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Fauna · Kgalagadi Transfrontier Park, Northern Cape, South Africa

Sociable Weaver Colony — Kalahari South Africa

The sociable weaver (Philetairus socius) colony nests — the world's largest bird-built structure, a single nest mass of up to 1 tonne housing 200–500 birds in separate nest chambers, built over 100+ years in the Kalahari's camelthorn acacia trees — create one of southern Africa's most architecturally extraordinary wildlife encounters. The colony's activity (the constant weaving, chamber maintenance, and traffic in and out of the nest's separate entrances in the structure's underside) is fully observable from the Kalahari's gravel roads where nest trees grow beside the fence lines, and the structure's sheer scale — a haystack-like mass 4 metres wide and 2 metres deep — is visible from 1 kilometre. The nest's thermal properties (the chamber temperature remains 33°C on nights when the Kalahari drops to -10°C) and the pygmy falcon (Polihierax semitorquatus) that uses the sociable weaver's outer chambers as its own nest create a colonial architecture of remarkable biological complexity.

When
Jun — Aug
Best viewing
A roadside encounter with the world's largest bird-built nest — a massive woven structure visible from 1 km, alive with hundreds of birds weaving, maintaining chambers, and commuting through individual nest entrances. Pygmy falcons add an unexpected bonus.
Category
Fauna
Status
Returns Jun 2026

About this spectacle

Standing before a sociable weaver colony in the Kalahari is a genuinely surreal experience. The nest — a haystack-like mass up to 4 metres wide and 2 metres deep — sits wedged in the crown of a camelthorn acacia, its sheer bulk almost implausible in the open, sun-bleached landscape. Watch the underside and dozens of tunnel entrances reveal themselves, each serving a separate family chamber. The birds are in constant motion: ferrying dry grass, jostling at entrance tubes, occasionally spilling out in small groups before vanishing back inside. Pygmy falcons perch at the colony's periphery, entirely at ease in chambers borrowed from their hosts. In the early morning the light rakes across the nest's woven texture, picking out individual strands. The Kalahari's silence amplifies every chirp and rustle. The structure is visible from the road — no walking required — making it one of the most accessible and structurally extraordinary wildlife encounters in southern Africa.

When to go

Jun — Aug

Getting there

Nearest airport: UPJ. Nearest city: Upington.

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