Mokoro Day Trip
A day trip into the Okavango Delta by mokoro (a traditional dugout canoe) is widely considered the most soul-striking way to experience Botswana's wilderness. Unlike a motorized safari, the mokoro offers a 'slow travel' experience where the soundtrack is the ripple of water and the call of distant fish eagles rather than an engine.
The Delta at Eye Level: The most striking part of a mokoro trip is your perspective. You sit just inches above the water level line, gliding through narrow, reed-lined channels. Because the movement is nearly silent, you become a part of the environment rather than an intruder.
The Skilled 'Poler": Every mokoro is guided by a local poler who stands at the rear. They use a long pole (called an ngashi) to propel and steer the craft. These guides often grow up in the Delta and possess an incredible ability to spot tiny details, like a Painted Reed Frog the size of a fingernail clinging to a stalk.
The Morning: Setting Out
Depart from Maun around 7:30 or 8:00 am. You are usually driven in a 4 x4 vehicle( or sometimes a motorboat) for about an hour to a mokoro station (like Boro, Daunara or Ditshipi) at the edge of the Delta.
Meeting Your Poler: You'll be paired with a local guide, known as a poler.
The Midday: Islands and Exploration
Around mid-morning, your poler will steer the mokoro toward one of the many palm-fringed islands and explore the Delta on foot.
Picnic lunch