Tok Tokkie Trails
NamibRand Nature Reserve, Sossusvlei & South, Namibia
Reviewed by
Guy Hunter Watts
There are few travel experiences quite so remarkable as walking through the desert and sleeping beneath the stars. The desert is slow to reveal its secrets: travelling on foot you'll get to see a whole lot more of its hidden life. And the expertise of Trailhopper's guides coupled with the surreal beauty of the Horseshoe Wilderness Area and NamibRand Nature Reserve ensures this will be a journey that will stay with you for a lifetime.
Their most popular trail is a 3 day event for a maximum of 8 people. After meeting the other group members and trading suitcase for day-pack, you depart by jeep to the trailhead. A 2km walk through red dunes and desert scrub leads to Horseshoe Camp and a first night beneath the stars. This part of Namibia has some of the clearest night skies in the world and there's no better way to experience them than by sleeping out in the open. The following day, an easy 10km hike takes you over a high pass and down to Schafsberg camp, where you spend a second night flycamping in the dunes, before the final 7km hike back to base. It's wildly beautiful, inspirational and educational - read our review - and if it leaves you wanting more, their colleagues at Trailhopper offer more demanding 5-7 day hikes.
Their most popular trail is a 3 day event for a maximum of 8 people. After meeting the other group members and trading suitcase for day-pack, you depart by jeep to the trailhead. A 2km walk through red dunes and desert scrub leads to Horseshoe Camp and a first night beneath the stars. This part of Namibia has some of the clearest night skies in the world and there's no better way to experience them than by sleeping out in the open. The following day, an easy 10km hike takes you over a high pass and down to Schafsberg camp, where you spend a second night flycamping in the dunes, before the final 7km hike back to base. It's wildly beautiful, inspirational and educational - read our review - and if it leaves you wanting more, their colleagues at Trailhopper offer more demanding 5-7 day hikes.
Why we chose this partner
- The Trailhopper team have finely tuned their trails through the Namib over 20 years
- Owners Kerstin Klein and Thomas Soutschka are passionate hikers. Both have guided tours in southern Africa, so they have that great mix of in-depth knowlege of the region plus professional organisational skills
- They only employ qualified and experienced multilingual guides who have proved their ability to guide safely in difficult terrain
- Their guides enhance your experience with information and anecdotes that you won’t find in a book
- In their small groups (maximum 8 hikers) you can savour Namibia’s empty landscapes
- If managed well, hiking is a very eco-friendly and non-invasive way of travelling. Keeping their footprint in Namibia’s unspoilt landscapes as small as possible is of utmost importance to the Trailhopper team
Please be aware
- For the duration of the trail, you become part of a group and so you have to be sociable
- Long-drop toilets, bucket showers and simple bed rolls won't appeal to everyone (and they are absent altogether on the more challenging trails), but no creature comfort can equate to the joy of sleeping beneath the stars
- You have to carry your own personal gear - typically a 5kg daypack for water, lunch, sunlotion - and on the 5-day trip, that rises to 15kg, plus 7 to 9 hours of walking per day
Best time to go
From March through to mid June is a great time to be in the desert with daytime temperatures around 20-25ºC (but can go up to 30-35ºC), cooler in the shade and night temperatures can fall to 5-10ºC, with a very very low probability of rain.
If you come between June and August you should be prepared for similar daytime temperatures, but a big fall in night temperatures which drop as low as minus 5ºC (though you can still sleep snugly beneath the stars in your bed roll).
September to November temperatures are around 20-30ºC during the day and nights are 5-15ºC but can go down to 0º and occasionally below, with a possibility of rain. The milder nights make the al fresco dining and washing arrangements that much more enjoyable.
Tok Tokkie shuts up shop from early December through to mid February, when the soaring temperatures of the southern hemisphere's high summer make walking impractical.
If you come between June and August you should be prepared for similar daytime temperatures, but a big fall in night temperatures which drop as low as minus 5ºC (though you can still sleep snugly beneath the stars in your bed roll).
September to November temperatures are around 20-30ºC during the day and nights are 5-15ºC but can go down to 0º and occasionally below, with a possibility of rain. The milder nights make the al fresco dining and washing arrangements that much more enjoyable.
Tok Tokkie shuts up shop from early December through to mid February, when the soaring temperatures of the southern hemisphere's high summer make walking impractical.
Our top tips
The 3-day trip is OK for any reasonably fit person - you have a total of 22km to cover over 3 days - but remember that walking in the sand is surprisingly tiring. The 5-day trek is only for those used to hiking long distances on a fairly regular basis.
Tok Tokkie no longer supply plastic water bottles but you can buy stainless steel bottles at reception, or bring your own (it is advised that you bring 1x2litre bottles).
Tok Tokkie no longer supply plastic water bottles but you can buy stainless steel bottles at reception, or bring your own (it is advised that you bring 1x2litre bottles).