covering up to 100 kilometers in a week.
The night is young, the Nile not so much.A
cruise down the Egyptian Nile, ideally on a romantic felucca rather
than a crowded tourist boat, reveals relics of one of the world’s most
ancient civilisations.
The highpoint is the Valley of the Kings, with its monumental statues, and the magnificent Kom Ombo Temple, north of Aswan on the east bank.
Less light, more memories.This
iconic formation in the night sky is best seen from the Southern
Hemisphere, and few spots offer better vantage points than on an
open-air safari in Luangwa, Zambia.
The constellation has appeared in various cultures in various ways, not least with a reference in the Australian national anthem.
If Hello Kitty was actually Hello Birdie.
Lake Nakuru National Park is home to one million resident flamingos, providing one of Kenya’s most unforgettable sights.
This lake has become famous for the greatest bird spectacle in the world, with swathes of vibrant pink filling the alkaline lake and the huge sky.
Ernest Hemingway would have loved this. Canoeing
safaris in the Lower Zambezi offer sightings of hippos, elephants and
other animals drinking from the rivers and tributaries around camp.
Sports fishermen and women can also be accommodated at various of the camps and lodges on the banks of the river.
Whales, dolphin and dugong, oh my.The
10-minute helicopter ride across the Bazaruto Archipelago to the Azura
Retreats lodge on Benguerra Island is worth it in its own right. The
destination is the icing on the cake.
This award-winning boutique hotel set on a remote desert island is set within a Marine National Park, giving the chance to see whales, dolphins and dugong.
One thing we know -- Botswana is not short of sodium. The Baines Baobabs that sit close to the entrance of Botswana’s Nxai Pan National Park take their name from a series of watercolors by Victorian explorer and artist Thomas Baines.
Their fruit apparently tastes a little like sherbet.
The Nxai Pan park is great for viewing the vast, salt-rich pans that characterize the Kalahari and is also known for lion, leopard and cheetah and unusually large herds of giraffe.
For all NASA knows, the Mars rover went off course and landed here.Some
500 meters deep and more than 160 kilometers long, this great rift is
second only to the United States' Grand Canyon in size, and during the
dry season is characterized by beautiful turquoise pools of
seasonally-flowing water stretching into the distance.
No pots of gold in Kenya, just rhinos.Located
in the valley between the dramatic slopes of Mount Kenya and the
rolling peaks of the Aberdare Mountains, Solio Reserve is home to around
250 black and white rhino and considered the best place to see these
increasingly rare species.
Can't stand the heat? Get out of Africa.A
whopping two kilometers wide and usually containing a lava lake,
Nyiragongo Volcano is one of Africa's most active volcanoes, with an
eruption in 2002 displacing half a million people.
Climb Kili, take photo, retire happy. Mount Kilimanjaro,
at 5,895 meters Africa's highest peak -- and an item on thousands of
bucket lists -- is a “Sky island,” creating a varied and dramatic
natural habitat.
Rising through lush rainforests and alpine meadows, climbers finally cross a barren lunar landscape to reach the twin summit, often above the clouds.
Sunbathe, soak, repeat.Lake
Malawi, one of the largest lakes in the world, was dubbed “Lake of
Stars” by Dr. David Livingstone, who trekked here a century and a half
ago.
The lake has more tropical fish than any lake in the world -- 1,300 species -- and the freshwater diving is great.
The bio-diversity has been recognised by UNESCO, which has made Lake Malawi National Park, the world’s first freshwater park, a World Heritage Site.
Throw in that sense of being in a place that hasn't changed for centuries and sometimes millennia, and you get some of the most inspiring, and inspired, spots on the planet.
1. The great migration, Tanzania
The migration is actually a year-round event as the animals move from Tanzania's Ngorongoro Reserve in January, up through the Serengeti around June and hit Kenya's Masai Mara around September, before journeying south again.
2. Table Mountain, South Africa
Cable car rides are available to the top of the mesa, giving great views, fantastic sunrises/sunsets and a great photo. Challenge: try and limit yourself to 50 pics.
3. Djmaa el Fna, Morocco
As night falls, the vendors are joined by tribal drummers, ladyboy dancers and mobile restaurateurs selling delicious grilled meats, bread and salad as the smoke rises above their stalls till past midnight.
4. Sossusvlei Dunes, Namibia
The dunes have developed over millions of years, the result of material flowing from the Orange River into the Atlantic, carried north and returned again to land by the surf.
Climbing the dunes yields breathtaking views, including the Deadvlei, a ghostly expanse of dried white clay punctuated by skeletons of ancient camelthorn trees.
5. Mountain gorillas, Rwanda
Various operators run tours tracking silverbacks and their troupes in the dense forest.
6. Victoria Falls, Zambia and Zimbabwe
Since then thousands have enjoyed the spray from the 108-meter high cascade, which was once recorded flowing at 12,800 cubic meters per second -- double that of Niagara's highest flow.
7. Spitzkoppe, Namibia
Activities in the area include bouldering and rustic cave camping as well as multi-day safaris.
8. Sahara dunes, Morocco
The foot of the Merzouga Dunes is the ultimate location for star-gazing, totally free of light pollution.
9. Pyramids of Giza, Egypt
The most famous of the structures at Giza, near Cairo, the Pyramid of King Cheops was built around 2650 BC from 2.5 million blocks of limestone.
Its sides are oriented exactly to the north, south, east and west.
The Chephren pyramid, built by Cheops’ son, is similar in size and incorporates the entrances to a burial chamber which still contains the large granite sarcophagus of King Chephren.
The pyramid of Mycerinus is smaller than both and all three are surrounded by other smaller pyramids and dozens of tombs.
10. Nyika Plateau National Park, Malawi
The eastern border of the plateau forms the wall of the Great Rift Valley.
The great domes of hills have gentle slopes, making Nyika perfect for both trekking and mountain biking as well as Jeep exploration.
Antelope and zebra abound, and the park has one of the highest densities of leopard in Central Africa.
11. Makgadikgadi Pans, Botswana
But it can transform in an instant during winter, if rains have been good enough to make lush grass sprout, bringing a stampede of wildlife to break the silence including zebra, wildebeest and flamingos.
12. Draa Valley, Morocco
Zagora, at the southern end, makes a good base with decent hotels and restaurants. Allow five hours to reach the Draa from Marrakech via a spectacular route across the Atlas mountains -- it’s best not to self-drive.
13. Sphinx, Egypt
Although the Sphinx has been thought of as female, many scholars believe the face is that of King Chefren.
14. Mount Mulanje, Malawi
The mountain is distinguished by giant basins of rock and narrow gullies cut by fast-flowing streams. A strenuous trek leads to magnificent viewpoints.
En route, expect to encounter monkeys, hares, voles and a carpet of enchanting wildflowers after the rain. Large numbers of butterflies are another feature.
15. Riding safari, Kenya
Travelers can gallop alongside the stripey beasts in the Masai Mara, covering up to 100 kilometers in a week.
16. Wonders of the Nile, Egypt
The highpoint is the Valley of the Kings, with its monumental statues, and the magnificent Kom Ombo Temple, north of Aswan on the east bank.
17. The Southern Cross, Zambia
The constellation has appeared in various cultures in various ways, not least with a reference in the Australian national anthem.
18. Flamingos, Kenya
Lake Nakuru National Park is home to one million resident flamingos, providing one of Kenya’s most unforgettable sights.
This lake has become famous for the greatest bird spectacle in the world, with swathes of vibrant pink filling the alkaline lake and the huge sky.
19. Lower Zambezi, Zambia
Sports fishermen and women can also be accommodated at various of the camps and lodges on the banks of the river.
20. Bazaruto Archipelago, Mozambique
This award-winning boutique hotel set on a remote desert island is set within a Marine National Park, giving the chance to see whales, dolphins and dugong.
21. Nxia Pan National Park, Botswana
Their fruit apparently tastes a little like sherbet.
The Nxai Pan park is great for viewing the vast, salt-rich pans that characterize the Kalahari and is also known for lion, leopard and cheetah and unusually large herds of giraffe.
22. Fish River Canyon, Namibia
23. Rhinos at Solio Reserve, Kenya
24. Nyiragongo Volcano, Virunga National Park, Eastern Congo
25. Kilimanjaro, Tanzania
Rising through lush rainforests and alpine meadows, climbers finally cross a barren lunar landscape to reach the twin summit, often above the clouds.
26. Lake Malawi, Malawi
The lake has more tropical fish than any lake in the world -- 1,300 species -- and the freshwater diving is great.
The bio-diversity has been recognised by UNESCO, which has made Lake Malawi National Park, the world’s first freshwater park, a World Heritage Site.
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