The Skeleton
Coast
Where the Namib Desert meets the Atlantic — a hauntingly beautiful wilderness of fog, shipwrecks, and desert-adapted wildlife.
The Structure of Skeleton Coast National Park
Most travellers don't realise the Skeleton Coast is effectively two parks in one, and the distinction matters enormously for trip planning.
The southern Skeleton Coast runs from the Ugab River north to the Hoanib River. This zone is open to self-drive visitors with a transit permit, accessible via gravel roads from Swakopmund or Henties Bay. Day trips and short overnight loops are practical here, and most of the famous coastal shipwrecks lie within this section.
The northern Skeleton Coast — from the Hoanib River up to the Kunene River on the Angolan border — is a different proposition entirely. It is a concession area, fly-in only, with no public road access. Vehicle numbers are strictly capped, and the only way in is via a charter flight to a private airstrip serving one of three lodges. For luxury clients, this is where the truly exclusive experience lies.
Famous Shipwrecks Along the Coast
The coastline carries the wrecks of more than a thousand vessels. Four are worth knowing by name:
- Eduard Bohlen (1909) — a German cargo ship now sitting roughly 400 metres inland. The dunes have migrated around her over the past century.
- Dunedin Star (1942) — a British liner that ran aground during the Second World War. The rescue operation became an epic of its own.
- Zeila (2008) — a fishing trawler that broke from her tow line en route to a Bombay scrapyard. The most visible wreck for day visitors, particularly at low tide near Henties Bay.
- Otavi (~1945) — a smaller wreck further north, often viewed from the air on fly-in safaris.
Wildlife of the Skeleton Coast
The coast looks empty. It isn't. The desert-adapted lions of the Hoanib River are among the most studied desert-lion populations in the world, occasionally walking down to the beach to scavenge seal carcasses. Brown hyena, the rarest of the four hyena species, are found here in unusual concentration. Desert-adapted elephants move along the Hoarusib and Hoanib river courses. Add oryx, springbok, black-backed jackal, and the occasional cheetah, and the Skeleton Coast quietly delivers more sightings than its reputation suggests.
The Fly-In Safari Option
For travellers who want the northern concession, three lodges anchor the experience:
- Hoanib Skeleton Coast Camp — eight tented suites in a dry riverbed valley; strong on desert-adapted lion and elephant tracking with a resident researcher often in camp.
- Wilderness Skeleton Coast Camp — the most remote of the three, deeper into the Kunene region, focused on dune landscapes, the Clay Castles, and the Suiderkus shipwreck.
- Shipwreck Lodge — the architectural standout, with ten cabins shaped like the hulls of stranded ships, set on a dune ridge between the Hoarusib and Hoanib rivers.
A typical fly-in arrangement runs three nights minimum, often combined with Sossusvlei or the Kunene region.
Best Time to Visit the Skeleton Coast
The cold Benguela Current produces dense morning fog along the shoreline that usually lifts by late morning. May to October is the most reliable window — clear skies, cool conditions, and the southern park's gravel roads in their best state. The northern concession lodges typically restrict access from late December through March due to flash flooding in the ephemeral rivers.
Skeleton Coast FAQ
Q: Why is it called the Skeleton Coast?
A: The name refers both to the whale and seal bones that once littered the beaches from the whaling era and to the wreckage of ships driven ashore by fog, current, and treacherous reefs.
Q: Is the Skeleton Coast worth a luxury fly-in trip?
A: For travellers who value exclusivity and remoteness above all else, yes — the northern concession is one of the most genuinely uncrowded wilderness experiences in southern Africa.
Q: Can children visit the Skeleton Coast?
A: The southern park is family-friendly. Most fly-in concession lodges set minimum ages of 8 or 12; we confirm at the booking stage.
Q: Is there mobile signal on the Skeleton Coast?
A: Patchy in Henties Bay and Terrace Bay; effectively none in the northern concession. Lodges provide satellite communication for emergencies.
View the 14-day Namibia itinerary → Plan a Skeleton Coast Safari →