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The Makgadikgadi is
a place of wide-open, uninhabited spaces under an endless canopy of blue sky. The remoteness, inaccessibility
and danger of the pans all add to their allure.
It is a vast expanse filled
with subtle hues and surrealistic beauty. Almost the size of Portugal, the pan covers 12 000 square
kilometers and is the largest saltpan in the world. The pan is only a portion of what used to be one
of the largest inland lakes in Africa.

The area is comprised of the
Sua and Ntwetwe pans. During the heat of the late winter day the pans become a shimmering mirage of
disorienting and ethereal austerity. The large number of small villages and the small stone age tools
and other artifacts that can be found scattered around the islands (for example on Kubu Island), all
point to the fact that the Makgadikgadi Pans have supported human habitation, and their livestock,
for a very long time. At one time the Makgadikgadi Pans was important as a major trade route.
In September large herds of
antelope, zebra and wildebeest roam the dusty plains awaiting the first rains. On their arrival the
waters turn the pans into a perfect mirror of the sky, distorting all sense of place and time. Although
these rains are short lived, in December another deluge turns the edges of the vast pans into waving
fringes of green grassland where herds of wildlife converge to partake in the bounty.
Flocks of birds arrive to
build their nests along the shoreline of the Nata River, in Sua Pan, and feed on algae and crustaceans
that have been lying dormant in the salt and sand awaiting the drenching rains.
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