In the south west of a great continent, lies the unknown and endless German colony of Namibia. Situated deep inside the Namib desert surrounded by miles of sand and rolling dunes lies the history of the height of German rule.
Driving through the deserted and empty Namib desert you would wonder if people ever lived here if there was something in this desert that could be useful to mankind. After an hour of driving on sand roads, we finally reached the small ancient Ghost town of Kolmanskopa (the town lost to Namibia’s desert.) After we had entered the town, we parked the car and went on a tour around the town. Upon walking along streets hundreds of years old and stepping into houses that looked like they had been emptied yesterday you have entered Namibia’s diamond fields.
With the few other people who were there we went into the once bustling town to explore. The Germans had used German building sand as they wanted it to feel like Germany, they ate German cattle and wore clothes made in Germany. They had a neatly laid out street format and built entertainment halls, hospitals and schools.
The name Kolmanskopa comes from the name of an unknown person found dead who was delivering goods to the town.
Walking through the doorway of each building making sure there isn’t a snake under a fallen piece of roof is such an amazing experience. The ice factory would make ice that everyone would put in their fridge to keep peoples food cold. Waling up the stairs to the second floor of the bigger houses is amazing as the buildings are so old. The paint is still on the walls in some buildings and others have cupboards half submerged in sand.
As you are walking through the town you could easily imagine the men getting drunk,(because it is in the midle of the desert beer was the same price as water,) the children in the school and the doctors in the hospital trying to keep patients alive this entire town now a ghost town.
In the end I think Kolmanskopa is an amazing thing to do in Namibia and shows you how the Namib desert could be used as it is such an unusual place to put a town.
A house where the only thing holding it up is sand.
a old cupboard half submerged in sand.
the desert keeps its shape inside the buildings.
What was once was the main corridor of the hospital now ruins.
The roof of the buildings are falling down.
a recreation of what the walls would have looked like.
the oldest bowling alley I have been in and it still works.

