Lounging peacefully on the terrace, watching the elephants, leopards and antelopes gather at the watering hole.
That’s how hundreds of football fans will relax in South Africa’s Kruger National Park on “soccer safaris”, after taking in World Cup matches in the nearby city of Nelspruit.
With 100,000 people, Nelspruit is among the smaller of the host cities and doesn’t have enough accommodation for the fans expected to arrive here in June 2010.
So organisers are tapping resources in the tourist magnet of Kruger game park, just a two-hour drive away.
“Any person who comes so close to Kruger would definitely come to see the game. You cannot miss it if you’re that close to it, especially coming from Europe or Asia,” said Stephen Nel, a manager at the Berg-en-Dal rest camp.
About 1.3 million tourists each year visit the park, which is about half the size of the Netherlands and has a highly developed network to accommodate guests.
During the World Cup, the camps of Skukuza, Berg-en-Dal and Pretoriuskop will host nearly 2,000 fans in search of South Africa’s “Big Five” – elephants, buffalo, leopard, lions and rhinos.
FIFA partner responsible for accommodation, Match, is offering packages that include lodging, transport and safaris, which could mean pre-dawn drives to catch the animals at sun-up, twilight hikes, or dinner in the bush.
To allow the guests to see the football matches, Kruger is reworking its rules. The park currently closes at 6:00 pm, and some games at Nelspruit’s Mbombela stadium will only kick off two hours later.
Armed rangers will escort the fans back to their lodges and tents, “to protect them from lions, elephants and other dangerous animals,” according to South African National Parks.
“They’ll probably change the opening times of the restaurants as most of our guests would be for the World Cup,” Nel added.
He said that the camp had welcomed guests from the rugby World Cup in 1995, but that was on a smaller scale that what organisers expect in 2010.
The World Cup will be the biggest event ever held in this rural province, with Nelspuit building a 46,000-seat stadium for the occasion.
“Initially, there was a shortage of accomodation,” said FS Siboza, operations manager for the city.
But he said the new guesthouses have opened in the city, and two other towns are helping to ensure enough beds are available during the tournament, he said.
The city expects new hotels will be built, while some homeowners plan to leave on vacation and to rent out their homes to the tourists.
Organisers are even considering creating tented campsites for visitors, spread around a 200-kilometre (125-mile) radius, including in neighbouring Swaziland and Mozambique.
FIFA wants to ensure that 55,000 rooms are available across the country during the World Cup. Right now there are 34,000, making Kruger’s model an appealing option that could be expanded to other national parks.
The only requirement for the “soccer safaris” is that guests can actually see the matches. At Berg-en-Dal, they will be housed in simple cottages built in 1985, without televisions.
The camp is thinking about setting up a TV in a conference room so the fans can watch games in other towns… if they find generators to keep the electricity running.
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