|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
You Are
Here: |
|
Wednesday, December 21, 2005 - Web posted at 7:05:51 GMT Summer time, and the coast is buzzing * ELMA ROBBERTSIN the streets of Swakopmund and Walvis Bay, heavily loaded vehicles with foreign number plates are hogging parking spaces while holidaymakers sporting beachwear and sunburnt faces are beginning to fill coffee shops and restaurants. |
|
The holiday season is coming to town. Local businesses are thriving as the Christmas-New Year boom sets in. According to Almuth Styles from Namib-i in Swakopmund, self-catering and bed-and-breakfast establishments at the coast are well occupied. Those who hope to find accommodation between Christmas and New Year will need a healthy scoop of good luck. "Maybe one can still find room for a single night here and there, but only if one really looks around," said Styles. Hotels also report very good reservations. Most of the bigger hotels are fully booked for the period between Christmas and New Year, though some still have a few rooms available. Styles said the biggest influx is, as usual, of Namibians but she has noted a marked increase in the number of tourists from South Africa and Botswana. At Walvis Bay, the picture is similar, reports Chriselda Meyer of the Walvis Bay Tourism Association. Some hotel rooms are still available, but until the beginning of January places at bungalows, camping sites, lodges and B&Bs will be hard to come by. Getting a camping site or two at Long Beach might still be possible for those who move quickly. At Namibia's favourite fishing destination, Henties Bay, a tug-of-war is also going on for lodging during the last week of the year. |
|
||||
|
PO Box 20783 - Windhoek - 42 John Meinert Street Tel: +264 (61) 279600 - Fax: +264 (61) 279602 |