Union's End
Union’s End is located 284 km from Two Rivers at the end of the predator rich Nossob Valley on the Botswana side of the Kgalagadi Transfrontier Park. The camp is nestled amongst tall Acacia trees and offers a spectacular view of the valley.
Union's End Introduction
Union’s End is located 284 km from Two Rivers at the end of the predator-rich Nossob Valley on the Botswana side of the Kgalagadi Transfrontier Park. It is a truly remote area
where Botswana, Namibia and South Africa meet. The camp is nestled in a malaria-free area amongst tall Acacia trees and offers a spectacular view of the valley. The landscape is typical of the Kgalagadi with wide, open plains dotted with distinctive camel thorn trees and low rise bushveld; pans of vegetation and scattered smaller salt pans. This is the area were the Nossob river crosses from Namibia into the Kgalagadi Transfrontier Park and winds for 200km through the south of the park creating the border between Botswana and South Africa. The waterhole at Union’s End attracts large numbers of game and birds providing excellent viewing from the camp.
- Luxury lodge accommodation option in the Kgalagadi.
- Union’s End is powered by solar panel with silent generators as a back-up.
- The camp has satellite phone for emergencies.
- Early and mid-morning nature walks in the camp’s private concession area.
Union's End Game Viewing and Activities
Mornings are started with a gentle awakening and freshly brewed coffee before guests are taken out on eventful gamedrives in the area that is renowed for its lion sightings. The dry riverbeds attract a premium number of predators and antelopes and provide excellent photographic opportunities. Sixty species of mammals have been recorded in the park; including, the majestic gemsbok, blue wildebeest, springbok, red hartebeest, eland and steenbok. Predators are the area’s big attraction and include the black maned Kalahari lion, leopard, cheetah, brown and spotted hyena, jackal and wildcat. The Nossob riverbed is rated one of the best places in Southern Africa to view raptors particularly during the summer months when large numbers of migratory eagles, kites and falcons move through the park. Of the 80 raptors recorded in Southern Africa, 52 have been recorded in the
Kgalagadi Transfrontier Park.