There is at least one of the world’s “malls” which Paris Hilton has never shopped.
It is surely safe to assume that no visiting North American tourist will ever feel compelled to enter this mall for a dose of “retail therapy”…
2 CommentsNatural splendour, real musics, wines, wordpower
There is at least one of the world’s “malls” which Paris Hilton has never shopped.
It is surely safe to assume that no visiting North American tourist will ever feel compelled to enter this mall for a dose of “retail therapy”…
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“Retail therapy” may be a flawed, hollow notion, but it has been bought by billions.
It would appear, however, that this kind of message is a little harder to sell to northern Namibians than to Southern Californians.
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Well inland in northern Namibia, fish shops are “astonishingly” common.
As with shebeens, most of them greatly resemble most of them.
This one’s sign, however, proudly denies this reality.
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You like to mix “business” and “pleasure”?
In northern Namibia this is easily achieved.
Many shebeens are multi-purpose establishments.
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The photo (copyright Doug Spencer, taken on 08 November 2022) shows a typical northern Namibian shebeen.
Signage in northern Namibia often provides visitors with delight…and/or surprise, confusion, bewilderment…
You’ll find no superb photography in this single-image series; almost everything in it was shot “on the fly”, through the window of “our” bus, as it zoomed past one one of many thousands of owner-operated businesses.
All were small, in reality.
However, their signs often “talked big”…
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Giraffes harvest most of the water they need from the leaves they eat, so they do not need to drink every day.
However, they do need to drink.
On that occasion, the current world’s longest necks are “not long enough”.
As every lion and crocodile knows, the only occasion when it is a good idea to “move in for the kill” on an adult giraffe is when that giraffe is drinking.
Every giraffe is acutely conscious that his or her “killer kick” defence system is entirely disabled whenever s/he has to splay his/her legs to enable his/her neck to reach down far enough to make drinking possible.
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Five rhinoceros species (within which are eleven subspecies) still walk “our” planet’s surface.
All are in trouble; their total number is lower than ever before in human history, and they now walk “freely” only within a tiny portion of their former range, in discrete populations in various National Parks and “Reserves”.
Diceros bicornis, commonly known as the “black” rhino, is the smaller, now rarer – and allegedly, more ornery – of the two African species.
It and Ceratotherium simum – the so-called “white” rhino – are in fact both grey.
The fifth night of November 2022 was a good one for rhino-watchers at the Okaukuejo waterhole; the rhinos’ demeanour was not at all ornery, and they broke only wind – loudly.
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Etosha National Park is one of Africa’s largest and finest national parks.
Okaukuejo is the southernmost of its six major “camps”, and its main administrative centre.
By day and by night, Okaukeujo’s waterhole offers visitors oft-superb, comfortable, relaxed and close wildlife viewing.
As this three part series illustrates, the night of 05 November 2022 was very rewarding.
One CommentThis post’s musical bonus really is astounding, I think.
November 4 2022, at Okonjima, was one of the most rewarding days of our lives.
The immediately-preceding post’s leopard encounter was its most electrifying moment, but we also saw another leopard, giraffes galore, cheetahs, many other animals, and some beautiful country.
Circa 7 pm, we adjourned to a hilltop, to enjoy “sundowners”…and/or the actual sundown.
I took the featured photo at 7.06 pm.
The other images, below, are in chronological order.
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This post is the “morning after” sequel to the one that showed Lila stashing her “prize”, shortly after she had killed a Red Hartebeest calf, late in the afternoon of 03 November 2022.
I took the featured image, above, at 7.55 am on 04 November 2022, when we returned to the relevant tree.
As you can see, Lila’s kill was quasi-intact, still “safe” in the tree’s canopy.
“When will Lila return to it?”, we wondered.
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