Four days inside the Namib-Naukluft National Park — the world's oldest desert (55+ million years), 50,000 km² of red dunes, dry valleys, and impossibly clear night skies. Sossusvlei is the iconic salt-pan in the dune sea, surrounded by 300m-tall dunes; the famous Deadvlei alongside is a white clay pan dotted with 900-year-old camelthorn skeletons. We fly into Sesriem airstrip (no driving the 5-hr-long-road), climb Big Daddy dune before dawn, walk Deadvlei when the light is harsh, and stargaze under a Bortle Class 1 sky. International Dark-Sky Reserve since 2012.
"Dawn at the top of Big Daddy, 325 metres above Deadvlei, the desert glowing orange — best 90-minute climb of my life."
"Bortle Class 1 sky is the night sky humans evolved under. We saw it from the lodge deck. Magellanic Clouds. Milky Way 3D. Lost words."
April–October (cool, dry, clear skies). November–March is hotter but still doable; summer afternoons can hit 40°C. Avoid Dec–Feb if you don't like heat.
Yes — most travelers chain WDH → Sesriem → Etosha fly-in. Combined 8-day from $4,690/pp.
Cross-border flight Sesriem → Maun is possible. Combined 9-day Sossus + Okavango from $6,890/pp.
90-min uphill on sand — moderate effort. We go at dawn (cool). Sliding down is easy and joyous.