En parcourant le forum, j'ai vu et suivi sur T4A le parcours par la D3707 via Tokamas.
Il existe une autre piste en prenant à gauche (40 km après Sesfontein) qui va vers l'ouest (la mer) et ensuite longe le Skeleton Coast NP et la rivière Hoarusib pour arriver à Puros.
Quelqu'un a t-il fait cet itinéraire ? Peut-on le faire en mai (niveau des rivières) ? Quelles sont les difficultés ?
Effectivement la piste tracée par Houselander est très tentante 😛
Pour autant que je sache c'est déjà du off road, réservé aux personnes ayant déjà une expérience en 4x4 en autonomie.
Je ne suis pas certain que ce soit faisable en 1 journée.
Perso je l'ai faite depuis Puros et en deux jours pour rejoindre Opuwo, donc depuis Seisfontein, il faut mini trois jours, d'autant que les paysages sont superbes donc si on a le temps autant le prendre, oui il faut une bonne pratique du 4X4, il y a du sable, du cailloux et aussi de l'eau, donc bien observer le terrain, surtout si on est seul, comme dans mon cas.Vu les éléphants déserticoles par deux fois.
Il y a environ 450 kms pour faire Seisfontein, Opuwo.
Je suis allé deux fois dans cette région et y retournerai sans doute, car c'est vraiment trés beau.
Cordialement
Quand je parlais, avec réserve, de la faisabilité en 1 journée je ne pensais qu'à Sesfontein - Purros, naturellement pas la boucle entière, qui comme je l'ai dit me tente aussi beaucoup pour un futur voyage 😛
Merci pour ta réponse. OUI, c'est bien la piste que tu m'indiques sur ta carte.
Par contre, et suite à la lecture du carnet de Pierre77n, suivant l'état des rivières Hoarusib et Khumib, je suivrais la piste directe pour aller jusqu'à Orupembe. Ensuite, je reviens sur Opuwo par la D3707. J'envisage ce parcours début mai (entre le 5 et 12 mai), sans contrainte de temps car j'y serais avec mon 4x4.
Merci de ta réponse. J'ai lu ton carnet et ferais le retour comme toi entre Puros et Opuwo. Par contre l'aller + à l'ouest me tente bien.
J'ai un peu (pas mal ?) d'expérience en 4x4 même en solo (Maroc 3 mois, Ile sur le lac Baïkal) . Nous avons la chance d'avoir du temps et donc pas de contrainte de ce côté. Pour la piste de l'ouest, je compte 2 jours, ensuite repos à Puros et 2 jours pour revenir sur Opuwo mais cela n'est pas figé. La seule incertitude, à ce jour, est l'état des rivières début mai.
Sur VF, je n'ai qu'un carnet sur la Mongolie mais sans photos car je n'arrive pas à les insérer (j'ai vu un message 1 fois sur la manip et je ne l'ai pas retrouvé). Pas grave car avec notre voyage Namibie, Botswana et Afrique du Sud, j'ai de quoi m'occuper.
Quand je parlais, avec réserve, de la faisabilité en 1 journée je ne pensais qu'à Sesfontein - Purros, naturellement pas la boucle entière, qui comme je l'ai dit me tente aussi beaucoup pour un futur voyage 😛
Cordialement
JF
PS: ax-tu un carnet ou un blog de ce voyage ?
Bonsoir,
En fait je n'avais pas vu que tu avais un carnet sur la Namibie, je vais en prendre connaissance.
Bonne soirée.
Bonsoir Bernard,
Les amis avec qui nous avons traversé le Botswana en 2010 ont ensuite fait un parcours dans ce genre.
D'après leur expérience et la mienne plus au Nord, toutes ces pistes qui longent le Skeleton Coast NP sur sa bordure est ne sont pas les plus intéressantes, loin de là. C'est caillasse, caillasse et caillasse.
D'après les infos que je suis en train de rassembler pour notre prochain tour là-bas, depuis Seisfontein, il vaut mieux commencer par le lit de la Ganamub qui démarre un peu plus à l'Ouest sur la D3707 et qui comporte de belles formations rocheuses. Ensuite tu rejoins l'Hoanib que tu suis jusqu'à Amspoort où tu montes plein Nord comme tu l'imagines.
Tu rejoins le canyon de l'Hoarusib au Sud de Puros où les éléphants peuvent te refuser le passage s'ils sont mal lunés, c'est arrivé à mes copains en 2010. Après 2h à tergiverser, ils sont sortis du lit de la rivière de façon plutôt acrobatique pour rejoindre Puros. Il y a encore de l'eau dans ce coin l'été. En mai si les pluies on été tardives, le passage peut sans doute être problématique dans le canyon. Sans doute plus problématique là que les Hoarusib et Khumib plus au Nord.
Après Puros, s'il y a de l'eau dans les rivières, il y a des pistes parallèles en dehors des lits en rechange.
Après la bifurcation vers la Khumib, l'Hoarusib devient très difficile.
La D3707 entre Puros et Orupembe fait partie de ces pistes aux milieux des caillasses sur le plateau. Elle est souvent terriblement "corrugated".
Merci pour tes infos. Je profite encore de ton expérience pour avoir une précision par rapport à la carte T4A : la piste dont tu parles entre Puros et Orupembe le long de l'Hoanib est celle avec un double pointillé ou celle avec un trait noir ?
Merci d'avance
Bonne journée.
Bernard
Salut Bernard,
C'est plutôt l'Hoarusib dont tu parles, non ?
T4A n'est pas une bible absolue, les pistes bougent d'une année sur l'autre après les crues.
La piste en pointillés est celle qui suit le lit de la rivière. Du sable mais plutôt roulante.
Celle en noir est en dehors de la rivière et devrait donc être praticable même s'il reste de l'eau au fond. plus cassante et extrêmement lente.
Il y a peu de points de passage entre les deux, les berges sont abruptes.
En tout état de cause, il faudra traverser la rivière à un moment pour partir vers la Khumib à gauche.
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Hi there,
I’m planning a trip to Russia and Mongolia, starting from France.
Crossing the border at Poland/Belarus or Georgia/Russia—other borders seem either closed or complicated.
Tourist visas for 3 months with multiple entries.
Do you have any info on Russian companies that cover a 4x4 vehicle for 3 months, and what prices in rubles or euros you’ve paid?
Which bank did you use for expenses? (EuroMastercard and Visa cards no longer work.)
Regarding Russian SIM cards, a new system called "Gosuslugi" has been introduced. How long did it take you to get one, and what steps did you follow?
Hi,
we’re planning to visit a park again.
Could you point us toward the camps in Gonarezhou Park?
>We’re traveling completely self-sufficiently.
We love wildlife.
Thanks for any tips you can share!
JP
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Anne
Hi there,
I’m heading to Lesotho in a few days and I’m struggling to find info on the best route between Katse Dam and Sehlathebe National Park. There’s a fairly "direct" route from Thaba Tseka, but the roads seem rough, and we’re not exactly 4x4 pros. Anyone have any tips to share? Thanks!
Hi everyone,
We’re heading to Mozambique in October and are looking for either a 4x4 or 4x2 rental in Maputo, or a driver transfer option to reach:
- Ponta Do Ouro
- Tofo
- Vilankulos
The idea is to be self-sufficient for sightseeing and stops while still being able to access certain lodges or beaches that require a 4x2.
Do you have any contacts, addresses, or ideas to share?
Thanks in advance,
Hello,
We're hitting the road again in 2027 to discover new countries and cultures.
Could anyone give me some tips on driving from Ulaanbaatar to Lake Baikal and the route to take?
Thanks, and safe travels to those who are setting off!
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For these countries, our national insurance obviously doesn’t cover the vehicle, so we’ll need to get local insurance.
Will it be a problem if the vehicle is registered under person A and the national insurance is under person B? Both A and B will be in the vehicle, and both will be listed as drivers on the insurance.
When we get the local insurance, if we again list A and B as drivers, does the order matter? Could we get stuck at the border for this reason?
Hi,
For those who’ve driven on Iceland’s gravel roads in their own or a rented Duster, could you tell me what tires were fitted on the vehicle?
Were they All Terrain tires or more "standard" ones like all-season tires, for example?
Follow-up question: if they were "standard" tires, did that cause any issues on the gravel roads and rough terrain?
Thanks so much for any info you can share.
Best,
Marc
Hi there,
I'm planning a 4x4 road trip from Darwin to Broome with a rooftop tent in July 2026.
I'd like to know if I need to book overnight stops in advance or if I can just wing it and stop wherever I feel like it?
Some evenings, we'd like to stop and make use of campsite facilities (restaurant, shop, showers, toilets).
What do you recommend?
Do I need a permit?
My rough itinerary looks like this:
Darwin - Kakadu
Kakadu - Nitmiluk
Nitmiluk - Kununurra
Kununurra - Purnululu
Purnululu - El Questro
El Questro - Mt Elizabeth - Bell Gorge - Broome
I’m planning a trip to Iceland for next July-August, with a car and tent, and I’m wondering about booking campsites.
From your experience, is it necessary or even essential to book campsites in advance, or do you always manage to find a spot to pitch your tent?
We’ll also have the option to sleep in the car without pitching the tent.
Does that give us the flexibility to stay outside a campsite for a night here and there?
Hi,
I’m planning a road trip in the Middle Atlas, starting and ending in Fez and heading down to the south of Midelt, the Assoul Massif.... We’ll be traveling with two small 4x4s.
I’m looking for detailed maps of this region that include small roads and tracks.
Last year, we had a fantastic road trip in the Anti-Atlas and High Atlas using Erfahren maps, but unfortunately, they don’t cover the area we’re interested in this year.
Thanks for your suggestions!
Dominique
We’re planning a 13-day family road trip in Morocco this July, with six people in a Toyota Prado 4x4 (renting in Marrakech).
We’ll alternate between bivouacking and small hotels/riads depending on the stops.
Here’s the planned route (in this order):
Marrakech
→ Ouarzazate
→ Draa Valley
→ Zagora
→ Erg Chegaga
→ Lake Iriki
→ Foum Zguid
→ Tata
→ Tafraoute
→ Aït Mansour
→ Tiznit
→ Mirleft
→ Taroudant
→ Back to Marrakech
Our goal:
Atlas Mountains + desert + dunes + plateaus + valleys + a bit of coastline.
We’ll cover about 1,700 km in total.
We’re planning:
Bivouacking in the Chegaga/Iriki area
Flexible for the rest (booking the day before or same day)
Sand gear: traction plates, compressor, tow strap, roof rack
Questions:
Is the Zagora → Chegaga → Iriki → Foum Zguid crossing in July doable on our own (single vehicle, no guide)?
Are there any truly technical or risky sections between Chegaga and Iriki?
Does the overall itinerary seem manageable in 13 days without rushing?
Any suggestions for great bivouac spots or particularly interesting stops along this route?
The points on the route are provisional overnight stops. Some spots will include two nights in the same area.
We’re used to off-road driving, but not yet in the Moroccan desert.
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Good evening
I could use some advice 🙂
Our trip to Namibia is planned for June/July 2026.
We’re struggling a bit with timing and choosing activities for the part of the trip between Sesriem and Brandberg.
Day 1: Sesriem to Mirabib
Day 2: Mirabib to Swakopmund – visit Swakopmund, overnight in Swakopmund
Day 3: Sandwich Harbour – overnight in Swakopmund
Day 4: Kayaking with the seals + the living dunes – overnight in Swakopmund
Day 5: Moon Landscape, Henties Bay + Cape Cross – overnight at White Lady Lodge in Brandberg
Does this itinerary seem realistic to you? Is Cape Cross really worth the trip? If I had to choose between Cape Cross and kayaking with the seals, which would you recommend?
Thanks in advance for your help!
Hélix
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However, the rental agencies we’ve found prohibit driving on the tracks to Omalo (Tusheti) and/or Ushguli (Svaneti).
Do you know of any agencies in Tbilisi (local and reliable) that allow rented 4x4s to drive on these tracks? If so, which ones?
Hi everyone,
I’m starting to plan an itinerary for September 2027 focused on Zimbabwe and Zambia. I’d love to visit Gonarezhou National Park—I see there are two sectors: the Mwenezi Region in the south and the area around the Runde River in the north. Should I cover both sectors or just focus on the northern region?
For the parks along the Zambezi River, is it better to visit Mana Pools on the Zimbabwe side or Lower Zambezi on the Zambia side?
Thanks in advance for any tips on the parks in these two countries.
Have a great day, everyone.
We’re spending 18 days in New Zealand from 05/04 to 05/21, arriving in QUEENSTOWN and leaving from AUCKLAND.
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Thanks.
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Do you have any rental companies to recommend?
The traditional rentals like Hertz, Avis, etc. seem way overpriced compared to local companies—what do you think? Are they properly insured?
Has anyone here tried Geo Rent Car, Auto 4 Rental, or Sur Price?
Also, I’m looking for info on the condition of the Ushguli–Lentekhi track—is it passable?
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A well-prepped 4x4, a travel plan across Africa in stages since I’ve got kids to see regularly and work to earn a living.
I’m leaving in November for about a month with the goal of reaching Senegal via Mauritania. I’d love to share this trip with someone who wants to discover Mauritania and a bit of Senegal... and also experience life on board a 4x4 in the desert or bush, sometimes sleeping in the vehicle or in hostels/small hotels for comfort. I want to share this rediscovery because two’s better than one!
Just traveling, exploring, and living! !
I’m planning to explore Argentine and Chilean Patagonia for a month in December 2019.
I’m looking for a rental company (or several) that offers single-cab 4x4 pick-ups with a fitted camper cell for two people. I’m specifically after a vehicle with an indoor shower for extra comfort ;)
So, no vans—at least not from the rental companies I’ve seen so far.
While browsing the forum, I came across the Chilean rental company Holiday Rent. But do you have any recommendations for Argentine rentals?
Because, if I can’t return the vehicle in the same city as pickup, I’d prefer—and it’d likely be cheaper—to at least return it in the same country.
I’m traveling through Argentina and Chile (as well as Paraguay and Uruguay) with a 2019 Toyota Hilux Euro 6. Could anyone tell me if the local diesel is suitable for its engine, or if I need to take any special precautions (like adding an additive, for example) for these countries?
I’d also like to know if driving at high altitudes is possible, and up to what elevation—or if I should worry about the vehicle going into limp mode?
If that happens, what should I do?
Hi there,
Can you tell me if the road between Zagora and M'Gouna is easy or difficult for a 4x4? How much time and how many kilometers should I plan for? I’m traveling in May.
Thanks!
Hi there,
My trip to South Africa is starting to take shape.
However, I'm struggling to figure out the route through Kruger Park. I can't seem to find the information I need about getting around.
Coming from the south, I plan to arrive on Day 1 in the early afternoon at Malelane or Crocodile Bridge.
Do some shopping in Malelane (or Crocodile Bridge main area) and stay overnight outside the park.
Leave on Day 2 at 5 AM for the park. Explore the southern part of the park.
Stay overnight around Skukuza or Lower Sabie. (We don’t want to stay in one of the park’s big camps. We’re looking for a lodge around 200 €.
Head out on Day 3 for a self-drive safari, maybe as far as Orpen.
We’d like to stay in a private reserve on nights 4 and 5.
We’re not sure which one or how to get into a private reserve. Do we need to exit Kruger Park?
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I’m planning to leave Morocco for the summer but want to leave my 4x4 there to avoid exceeding the famous 6-month limit. I’d like to park it in one of the two Spanish enclaves (Ceuta or Melilla).
Does anyone know of people or companies that handle long-term parking (preferably secure) in either place?
Once the car is parked, what’s the best way to get back to France using public transport?
Is the nearest airport Tanger from Ceuta?...
How do I get there easily, etc. etc.
hello! I’d like to go to Kazakhstan and rent a fitted 4x4 locally so I can drive off-road trails and sleep inside the vehicle... could anyone share some local rental company addresses, please? Thanks! !
I'm about to rent a self-drive 4x4 in Mongolia. Has anyone heard of GOBI.RENT?
Otherwise, do you have any tips for checking this company since there's no info on their website (e.g., registration number on the RCS)?
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When I arrive in Divundu, I’d like to head straight to the Khwai area early in the morning to one of the campsites in the Khwai Development Trust. Is the drive doable with a good 4x4 in a day?
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We’d also like to do one or two boat excursions in the delta. Any suggestions for the best options and operators?
Thanks in advance for your tips and advice!
Best,
Patrick
Hi everyone,
I’m planning to explore the western part of Madagascar from May 1st to 5th, specifically to visit the Tsingy. I’ve heard different versions about the road conditions and access to the Tsingy during this time, so I’d love to hear from people who’ve actually made this trip during this time of year.
Have you traveled from Morondava → Tsingy between May 1st and 5th?
Was the journey doable and safe?
Did you have access to the Grands Tsingy, or just the Petits Tsingy?
Thanks so much for your feedback—it’ll really help me get a clearer picture! 😊
Also, if you have any recommendations for reliable and experienced driver-guides, I’d love to hear them.
Thanks again!