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-   -   Maun, Botswana. The essential guide. (https://www.pprune.org/african-aviation/433420-maun-botswana-essential-guide.html)

rmball 10th Oct 2015 17:15

Medical expenses are a lot cheaper than the US. We paid around 300 pula for a doctor visit. Meds are around 50 pula. Some of the hospital bills are subsidized by the govt. If you pay cash, you won't have to wait as long. The medical care is decent, but if you have specialized medical needs, aka MRI or CT scans, you'll probably need to go to Gabs or South Africa for more advanced medical care. We've had friends who have had surgery and delivered babies in Gabs with no trouble. Oh, and make sure you get your shots before you guys head over.

254HEAVY 10th Oct 2015 23:33

BrazilianPilot2
 
Its very simple!
1. Get the job first
2. Do the job
3. You will have all the answer!

In Africa you go with an open mind, eyes, and ears! Don't over plan for things until you are there!

caa 11th Oct 2015 03:41

Maun as other places seem to have lots of holidays for Power and Water.

PilotSVK 12th Oct 2015 11:15

IR rating requirements
 
Hello all and thanks for all the great advice over here!

I'm wondering as per what is the best way to approach my current decision regarding whether it is more important to get the Instrument Rating (for which I would need to pay approx. 8,000 EUR / 9100 USD) or rather to get a flying experience in the 206/210? (due to budget constraints)

On Wilderness Air employment site it is clearly stated, that they require the IR, but for example Mack Air on their vacancy post did not list the IR as a requirement, and as I understand that there is rather no IR flying in the Delta or in Namibia.

I understand that the 500-hours is the Botswana authorities' unofficial requirement, but I'm wondering whether anyone has experience with landing a job (and the work permit) without the Instrument Rating, please? (I went through all the pages on this thread as well as the Namibia one) So should I spend time and money on the IR or rather keep still focusing on getting as many hours and to increase my VFR skills?

Thanks a lot in advance for your help!

About me:
I'm currently progressing with my hours, doing flight instructing, sightseeing flights etc. and will have over 500 hours by the next hiring season. In addition I'm doing a Bush Pilot training, albeit in a small 2-seat taildragger.

lilflyboy262...2 12th Oct 2015 19:21

Not only aspire, but tourists spend thousands of dollars a night to see the beauty of the place.
Never been out into the delta then I take it ike?

BrazilianPilot2 13th Oct 2015 02:29


Originally Posted by 254HEAVY (Post 9143699)
Its very simple!
1. Get the job first
2. Do the job
3. You will have all the answer!

In Africa you go with an open mind, eyes, and ears! Don't over plan for things until you are there!

Excellent answer!!! Thanks!!!

BrazilianPilot2 13th Oct 2015 02:30


Originally Posted by rmball (Post 9143428)
My wife and I made it on 10000 a month. I think you could do it as a family if you lived frugally. Our rent was around 5000 a month with water. Power was another 500 or so. We still managed to eat out a few times a month. Just make a budget and stick to it. It's Africa, enjoy the slower paced living :)

Thanks man! You help me a lot!

PilotSVK 13th Oct 2015 20:05

Headphones
 
In addition to the question about "need" of the instrument rating (as for my current hours I will not need to pay due to flight instructing), I would like to ask you if you can let me know whether there are active noise cancellation headphones being used by some of the pilots or even if they are given out by the companies?

I do like to protect my hearing, but on the other hand it may get more complicated if my passengers would need something of if the engine would start to run roughly etc.

Thanks for the advice :O

abezzi 14th Oct 2015 11:06

That's a very strange question...by the way you must have your own headset, no company is going to provide them!
For the ANR question, it all depends on you, there are pilots with Bose A20 and pilots with ASA headsets...

Kryukov 17th Oct 2015 12:55

good afternoon to everyone. I am russian pilot with faa cpl. Currently flying Cessna caravan g1000 as a co-pilot. TT is about 700 hours. Is it possible to find a job an Africa with such qualities? In Russia the compane which I work for is on the verge of bankruptcy,so I am thinking now of going to Africa.

PilotSVK 17th Oct 2015 16:58

Thank you Abezzi - the question was pretty much whether I should buy a good headset now (even if coming to Africa in a year from now). Now I understand that I will need one and that one with ANR is not an issue as well. Thinking of Beyerdynamic HS800 as I found an unused one for 1/2 the price of Bose A20.

Also can someone let me know whether the Instrument Rating would be a big advantage or I should rather concentrate on getting additional hours? (I understand that for some employers it will be a no-go)

abezzi 17th Oct 2015 19:18

Maybe I'm wrong here, but as long as I know the co-pilot hours are not taken in consideration for the 500hrs minimun to get a job, but maybe I'm wrong...

theSOD 19th Oct 2015 19:08

Does anyone have the email and postal address for safari air? Please pm me

Elevators 22nd Oct 2015 04:45

Documents
 
Does anyone know whether the Botswana authorities will only accept original documents for things like license verifications and accident and incident reports for the purpose of obtaining a validation / working visa? If I was to bring copies, would I run into trouble?

Also any suggestions on things you wished you had brought to Maun with you once you arrived?

abezzi 22nd Oct 2015 07:06

Only originals, and if those are not in english you need a copy of it translated.

darkroomsource 22nd Oct 2015 07:43


wished you had brought to Maun with you once you arrived?
More money?
(you can buy anything in Maun that you can buy in any city or town anywhere in the world)

A better tent.
Mine "died" after 4 months, it just couldn't keep the rain out any more. A couple other tents I saw also reached their limits. On one, a pole snapped under the weight of a storm. On a few the zippers didn't hold up.
I should have spent more on the tent, it would have saved on headaches as well as the cost of having to hire a room for a couple nights.

Diarrhoea meds.
It's a brave person who farts in a bar in Africa.

caa 22nd Oct 2015 08:05

Make sure you take a good understanding of TIME!


A SR71 flies at the same speed as a C150 in Africa - when the bank is full of customers all the tellers are suddenly on lunch break.

wevanniekerk 22nd Oct 2015 20:40


Originally Posted by theSOD (Post 9152388)
Does anyone have the email and postal address for safari air? Please pm me

Safari air is not employing at the moment. Sent you a pm with the email.

PilotInPink 22nd Oct 2015 23:48

In contrast to darkroomsource wanting

A better tent
, I actually wish that I hadn't bothered with a tent at all. Hardly anyone is camping these days. You can get a backpackers room for P100 a night at Alfa. Or a dorm bed at Old Bridge. Or find another pilot and crash on their couch.

I wish I had used the extra few kilograms of luggage allowance for things other that a tent. If you really want to camp, you can pick up a decent tent from Kalahari Canvas by the airport.

caa 23rd Oct 2015 09:11

It is + 10 years since my time in Bots and about 15ish since Maun. But have been back and stayed at Old Bridge. Dave drove me from his Jungle in Zambia to Maun for a job interview - he helped a lot in Maun. We then went back to The Jungle that Dave's girlfriend Helana was looking after while we were away. The Power Station worked overtime back then - Even if you did wake up Green!

Party at the Old Bridge forget the tent.


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