Etosha National Park

Good to know
- Best time to go
- June to October
- Budget
- $$
- Accessibility
- limited
- Coordinates
- Open in maps
Etosha National Park is centred on an enormous salt pan — the Etosha Pan — that covers nearly 5,000 square kilometres and is visible from space. The park's network of waterholes, lit at night at some camps, allows prolonged observation of elephant, lion, leopard, cheetah, black and white rhinoceros, and the endemic black-faced impala. The stark white pan and floodlit waterhole photography at Okaukuejo are defining Etosha experiences.
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