About Austin Lehman
- > Why Travel With Us
- > Letter from Paul and Dan
- > Our Guides
- > Meet Our Guides
- > Travel Journals
- > Our Lodgings and Cuisine
- > Our Equipment
- > Travel Professionals
- > What Our Guests Say
- > Company Awards
- > Trusted Adventures
- > Newsletter Archive
- > Employment
- > FAQ
- > Media Center
- > Our Partners
- > Local Bites
Paul's Africa Travel Journal
Installment 1: Zambia & Botswana Safari
Day 1
![]() First safari lodge ![]() Hippos on an evening cruise ![]() Ronna enjoys the cruise ![]() Sunset in Africa ![]() Victoria Falls |
Day 2
We arrive in Johannesburg a couple of hours late and check into our hotel for the night, leaving just enough time to fall asleep in our soup bowls before we turn in.Day 3
Today, we sleep in (7 a.m.—this is not a trip for people who like to party until the wee hours of the night and then get their beauty sleep until noon). We fly from Johannesburg to Livingstone, Zambia for the true beginning of our trip. There a driver picks us up and takes us to Sussi and Chuma Lodge, our first bush camp, located on the shores of the Zambezi River. We are still pretty jet-lagged, so we decide we will exert ourselves by drinking gin and tonics on the late afternoon sunset cruise. We board the boat and literally within two minutes we are cruising by the five or six hippopotamuses that live just downriver from the camp. They do their customary snort-angrily-and-sink-into-the-water routine. We never do see more than the nostrils and ears of hundreds of hippos over the next week. Though angry, hippos are also shy and very susceptible to sunburn, so they spend the entire day up to their ears in water and then venture out around 9 p.m. to graze alongside the river. Along the riverbank we also see elephants wallowing in the mud (to clean themselves, of course) and then spraying dirt and sand on themselves to dry off. Later, we’ll find out that this method is, in fact, effective.That evening we meet our guides Juliet and Gabriel who lead us to see Victoria Falls. So much has been written about this incredible gushing faucet, visible from both Zambia and Zimbabwe (and well worth seeing from both sides).
Hippos | Victoria Falls | Ronna & Paul - Victoria Falls | Rafts at Victoria Falls |
Paul with Sussi & Chuma guide |
Day 4
Today we leave Zambia for Botswana. My wife Ronna and I are both very excited because we are going on our first safari trip. Plus, transferring camps is part of the adventure in adventure travel, as we are about to find out. A driver named Charles picks us up. He is a friendly, diminutive man with a wonderful, broad smile. As we drive to Kasane in Botswana, he tells us about the few large farms that line the road going south. We haven’t seen farms like these in our brief time in Zambia: large irrigation equipment is in place, and corn and wheat is growing. Charles tells us that these farms are being operated by white people from Zimbabwe. As the political situation in Zim (as it’s often abbreviated) worsened and government confiscation of land from white farmers was accomplished, the Zambian government invited these same farmers to its country and gave them very reasonable, long-term leases in exchange for their commitment to farm the land and employ black Zambians. Charles told us that he saw this as a win-win situation for Zambia. This land was not particularly fertile and there were doubts that it would be arable, but the farmers were willing to take the risk, and now the fields were green with vegetation. Zambians had new sources of maize, the staple of their diet, and jobs. Charles' response to the white farmers was not what we had expected from a black African—our knowledge continues!We arrive at Border Control on Zambezi River, which we will cross by boat to Botswana. It is utterly chaotic. Trucks line both sides of the road approaching the ferry terminal. Charles tells us that truck drivers can wait up to two weeks to board the ferry for the seven-minute ride to Botswana. We try to get our mini-bus closer to the front of the line, but we're trapped between a large truck and a passenger car. Women walk by with heavy loads on their heads. We tell Charles that we had packed very lightly (per the instructions of Austin-Lehman) and that we could easily wheel our bags through the line of cars and through immigration. I look at my watch; our plane is leaving from Botswana in one hour. I contemplate an evening sleeping on the road with the truck drivers.
But Charles knows the procedure. He pushes us to the front of a long line of people to get our passports stamped and leads us to a speedboat that will take us across the Zambezi, and within five minutes we are disembarking in Botswana. With the customary efficiency that we have now come to expect, we arrive at the airport with 15 minutes to spare.
![]() View from our 12-seater of the Okavanga Delta ![]() Zebra - Tubu Tree Camp ![]() Elephants in Botswana ![]() A giraffe drinking water ![]() Sundowner on safari |
We land next to the Tubu Tree Camp Lodge sign, which consists of a couple of two-by-four’s and some small palm fronds. No one’s there; we wonder if our pilot is going to leave us to fend for ourselves. But by the time we have gathered our belongings and de-planed (as they say), our wonderful guide, July (“Yes,” he tells us, “as in the month.”), is there with an open-air Land Rover and a warm smile. He drives off the tarmac and we are in the midst of the Delta. He is full of questions: How many times have we been to Africa before? What animals have we seen so far? Which are our favorites? We explain that we are safari virgins, but that we have already become very attached to elephants and monkeys. On the drive to the camp, we look out the window and find ourselves surrounded by zebras and impalas (recalling the Chevy car named after these elegant animals helps me identify them again later). We are greeted at the camp by the entire staff singing a traditional tribal welcome song.
It is very hot. (Later we find out that October is the hottest month of the year, though in my head I do the math and determine that since it is mid-fall at home, it's mid-spring here. But it is still the dry season; the cooling rainy season arrives in the next couple of weeks.) Late in the afternoon—like early morning the time when the animals are most likely to be up and moving around—July meets us in the lodge living room and takes us on the first game drive of our lives. It would be an understatement to say that it was thrilling. We pass herds of zebra and impala grazing together in open fields. We see our first baboons and kudu. As we turn the corner, we are caught in “Wild Kingdom,” or is this the real wild kingdom? Two elephants saunter out of the brush, followed by a herd of five giraffes, three of adult age and two six-month olds. I nudge Ronna and ask her if this was not one of the most stunning moments in our travel life. We agree that it is. As I click away on my camera, I think to myself, “Should I turn off my electronic shutter click? July must be very tired of hearing digital sound effects from tourists almost desperately trying to capture these animals on film.” But he totally shares our enchantment. “I could watch giraffes for hours. They are so graceful,” he tells us. He goes on to explain how difficult it is for giraffes to drink water. They must splay out their front legs, stick their butts into the air, lean their massive bodies down, and stick their mouths into the pond. It looks silly to us; more chilling is the fact that it puts them in a very vulnerable position that lions use to their advantage when they attack.
We are thrilled with our first introduction to the African bush. By the end of the afternoon, we can check off only one of the Big Five (we don’t see lions, rhinos, buffalo or leopards), but who cares... we'll get there.
A herd of impala | Impala grazing | Giraffes | Giraffe and impalas |
Day 5
![]() Giraffe - Baines Camp ![]() Monkeys near camp |
At 5:30 a.m., we are up and piling into the Land Rover for the first of our two daily game drives. (I am used to seeing Land Rovers in the suburbs, gingerly crossing such obstructions as train tracks. This is the first time I have experienced them for their intended use.) This morning we see a mother and father ostrich and 20 of their chicks, many more baboons, impalas, zebra, a family of elephants, and (my favorite), giraffes.
When you’re on safari, you get up very early, go on a game drive until 11 a.m., and then have brunch. The next activity doesn’t start until 4 p.m. tea—it’s too hot in the middle of the afternoon for either you or the animals to feel like doing much. Afternoons are for napping, sweating, showering or reading. This afternoon, Ronna and I are joined by about 40 baboons who have come to the camp for some shade and a late lunch. We spend the next hour engrossed in watching their antics: they preen, clown and play. Is it anthropomorphic projection, or do we see a lot of ourselves in them?
Tonight, the staff treats us to a concert of Botswanan music and dance. Though composed of people from many different tribes, the staff have all learned the music and culture of one tribe so that they may perform in unison for guests. It is another example of what we are coming to learn is the openness and respect that Botswanan people show to one another.
Day 6
This morning is our final game drive with July at Tubu Tree Camp. He has been a marvelous and knowledgeable host, but he thinks we are disappointed that we haven’t yet seen a leopard (though in fact we are pretty content). He is bound and determined to find us one of the big cats before we leave, though they haven’t been seen in the vicinity for the last few days. Per our normal schedule, we are in the Land Rover and on our way at 6:15 a.m. The morning starts very promisingly.![]() Leopard - Baines Camp ![]() Leopard on the hunt ![]() Baines Camp |
It’s time to get on our plane for our next stop on the Okavango Delta—the Baines Camp, about 75 miles away as the crow flies. We arrive at Baines in the early afternoon. We were stunned by the beauty of the location, on the edge of a perpetual lake filled with birds and hippos. Unlike the Delta region around the Tubu Lodge, which becomes parched during the dry season, this area stays wet year-round (that means “feet up” when the Rover crosses streams.) Around here, it is always green and rife with birds of every kind and hue. The camp itself is also beautiful. Named after a famous explorer and artist who traveled through Botswana in the mid-1800’s, the camp’s rooms look out on the water, are filled with local fabrics and woodwork, and themselves bear the names of Baines’ paintings. Their canopy beds are on rollers and can be pushed out onto the rooms’ decks. Tonight, we sleep under the stars, listening to the sounds of nocturnal animals and birds of the Delta.
Day 7
![]() Paul with elephant ![]() Paul & Ronna with elephant ![]() Sunset over the Delta |
Each elephant has its own personality. Jabu, the dominant male, is always ready to show off and demonstrate how much he has learned under Doug’s care. He allows us to examine his skin up close and to open his mouth wide to see his tongue. As he smells Thembi’s urine (which contains pheromones that help the male determine when the female is about to ovulate), he gets an instantaneous ‘fifth leg.’ Compared to Morula, Thembi is a younger, more delicate female. She is a bit mischievous and demands more of Doug’s attention to be kept in line. Morula is the senior citizen of the trio and is extremely patient and gentle. When lunchtime rolls around, we eat under the shade of acacia trees while the elephants forage for roots and leaves about 50 feet away.
This evening we take a speedboat ride through the Delta. It is very hot, but the waters of the Delta cool us somewhat. Near sunset, the bayous become filled with birds of every type, color and size. Our boat captain pulls fish after fish from the water. The sunset is breathtaking.
Doug and Sandi Groves | Walking with an elephant | Stylish elephant | Baines Camp |
Paul's Africa Travelogue, Installment 2: Namibia and South Africa, will be available on-line later this summer. Look for it in ALA's Newsletter. Not already a subscriber? Sign up here >>
Travel + Leisure World's Best Award Winner
Austin-Lehman Adventures was recognized as the #1 Tour Operator and Safari Outfitter in the World by the readers of Travel + Leisure magazine. Read the Press Release >
National Geographic Adventure Best Adventure Travel Companies on Earth
ALA is added to the list of Best Adventure Travel Companies on Earth in 2009. Read the Press Release >
National Geographic Traveler 50 Tours of a Lifetime
The editors of National Geographic Traveler single out ALA's Montana Adventure as one of their top tours in 2007. See the Complete List >





























