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Coastal RegionThis region extends from the northern border of Namibia at the Kunene River past Walvis Bay, covering an approximate one hundred kilometres wide stretch of desert and semi-desert terrain sandwiched between the Atlantic Ocean and the acacia savannahs of the northern and central Regions. The coastal region is one of the world's most captivating desert regions, and in the south lies a canyon second in magnificence only to the Grand Canyon itself. Swakopmund Quaint architecture from a bygone era adds to the time-out-of-place atmosphere of Swakopmund. When approached from the interior, domes, turrets and towers and towers on the skyline appear as a hazy desert mirage. Much of the distinct German colonial character has been preserved and today many of 5the town’s old buildings house shops, offices and other utility services. The well-known information service and the oldest tourism organisation in Namibia, Namib i, is now in private hands, with Almuth Styles, who worked for the organisation for nine years, as its new owner. Almuth will continue to manage the centre as a general information and marketing service for the Erongo Region and also provides a comprehensive reservations service. Walvis Bay A former enclave belonging to South Africa, Walvis Bay and the offshore islands were incorporated into the Republic of Namibia on 1 March, 1994. The town has a well-developed and efficient port, while its fishing harbour is the hub of Namibia’s lucrative fishing industry. Entry permits to visit the harbour can be obtained from the Police Offices at the Harbour Entrance on 13th Road. Organised visits are undertaken every two weeks, usually on Thursdays. The Civic Centre complex of the harbour town houses the Walvis Bay information office and consists of the Town Hall, Mayor’s Office and a Museum and Library, the latter with temporary membership facilities. A national monument, and the oldest building in Walvis Bay, is the Rhenish Mission Church, a timber structure which was built in Hamburg in 1880, then dismantled and shipped to Walvis Bay. Henties Bay In 1929 Major Hentie van der Merwe, a motor dealer in Kalkveld, discovered a fresh-water spring in an old delta of the Omaruru River while on a rhino hunt-expedition in the desert. He immediately fell in love with the place and for years it was his private haven to which he escaped every December. In 1951 the South West Africa Administration proclaimed erven in the riverbed that could be rented under the condition that no permanent structures be erected there. Shacks on stilts wee built from wood and hardboard. In those years there was only one shop, where bare necessities such as rice, sugar, flower, tinned foods, coffee and paraffin could be bought. Henties Bay has since become an increasingly popular proposition for holiday and retirement property investments, due to the relatively affordable property prices and its popularity as a holiday town. Its peaceful atmosphere and remote setting along the Skeleton Coast is one of its greatest assets. It is a place where the busy city dweller can find solace in the stillness of the night and the quiet rumble of the tides.
A good place to stay in Henties Bay is Byseewah Guest House, positioned only 200 metres from the beach. Luderitz Luderitz was initially referred to as Angra Pequena, meaning Little Bay, by the Portuguese, whose navigator Bartolomeu Dias erected a stone cross on Dias Point on 25 July, 1488. Heinrich Vogelsang, agent of the German merchant from Bremen, Adolf Luderitz, landed at Angra Pequena on 9 April, 1883, to establish a trading station. Following negotiations with the Khoekhoi chief, Joseph Fredericks from Bethanie, he purchased the land within an 8-km radius of Angra Pequena. In April 1884 this land became part of the protectorate of the German Empire, marking the beginning of German colonial control in Namibia, referred to then as Deutsch-Südwest-Afrika. |
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