Plan Your Visit
Etosha Game Drive Expectations by Season
Etosha Game Drive Expectations by Season
Understanding what a realistic game drive looks like in each season prevents disappointment and helps you plan with accurate expectations. This guide tells you honestly what to expect from your daily drives in every period of the year.
Dry Season: June–October
What a Typical Morning Drive Looks Like
- 06:00 — Leave camp; within 15 minutes the first animals appear on the road or nearby
- First productive waterhole: typically 2–5 species present, including large mammals
- Elephant likely at most major waterholes throughout the morning
- Zebra, wildebeest, springbok in groups of 20–200+ at busy waterholes
- Predator sighting: lion — roughly 30–50% chance per morning drive in peak dry season
- By 09:30: animals retreating to shade; waterhole activity slows
What a Typical Afternoon Drive Looks Like
- 14:30–15:00 — Leave camp; animals emerging from shade
- Pre-sunset waterhole session (16:00–17:30): best lighting of day; herds arriving
- Lion movements increase; look for predators trailing zebra/wildebeest herds
- Return by gate closing — often the most productive 2 hours of the day
Realistic Sightings Count (3-Night Dry Season Visit)
- Elephant: Certain (daily)
- Giraffe: Very likely (most days)
- Zebra: Certain (daily)
- Springbok, oryx: Certain (daily)
- Black rhino: Likely (1–2 nights at Okaukuejo waterhole)
- Lion: Good chance (50–70% over 3-night trip)
- Cheetah: Possible (20–40%)
- Leopard: Unlikely but possible (5–15%)
Green Season: November–April
What a Typical Morning Drive Looks Like
- Animals present but more spread out — they can drink anywhere
- Waterholes still visited but less predictably
- More driving required to find the same density of animals as dry season
- Calving (Jan–Feb): small zebra and wildebeest foals visible; predators alert
- Flamingo at Fischer’s Pan (Nov–Mar): visible from 7 km in the first light
- Birding outstanding: 50+ species possible in a 3-hour morning drive
Realistic Sightings (3-Night Green Season Visit)
- Elephant: Very likely
- Giraffe, zebra, springbok, oryx: Likely (most days)
- Black rhino: Possible at Okaukuejo waterhole (still visited)
- Lion: Possible but harder to find (30–40%)
- Flamingo: Likely if pan is flooded (Nov–Mar)
- Cheetah: Possible but harder to spot in tall grass
Month-by-Month Expectations
| Month | Sightings Quality | Special Conditions |
|---|---|---|
| June | Very good | Cool mornings; waterholes productive |
| July | Excellent | Peak season; best all-round |
| August | Excellent | Warming; high predator activity |
| September | Outstanding | Most animals per waterhole; hottest mornings |
| October | Outstanding | 40°C heat; plan all activity dawn/dusk |
| November | Very good (early); Good (late) | First storms arrive mid-month |
| Dec–Feb | Good | Green; calving; flamingo; dispersed game |
| March–April | Good to Very good | Transitional; improving visibility |
| May | Very good | Dry season establishing; good value |
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