Temperatures
I have been monitoring the weather in both Johannesburg and
Namibia for the last two months.
screenshot from weather.com
First, the Southern Hemisphere is the opposite climate of the Northern hemisphere. When it’s summer here it‘s winter there. But one also must factor in the relationship to the equator. Portland, Maine is 43’latitude and Johannesburg is 26’latitude, thus Southern Africa is closer to the equator.
First, the Southern Hemisphere is the opposite climate of the Northern hemisphere. When it’s summer here it‘s winter there. But one also must factor in the relationship to the equator. Portland, Maine is 43’latitude and Johannesburg is 26’latitude, thus Southern Africa is closer to the equator.
copyright Univ of CA http://cse.ssl.berkeley.edu/segwayed/lessons/search_ice_snow/ski.2b1Map.html
Winter in Southern Africa means the dry season. While in Zimbabwe, it only “misted”
one day in six weeks. So, I am expecting
warm, sunny days with daytime highs of 75 degrees in South Africa and 85 degrees
in Namibia. It sounds lovely. It’s the nights I am concerned about, as we will
be tenting for over half of our trip and the nighttime temperatures are in the
30-40s. I nearly froze to death in 1996 in a tent at Great Zimbabwe and again
on an early morning game drive in Hwange National Park in the back of an open
safari vehicle. The nights will be cold!
Cultural Expectations
Africans dress well. In the cities and small towns, women
wear dresses and men are in suits or slacks and dress shirts. The best way to
stand out as a tourist is wear your safari attire in town.
On Safari
The winter is the best time for game viewing because the dry
season means little rain. This brings the animals to the water holes also known
as a pan. There is
a reason people dress in khaki on safari, you want to blend in so you don’t
startle the animals. Obviously red and orange are eye catching, but even white
can upset the animals. Since our visit will be during the dry season, most of
Southern African foliage is light brown and so we want to be light brown also,
to blend in.
Our Plan
We are packing mostly long pants and long sleeve shirts with
only a few pairs of shorts for Namibia, and we are planning to dress in layers
to accommodate the steep changes in temperature each day. The duffel bag will
be filled with socks, sweatpants and a sweat shirt for cold nights in the tent.
I'm thinking of bring some long skirts for sightseeing in Johannesburg.
Pictures! We will need pictures! Even of your suitcases! ;-) ~ Jessica
ReplyDeleteInteresting note on "why khaki" - I never thought about that before. Makes total sense though!
ReplyDelete