- Home
- About Us
- Membership
- Go Birding
- Empowering People
- Education and Outreach
- Site Support Groups
- Nata Conservation Trust
- About Nata Conservation Trust
- Facilities
- Natural Resources
- Nqwaa Khobee Xeya Trust
- Cape Vultures Association
- Lake Ngami Conservation Trust
- Gumakutshaa Conservation Trust
- Lenao La Kwalabe Conservation Trust
- Gain-O Community Trust
- Nata Conservation Trust
- Local bird guides
- Makgadikgadi Ecosystem
- Chobe Ecosystem
- Lake Ngami
- Manyelanong Game Reserve
- Okavango Delta
- Volunteerism
- Conservation
- Media
- Publications
- Contact
Facilities offered at Nata Conservation Trust
Camping
There is a pleasant campsite close to the entrance gate. The individual sites are very spacious and shady and have their own braai stand, concrete table and benches, power points and electric light. Each is named after an indigenous tree which grows here – the names are in Setswana: Mowana – baobab, mokoba – knobthorn, motswiri – leadwood. There is a thatched ablution block with flush toilets and hot showers.
Bird Watching
Grasslands birds, such as ostrich, kori bustard, secretary bird and black korhaan may also be observed throughout the year. One local guide once referred to the korhaan as “the Makgadikgadi chopper” due to the noisy kraak sounds which it makes. But what makes the area so special are the large flocks of great and lesser flamingos which gather here when the pan is flooded during good rainfall years. However, when Sowa Pan is too deep, the birds tend to congregate on the smaller pans in the sanctuary where the water is much more shallow. Other water birds, such as spoonbills and herons, also call the sanctuary home. The sanctuary also occurs along the flight path of many Palaearctic and inter-African migrants such as steppe eagles and European and carmine bee-eaters.
Obserevation Hide
Braai
Canoeing
Picknicking