Please note that we were travelling in May 2024, the southern hemisphere’s winter and absolute dry season. The road conditions change drastically during the rainy season.
We picked up our rental car in Kasane, Botswana and started our journey. But as luck will have it, we got a punctured tyred and had to drive to Kazungula first to have our tyre fixed. I’m so glad we decided to have the tyre checked out before pushing on..We were running late as it was and at first wanted to push onwards to our days destination at Thobolos Bush camp, thinking that maybe it’s not a slow puncture but that maybe the tyre was just handed to us with too little air.. Luckily we decided to take the time and have the tyre checked out by a pro. Turns out we had hit a nail somewhere in Kasane. Thanks so much to David and his team, they had us back on the road in now time.
But as we only had 1 hour of sunlight left to get from Kazungula to Thobolo Bush lodge (a ca. 110km drive through the national park), we knew it was going to be a tight fit.
1st learning to take home dear readers: ALWAYS add ca. 2 hours buffer to your planned daily route for unexpected time-eaters like flat tyres or epic views which you need to stop for and take 1000 pictures of.. (no matter how sure you are of your time schedule and how well planned your route seems).
So we left Kazungula much later than planned, but were very chilled because the road to Thobolo’s Bush Lodge was said to be almost all tarred except for the last 10km which are “good dirt road” to quote numerous (also local) sources.
Turns out the last 10km is soft red sand (maybe its harder during the rainy season?!) In our case the sun had already sunk so the sand was relatively cool – upside for us (the hotter the sand, the looser and softer it becomes and the more you have to focus not to get your car stuck).
Spoiler alert: we did not get stuck in the first 10 kilometers sand of our short trip through Botswana’s north-east. That would’ve been rather pathetic 😉 But we were honestly unpleasantly surprised about the state of the road and could imagine how quite a few people get themselves stuck there – and judging by the amusing signs along the road as well as branches and dug out dips in the tracks, quite a few people have gotten themselves stuck on those first or last (depending on where you started) couple of kilometers between Thobolo and Kachikau.