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15 MIN LESEZEIT

The trade view

Is Brexit good or bad for African tourism?

We’re doomed!” said Private Frazer, the wild-eyed undertaker in Dad’s Army, in episode after episode. The Remain camp certainly caught his drift during the months leading up to the referendum vote in June. Dour, pessimistic warnings of job losses and companies fleeing abroad came so regularly that the Remain campaign became known as Project Fear.

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Travel Africa
October-December 16 (76)
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Andere Artikel in dieser Ausgabe


This is Africa
THIS IS AFRICA
The things we fall in love with
What’s online now
Winners’ gallery
At Travel Africa, we are proud to partner with the prestigious Nature’s Best Photography Africa competition, which celebrates the continent’s natural heritage and beauty. In this stunning online portfolio, we display the winning images
Editor’s Letter
Seize the day
“If we look straight and deep into a chimpanzee’s eyes,
Contributors
STORYTELLERS
OUR CONTRIBUTORS SHARE TALES FROM THEIR TRAVELS
Housekeeping
Featured book
AN AUTOBIOGRAPHY BY JONATHAN SCOTT Photographer, author and front man
Reader review
GREEN LAND, BROWN LAND, BLACK LAND: AN ENVIRONMENTAL HISTORY OF
Seven recent releases
This book is the memoir of distinguished elephant conservationist Sarah
Portfolio
Sands of time
This portfolio of captivating images explores the mystical ghost town of Kolmanskop, displaying it from every angle. This haunting place, half-buried in the Namib Desert, offers a singular glimpse into colonial times and demonstrates the supreme power that nature holds over such a volatile landscape
Indaba
Indaba
A place to share your experiences
Perspective
The map that tells a story
Characters
Explorer, writer and award-winning filmmaker Dereck Joubert tells Phil Clisby about his life, career and conservation efforts
Bucket List
The places we long to visit
Calendar
What's happening in Africa this quarter
6 of the Best of Africa
Trying to decide what to do on the world’s most exciting continent is a challenge. Safari Consultants founder Bill Adams tells us his favourite places
Letter from Africa: Peace on the plateau
On a weekend away from the Nigerian capital Abuja, Clementine Wallop finds serenity and strawberries in the north
Taste Africa in London
Emily Dehn picks the best places to eat out in the British capital
What’s cooking?
We ask Shayne Hlungwane of Pafuri Camp in South Africa’s Northern Kruger to give us an insight into life in the lodge kitchen
Foreign invasion
There was a time when investors in tourism wouldn’t touch South Africa with a bargepole. But now you can’t keep them out, says Graham Boynton
African by design
‘Maker’ Hugo Boys of BOSCO London tells us about his handcrafted lighting and his conservation efforts
Journal: Adventure with a purpose
Earlier this year Liz Dillarstone, Head of Community Action at Oundle School, and her colleague Nicola Guise embarked on a three-week trip from Kenya to South Africa to visit aid projects supported by the school
Journal: The cost question
First, let me tell you how much I enjoy Travel
Journal: Rebirth in the Cape
Wildlife once roamed South Africa’s Western Cape, but over the years, conflict with humans, loss of habitat and poaching have been detrimental to the region’s fauna. The Cape mountain lion was hunted to extinction, and elephant and rhino all fell victim to the hunter’s bullet some 250 years ago. But Searl Derman, owner of Aquila Private Game Reserve, two hours from Cape Town, has set about changing all this by reintroducing four of the Big Five species:
Journal: Photo school
“After years of trying, I finally got my dream shot
Glorious Guassa
Thirteen-year-old Nouria Saleban, our youngest contributor to date, tells us about geladas, wolves and touching the stars in the Ethiopian highlands
South Africa
Affordable SA
Jack Southan tells us why now is the best time to go to this diverse country, as well as revealing all the tips you need on how to travel without breaking the bank
Tanzania
A rough diamond
The remote Ruaha National Park, in central Tanzania, offers an outstanding opportunity to see carnivores, in a beautiful and diverse landscape of grasslands, mountains, rivers and swamps. Geoffrey Dean explores this vast wilderness
Zimbabwe
50 Shades of blue
It’s Africa’s largest inland body of water — and the world’s largest man-made reservoir. Lake Kariba is immense, scenically outstanding and incredibly rich in wildlife, and what better way to explore it than on a houseboat, waking to a different vista each morning, feeling the shift of the elements around you, drifting off to the rock of the boat and a hyena’s distant whoop?
Malawi
Exploring Middle-Earth
Not so dissimilar from JRR Tolkien’s magical world in The Hobbit, Malawi’s picturesque Liwonde National Park, with the Shire River snaking through it, bursts with life, says Sue Watt
Zambia
A watery wonderland
On an adventure in Zambia’s Bangweulu Wetlands, Sue Watt is blown away by the beauty and diverse wildlife of the country’s answer to the Okavango Delta
Uganda
A day in the life of a chimp
On the edge of the Rwenzoris lies a mystical land of volcanic lakes, majestic peaks and dense jungle. Laura Griffith-Jones sets off to western Uganda to see the chimpanzees of Kibale
Kenya
Keepers of the wild
Lauren Jarvis visits Kenya’s Nairobi National Park, the Masai Mara, Amboseli and Shimba Hills, and discovers the crucial role the nation’s people are playing in protecting its animals
Indian Ocean
Delicious Mauritius
The island’s two most popular drinks are rum and tea. Eugene Yiga learns how these classic brews are made and uses them to wash down the excellent local food
Botswana
Picture-Perfect
The wild, often-forgotten Northern Tuli Game Reserve, or Notugre, is a photographers’ heaven. Shutterbugs should go now
Madagascar
Looking for lemurs
The rarely visited south-eastern corner of Madagascar is a hidden utopia for wildlife lovers. With more of the world’s rarest species than you can shake a stick at, fascinating culture and a spectacular Indian Ocean coastline, there is much to discover
Wildlife
No lack of life
Animals don’t usually come to mind when you think of Ethiopia. But the country is home to an incredible diversity of species. Graeme Green explores the Simien and Bale mountains to find out more
Profile
Into the Okavango
Using the skills of the local Bayei people, Steve Boyes and his team embarked on an astonishing expedition from Angola to the Delta by mokoro. Here he tells Maria Airey about their experiences and achievements
Conservation
Conservation
Understanding and protecting our natural heritage
No more turtle soup
South Africa’s Maputaland is a place of incredible biodiversity. It’s also a great place to watch, awestruck, as these endangered marine reptiles brave the beaches to nest, says David Bristow
A world apart
Few people know that lemurs, endemic to Madagascar, are not monkeys. Rather, they’re a diverse primate group, united by their extraordinary sense of smell and agility in the treetops, says Mike Unwin
Know your lemurs
Lemur classification is contentious. The number of recognised species has shot up since the 1990s, a result both of new discoveries and advances in genetic taxonomy. Today the total stands at some 103, although this remains a work in progress. All lemurs belong to one of the following five families:
AWF: Making elephants matter
Uganda’s protected area authorities were deeply committed to conservation, but needed extra help in getting communities to care
Unexplored Africa
Time travel
St Helena Island has just completed its first airport. To experience it before the arrival of package tours, Justin Fox boarded one of the world’s last Royal Mail ships in Cape Town for a voyage to the land that time forgot
Safari
View with a room
Rhino Ridge Safari Lodge, Hluhluwe-iMfolozi Park, South Africa
Accommodation news
Newmark Hotels has added another African property to its portfolio
Thorntree
Jeremy and Emma Borg of Painted Wolf Wines have launched
Ask the trade
Your questions answered by those who really know
How safe is Sierra Leone?
Fourteen years after the official end of the civil war, our security expert Daniel Wheeler assesses the threat to tourists
The inside track on... The Gambia
The Gambia is the closest thing in sub-Saharan Africa to
Parting shot
Dawn king
Is there anything better than lying in your bed deep
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