Hiking Fish River Canyon, Namibia

Posted on 26 October 2024

There’s a legend that attributes Namibia’s Fish River Canyon to a giant snake that terrorised the people and livestock of the area. So hunters set upon it with spears and dogs. Writhing in its death throes, the giant serpent tore winding furrows into the parched plateau.

If you consider that southern Namibia is one of the driest regions on Earth, and that the canyon is the second-deepest in the world (after Colorado’s Grand Canyon), it’s hard to fathom how an intermittent river had the necessary erosive power (fracturing and faulting, the geologists will say) to carve this giant scar into the gneiss bedrock – so maybe it was the snake.

The steep descent into the canyon and the boulder hopping on day two are the toughest parts of the five-day hike. Image credit: Teagan Cunniffe

Intimidating from above? You bet. It’s roughly 160 kilometres long, up to 27 kilometres wide in places and more than 500 metres deep – this latter fact uppermost in our minds on the steep descent into the canyon at the start of the 85-kilometre hiking trail.

Other than peering over the edge from view sites, hiking is the only way to experience the immensity of the canyon. It’s five days of heat, dust, boulder-hopping and trudging through thick sand in an ancient landscape of angular valleys, sheer cliffs, sandstone and silence. And once in the canyon there are only two escape routes. But it’s probably the finest hike I’ve ever done, and the first beer and burger at Ai-Ais Resort was my most memorable devoured to date.

ALSO READ: Women-only African adventure getaways

 




yoast-primary - 1015463
tcat - Namibia
tcat_slug - namibia
tcat2 - Namibia
tcat2_slug - namibia
tcat_final -