Rovos Rail: African Trilogy
A rail journey through Southern Africa
• Kruger National Park • Swaziland • Fish River Canyon • Namib Desert • Etosha National Park
PRICE FROM | DURATION | |
---|---|---|
AUD
$20,365
|
Days
16
|
Nights
15
|
PRICE FROM | DURATION | |
---|---|---|
AUD
$20,365
|
Days
16
|
Nights
15
|
Introduction
Rovos Rail provides a high quality, yet affordable, rail safari experience for visitors to Southern Africa.
This exciting panoramic 15 day sojourn winds its way across Southern Africa from the Indian Ocean in the east to the Atlantic coast in the west.
Starting in Pretoria, descend the escarpment to world-famous Kruger National Park for a game drive. Explore the Kingdom of eSwatini followed by a game drive in Hluhluwe wildlife reserve, and tour Durban and its botanical gardens. Continue through the semi-desert region of the Karoo to Upington and Fish River Canyon. Cross the untamed beauty of the Kalahari Desert to the see the Quiver trees at Garas Park before taking a short flight to Sossusvlei for a lodge stay. Visit Namibia’s lively capital, Windhoek, and a cheetah conservation project before overnighting in game-rich Etosha National Park. Leave the stillness of the Namib Desert for the wild Atlantic coast and journeys end, Walvis Bay.
The Train: Each train has accommodation carriages, dining cars, a lounge car, small gift shop, smoking lounge and observation car with open-air balcony. The service is discreet and friendly with an enthusiastic team of chefs ensuring guests’ every need is catered for.
The two types of cabins are refined and spacious offering passengers privacy and comfort with double or twin beds and fittings and facilities that are of the highest standard. There is adequate storage and all have en-suite bathrooms with shower, toilet and basin, safes, air-conditioning, linen and amenities and are serviced daily.
Itinerary
Day 1 : Pretoria
Depart from Rovos Rail Station, Pretoria. Guests may freshen up in their cabin before joining fellow travellers in the lounge car or observation car. Lunch is served in the dining cars with tea in the lounge and observation cars as the train descends the spectacular Drakensberg Mountain escarpment. Dinner is served in the dining cars en route to eMalahleni.
Day 2 : At leisure on board
Enjoy onboard meals and meeting your travelling companions as the rolling hills of eMakhazeni, eNtokozweni and Dullstroom pass by your window. The train descends the spectacular Drakensberg Mountain escarpment as tea is served. Continue to Malelane as dinner is served.
Day 3 : Kruger National Park
Breakfast is served in the dining cars until departure followed by a game drive in the Kruger National Park with tea and lunch. The famous Kruger Park has 2-million hectares of unrivalled diversity of life forms. It is a world leader in advanced environmental management techniques and home to an impressive number of species, eg. 336 species of trees, 49 species of fish, 34 species of amphibians, 114 species of reptiles, 507 species of birds and 147 species of mammals including the Big Five.
Day 4 : Eswatini
After breakfast border formalities are completed with eSwatini before disembarking at Mpaka. The tiny Kingdom of eSwatini (Swaziland) covers only 17,000 square km, most of which is mountainous. For such a small country, it is surprising that it sustains two capital cities: Mbabane is the administrative capital and Lobamba is the royal and legislative capital. In April l2018, Swaziland changed its name to the Kingdom of eSwatini (meaning “place of the Swazi”) and is an absolute monarchy. It is landlocked and borders South Africa and Mozambique.
Visit Swazi Candles where guests are invited to interact with artisans as they make a variety of candles. Woodcarvings, colourful textiles and superb basketwork are also on display. Visit the Mantenga Cultural Village and enjoy lunch at Mantenga Lodge, nestled in the mountains overlooking ‘Execution Rock’. The village is a living museum of old traditions that represents a classic Swazi lifestyle during the 1850s.
Once back onboard the train tea is served in the lounge and observation cars with dinner served in the dining cars.
Day 5 : Hluhluwe-Imfolozi Park
Continental breakfast is served in the dining cars before transferring to Hluhluwe-Imfolozi Park for a game drive. Return to the train for lunch before traveling towards Empangeni. Dinner is served in the dining cars en route to Durban.
Day 6 : Durban
Breakfast is served before enjoying a tour of Durban and the botanical gardens. Durban is the third largest city in South Africa and enjoys great importance due to its industry and very large port. Drive along the ‘Golden Mile’ promenade where numerous hotels and restaurants are situated. Transfer to Umhlanga for lunch before returning to the train. Traverse the Valley of a Thousand Hills towards Ladysmith as tea is served in the lounge and observation cars.
Day 7 : At leisure onboard
Traverse the Drakensberg Mountains, first named by the Voortrekkers who thought the unbroken chain of heavily weathered peaks reminded them of the spines on a dragon’s back, hence the name ‘Dragon Mountain’ or Drakensberg in Afrikaans. Pass some of the highest peaks at 3450m.
Day 8 : Kimberley
Breakfast is served in the dining cars until departure for Kimberley’s Diamond Mine Museum and the Big Hole. Capital of the Northern Cape, Kimberly is well known for the discovery of diamonds that led to its establishment in 1871. Lunch is served in the dining cars as you travel through the Karoo, a vast semi-desert region that was once an enormous inland sea. Over millions of years, volcanic matter was ground down an deposited as silt upon the seabed to form what geologists call the Karoo system. Tea is served in the lounge car and observation car at the front of the train with dinner served in the dining cars.
Day 9 : Upington
Breakfast is served in the dining car as the train travels to Upington on the Orange River, the longest river in South Africa. Attorney General of the Cape, Sir Thomas Upington was principally responsible for liquidating the business activities of the all the Orange River pirates and capturing their leader, Klass Lucas. When the desperadoes were finally chased away in 1884, the town was founded on the banks of the Orange River and name in his honour. Dinner is served in the dining cars enroute to Holoog. Activities today will be confirmed on the day.
Day 10 : Fish River Canyon & Garas Park
Breakfast is served in the dining cars before boarding vehicles for the one-hour drive to the Fish River Canyon. The Fish River rises in the centre of the country before flowing south into the Orange River on Namibia’s border with South Africa. It has formed the great Fish River Canyon – the largest canyon in the southern hemisphere and probably only second to Arizona’s Grand Canyon in terms of size. The vast rocky landscape breaks up into a series of spectacular cliffs. Its size is impressive: 161km long, up to 27km wide and almost 550m at its deepest. Lunch is served in the dining cars as the train travel along the southern reaches of the Kalahari Basin. Visits Garas Park (Quiver Trees), home to roughly 300 specimens of the Aloe dichotomy. The prehistoric trees have forked branches that reach up to 5m making for great photographic opportunities. Dinner is served in the dining cars as the train travel north through the Kalahari to Windhoek.
Day 11 : Sossusvlei
Transfer to the airstrip after breakfast and depart in a light aircraft for a one-hour flight to Sossusvlei. The dunes of the Namib Desert were created by sand carried by the wine from the coast of Namibia. The sand here is over five million years old and is red in colour due to its rion-oxide content. As the light changes during the day so does the appearance of the dunes’ characteristic colour allowing for interesting photographs at any time. The wind in the Sossusvlei area blows from all directions causing the sand to form a star shape with multiple arms, hence the name “star dunes”. After check-in enjoy lunch at the lodge followed by an afternoon desert drive and bush dinner after sunset. Overnight at the lodge (please pack a small overnight bag for the stay in Sossusvlei. Tog bags have been placed in your cabin for your convenience).
Day 12 : Sossusvlei & Windhoek
An early wake up call with tea and coffee before enjoying a desert drive with breakfast in the vlei. Return to the lodge to use the facilities, check-out and transfer to the airstrip for one-hour flight on light aircraft to Windhoek. Situated in Namibia’s central highlands, Windhoek is an attractive city surrounded by clusters of hills and the impressive Auas and Eros Mountains. Visit the Trans-Namib Transport Museum which showcases Namibian transport history, particularly that of the railway. After lunch, board the train and depart for Otjiwarongo.
Day 13 : Cheetah Conservation Project
This afternoon visit a cheetah conservation project in Otjiwarongo. Founded in Namibia in 1990, the Cheetah Conservation Fund (CCF) is dedicated to saving the cheetah in the wild. Dinner is served in the dining cars en route to Otavi.
Day 14 : Etosha National Park
Transfer (60 min) to your lodge in Etosha National Park for an overnight stay. Check-in and enjoy lunch followed by a game drive in Etosha National Park which offers great wildlife viewing. It gets its name from the Etosha Pan – a large salt pan forming part of the Kalahari Basin. Etosha means ‘Great White Place’. Dinner and overnight at the lodge. (Please pack a small overnight bag for the stay in Etosha).
Day 15 : Etosha National Park
An early wake-up call with tea and coffee before enjoying a game drive in Etosha National Park. Return to the lodge for breakfast and check-out before transferring to the train. Lunch is served in the dining car followed by tea in the lounge and observation cars. Dinner is served as the train travels southwest to wards the Atlantic Ocean.
Day 16 : Walvis Bay
Breakfast is served in the dining cars as the train traverses the Namib Desert towards Walvis Bay. The observation car will be at the front of the train for the last stretch – a different aspect our rail enthusiasts enjoy. The Namib Desert stretches for more than 2000km along the Atlantic Coasts of Angola, Namibia and South Africa. The name is of Khoekhoegowab origin and means vast place. having endured arid or semi-arid conditions for roughly 55-80 millions years, the Namib may be the oldest desert in the world. the geology consists of sand seas near the coast while gravel plans and scattered mountain outcrops occur further inland. Arrive at journeys end at Walvis Bay Station.
Need Help?
Pricing
Pricing (per person), AUD
TYPE |
TWIN from |
SINGLE from |
EXTRA from |
---|---|---|---|
2025 | |||
1 Jan – 31 Dec | |||
Pullman |
AU$20,365 |
AU$29,095 |
|
Deluxe |
AU$26,640 |
AU$40,000 |
|
2026 | |||
1 Jan – 31 Dec | |||
Pullman |
AU$23,955 |
AU$31,550 |
|
Deluxe |
AU$32,275 |
AU$44,610 |
Departs
2025 | 2026 |
5 Feb | 4 Feb |
1 Oct | 9 Oct |
Included
- Luxury rail journey
- 15 nights’ accommodation onboard in your suite of choice
- All meals (B, L, D) during your trip
- Afternoon tea onboard most days
- All beverages onboard unless otherwise mentioned
- Water, coffee/tea, and breakfast juices at your accommodations off-train
- Historian onboard
- Shared fixed-wing flights to/from Sossusvlei
- Shared guided excursions as per the itinerary
- Entrance fees as per the itinerary
- Room service and limited laundry onboard
Not Included
- International sparkling wine onboard
- All other off-train beverages
- Gratuities
Gratuity
Recommended USD $10 to $20 per person per night
Important Notes
- Pricing varies due to fluctuations in exchange rates; please contact us for current pricing
- Please enquire about pricing for children (3 to 9 years)
- The minimum age requirement is 3 years
- No child-minding services or activities are available onboard
- Long journeys are not recommended for children 12 and under
- Included excursions are subject to change based on the achieved train schedule
- Formal attire is required at dinner most evenings
Please refer to World Journeys terms & conditions
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