Paddle a sea kayak alongside 80,000 Cape fur seals at Pelican Point, where a Victorian-era lighthouse stands guard over a bone-white beach strewn with shipwreck ribs. This is the most intimate way to meet Namibia's marine wildlife — eye-to-eye at water level.
What to expect
After a short transfer along the Walvis Bay spit, you launch your tandem sea kayak into the calm inner lagoon. Within minutes, inquisitive juvenile seals bob around your paddle blades, occasionally leaping clean over the bow. Your guide narrates the ecology of the Benguela upwelling and points out flamingo flocks feeding in the shallows nearby. The paddle rounds Pelican Point itself, where the 1910 lighthouse and skeletal shipwreck frames make for extraordinary photographs.
Good to know
No kayaking experience necessary; the lagoon is sheltered and calm. The excursion runs approximately 2.5 hours. Combine it with an afternoon Sandwich Harbour 4x4 for the ultimate dual-landscape day — operators on both sides support the combo. Wear a swimsuit under your clothes; curious seals will splash you.
Sail there
Luxury cruises that call at Walvis Bay — book through us, the fare is identical and your concierge stays on your side.