Hi! So I did a self-drive through Etosha early this year it was the nicest trip ever but the thing that frustrated me was that I lost signal past Andersson Gate. So over the last few months on weekends I built a little offline guide for the park. Sharing in case it's useful to anyone planning a trip. It's an Android app, fully offline once installed. The whole park map (roads, boundary, every camp and gate), all 74 named waterholes with type and notes, a wildlife reference, and around 6,977 historical sightings from iNaturalist research-grade observations. Tap a sighting, jump to where it was logged. Tap Around Me, see the nearest waterholes with distance and bearing. No accounts, no ads, no analytics, no data leaves the device. It's €1.99 one-time. I priced it that way so it could exist without ads or tracking. I'm just a part-time hobbyist. One thing that surprised me looking at the sightings data while building this: lion observations cluster heavily along the southern pan edge around Goas and Salvadora, but cheetah records are almost all out west toward the Andoni plain. Different parts of the park have genuinely different wildlife obviously, more than I'd expected tbh. Link if useful: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=app.parkpocket.etosha. Happy to answer questions about routes, waterholes, or how the data was put together. Mods, if this crosses a line let me know and I'll take it down.   submitted by   /u/jessedegans [link]   [comments]