Our makoro canoe ride in Botswana's Okavango Delta was an "authentic" experience, but our motorboat ride in the Delta was mind-blowing. In fact, it turned out to be one of our favorite experiences of the entire trip. Nothing I write here can truly capture the awe we felt as we puttered along this stunningly beautiful waterway.
We saw lots of God's creations on this motorboat ride, including prehistoric-looking crocs both in the water and on the banks, some quite ginormous:
Our favorite was the one who slept with his mouth wide open. We never saw him move even the slightest bit, even though we motored around him to get a view from several angles:
"Open wide!" He was a dentist's dream patient (or his worst nightmare):
Kingfishers |
Egret |
African darters |
Sacred ibis (birds with black bills on left) |
Sacred ibis and egret |
Egret |
There were often dozens of birds of varying species hanging around together, like some big inter-cultural gathering:
Sometimes huge flocks flew alongside our motorboat or caught the draft behind us. We felt like actors in a movie. How could something like this be real?
I told Bob it was almost like there was background music playing. It reminded me of the scene in the movie Out of Africa when Robert Redford takes Meryl Streep flying, and it's just the two of them soaring over the savannah, animals running below. Meryl Streep reaches back and grasps Robert Redford's hand, weeping at the inconceivable, inexpressible beauty of it all. It was that kind of a moment for me.
We were like kids at the airport watching the planes take off and land:
Cranky Mr. Crocodile wasn't the least bit interested in all the activity going on around him.
One of the highlights of the ride was the hippos. We had been warned many times to stay far away from these dangerous beasts, but our boat driver hadn't gotten that memo. We occasionally came across a lonely hippo:
. . . or a small group:
As we approached, they went CRAZY, leaping like ballerinas and arching like dressage horses to get underwater fast, causing a great churning and creating huge waves.
Even without the wild animals, the scenery was so pure, so vibrant, that it made my heart ache.
The colors in the Delta are so rich--almost like a photo that has been photoshopped just a little too much.
We bumped along the road back to the lodge . . .
. . . sometimes plowing through shallow lakes (and not so shallow lakes):
It was a morning we will never forget.
Nice - one of my favorite days anywhere. It is particularly fun when you are touched by nature. It brings to mind the day near a spring on Mt. Whitney when you got teary and said, "Bob, you never told me it was this pretty." When you say you like birds, and compare it to the creation, then I know something special is going on.
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