Activities
Thamalakane enjoys a wonderful location which lends itself to relaxation around the pool and on your private patios enjoying the plentiful birds and spectacular sunsets.
Venturing further a-field Thamalakane is an easy 20 minute drive from Maun, with it’s shopping centres and wonderful curio shops as well as the airport.
Moremi Game Reserve is a hour and half drive away offering spectacular game viewing opportunities.
The Delta is on our doorstep – a 45 minute drive will see one at the Boro Poler station where you are able to participate in a traditional Mokoro trip.
We have sight-seeing and safari day-trip packages available with pick up and drop off at the Lodge.
Below are some of the activities on offer: |
| Moremi Day Trip
Travelling time to the Moremi: 1hour 30 minutes
Trips are undertaken in 4×4 game viewing vehicles.
Guests are picked up at the lodge and enjoy a full day in the Moremi Game Reserve.
Meals and soft drinks are included in this day trip. |
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| Lake Ngami Bird Watching
Traveling time to Lake Ngami: 1 hour
Trips are undertaken in 4×4 game viewing vehicles.
Meals and soft drinks are included in this day trip. |
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| Mokoro Trip
Boro Poler Trust – 40 minutes drive. Guests are picked up at the lodge and transferred to Boro Poler station where they embark on a guided walk and a Mokoro adventure. Meals and soft drinks are included in this day trip.
A Mekoro trip will give guests the opportunity to learn more about the Delta, the ecosystem and its functioning – how the delta works, why it floods, the importance of flooding to the ecosystem, the effect of this on all animal life – both disadvantages and advantages, the effect it has on plant life, the various species that need the flood to survive, the special adaptations of certain plants to increased water levels each year, the guide will show you the actual plant, pull it out and explain the mechanisms for survival etc… Also learn more about the cultural aspect and way of life of the tribes, how they survived in this watery wilderness. Hear some fascinating cultural stories on why it floods, the determination of settlements because of floods and the impact on social life. And of course there are the birds, a truly amazing variety of birds are to be seen, on a mokoro you are placed right there in their habitat, you witness nest making, feeding young, mating behaviour and foraging. |


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| Maun
Traveling time to Maun: 15 minutes
Almost all tourists entering the Okavango do so through Maun, situated at the gateway to the Delta and Moremi Game Reserve. Maun is the tourism capital of Botswana and the administrative centre of Ngamiland. It is also the headquarters of countless safari and air-charter operations whose signs and offices dot almost every intersection, particularly towards the airport.
Since the town’s establishment in 1915 as the tribal capital of the Batawana people, Maun has had a rough and ready reputation as a hard-living ‘Wild West’ town servicing the local cattle ranching and hunting operations. But with the growth of the tourism industry and the completion of the tar road from Nata in the early 1990s, Maun has developed rapidly, losing much of its old frontier town character. It is now home to over 30,000 people.
Regular supplies of almost everything can be bought in Maun, and the town boasts several good shopping centers, filling stations, as well as car and four-wheel-drive vehicle hire. The Maun Airport, which was officially opened in 1996 after extensive renovations, is – if one counts the light aircraft charters to the various Delta camps – one of the busiest airports in Southern Africa. |
Maun History
The name Maun is derived from the San word “maung”, which means “the place of short reeds”. The village began in 1915 as the capital for the Tawana people. The capital was moved from Toteng after glorious victory over Ndebele King Lobengula.
This metropolis is now spread out along the wide banks of the timeless Thamalakane River where red lechwe can still be seen grazing next to local donkeys, goats and cattle.
Areas of interest in and around Maun include the small Maun Game Reserve which covers just 8km2 of woodland. It follows the Thamalakane riverbank upstream from the Best Western Riley’s Hotel and includes the original “Place of Reeds” from which the Town takes its name. The reserve is open every day and is traversed by numerous walking Trails. Various cultural tours can be arranged, where one would have the opportunity of learning more about the customs of the locals. |
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