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     BIOTA Southern Africa Observatory Information Sheet:   Narais

Below: Leucosphaera bainesii


 Observatory No.

S39

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 Alternative name

Narais

 Location

Khomas Region, former Rehoboth area (Rehoboth Gebiet)

 Zone

 Main research

Land use change, pair of 2 observatories, high priority

 Champion

 Para-ecologist

Scott, Jerome

 Owner / Institution

Alexander S. Nack

 Land tenure

Private

 Precipitation per year

289mm

 Observatory (north-west-corner)

 

 

Latitude

Longitude

Altitude (m)

 

-23.12038

16.89657

 Photo album

Photo album

 Weather data

Datum
Daily averages up to this date available



The town and the region of Rehoboth (Cornelia Limpricht):
The core area of the Rehoboth Basters, which today comprises partially the Hardap and the Khomas Region is scenically well endowed and geologically marked by three adjacent zones, the Khomas Hochland Plateau, the Rehoboth Plateau and the Kalahari Sandveld. In addition three vegetation zones are to be found: the Highland Shrubland (a savanna dominated by shrubs and low trees), the Dwarf Shrub Savanna and the Southern Kalahari (characterised by grasslands with scattered trees). The farms of the Rehoboth Basters are located in a semi-arid region. The long-term mean annual rainfall is about 250 mm. Apart from a few exceptions there is no year-round open water in the region. The land has been, and still is only used for animal husbandry, the prime herd animals being cattle, sheep and goats.

The town of Rehoboth is situated close to the boundary of the Hardap and the Khomas Region, a recently drawn boundary dissecting the area of farms, the former Rehoboth Gebiet, which had been reserved exclusively for Baster owners until the Independence of Namibia in 1990. The Oanob Dam, a smaller counterpart of the Hardap Dam, is situated on the outskirts of the town of Rehoboth offering an important resource for tourism.

Farm size: 8762 ha
Camps: 22
Livestock: about 350 cattle, 325 goats, 166 game (2004)
Management: average stocking rate 17-20 ha/LSU, in good rainy years 15 ha/LSU. Goats forage without a herdsman. The cattle is divided in 3 herds. During rainy season cattle gets shifted every 1 - 2 week. In dry season the rotation is slowed down to shifts every 1 - 2 months.



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