• Quiver tree forest near keetmanshoop dfdliy
    WELCOME TO
    Keetmanshoop


About Keetmanshoop

Keetmanshoop lies 500 km south of Windhoek, and is the traffic junction and the economic centre for the whole south of Namibia.

The town was founded as a mission station in 1866 and named after the German trader Johann Keetman who supported the mission financially.

There is a museum in the old church where the illustrated history of Keetmanshoop is on display. Worth a visit is the old "Kaiserliche Postamt" built in the year 1910, which now houses the Tourist Information.

About 13 kilometres north-east of Keetmanshoop lies the spectacular and much photographed Kokerboom or quiver tree forest on the farm Gariganus. The site has been declared a National Monument.

The quiver tree or "Kokerboom" is indigenous to the hot and dry southern part of Namibia and the Namaqualand in South Africa. The plants are succulents and can reach a height of up to 9 metres. They have adapted to the extreme environmental conditions and can store water in their trunks. The tree only blossoms for the first time after 20 to 30 years and can reach an age of 300 years. The wood is very light and spongy inside, and because the trunk and branches can easily be hollowed out, they were used as quivers by the San (Bushmen people) who formerly inhabited this area.


Quick Facts

Province: Karas
Region: Karas Region
Country: Namibia
Address: Keetmanshoop, Namibia

Why go?

- Kokerboom (Quiver tree) forest