Lijiang, Yunnan, China.
I'm in the midst of conducting my
Hidden China II adventure when an extraordinary opportunity has suddenly materialized.
What you
see above is an actual unretouched photograph, not a painting.
It was taken by National Geographic photographer Franz Lanting at sunrise at the base of the world's biggest sand dune in the world's oldest desert in Africa's most spectacularly unknown country:
Namibia.
Namibia is as big as Texas and Oklahoma together, yet only has 2 million people.
The former German colony of Southwest Africa, it gained independence in 1990.
While it is one of Africa's cleanest, safest, and best-run countries, it only now is beginning to be discovered by savvy international travelers as
the place to have an African Safari like nowhere else.
Even if you have been to the Serengeti of Tanzania, the Masai Mara of Kenya, or the Okavango of Botswana, Namibia's unique beauty, wildlife, and tribes will astound you.
The opportunity is this:
I have been able to arrange a safari to Namibia's most spectacular places and tribes - The Namib Desert, the Skeleton Coast, the Painted Himba Nomads, the Etosha Pan with such a profusion of wildlife it's known as Africa's Last Eden - at a stunningly low cost for a luxury private air safari.
What's more, the Hidden Africa Safari is at the best time of year for game viewing, after the rainy season with the grass drying up and the wildlife congregating at the waterholes.
And we can do it all in little more than one week, departing the US on Friday May 23 and arriving back in the US on Sunday June 01.
The catch is that I only have until March 15, then the opportunity goes away.
And I can only take 8 TTPers. I can't post more than a few photos with the connection I have here in China.
Here's a brief summary.
Read more...