You can make your safari in Africa as adventurous and active as you want: in a 4x4, on foot, across the water or through the air. We know the places and have been to almost all of the lodges and tented camps, and this means that we're in the best position to offer you the most comprehensive, tailor-made advice.
As specialists in quality, tailor-made safaris to the south and east of Africa, we have been organising dream safaris for more than fifteen years for customers who return to us year in, year out. These safaris can range from fly-in safaris for people who have little time, to luxury tented overland safaris à la Hemmingway that revive the ambience of yesteryear. We know the places and have been to almost all of the lodges and tented camps, and this means that we're in a position to offer you the most comprehensive, tailor-made advice. We not only take the location and the type of accommodation into account, but also the type of safari.
Perhaps you would like to travel with a small group of people in a 4x4 Land Rover. If you've already been on a safari, it may well be that you'd like (at a cost) to have a vehicle completely at your own disposal, so you can take as much time as you wish to study that a particular flock of birds or pride of lions.
For those live wires among you, we can also focus more on both single and multiple-day walking safaris, for example in Zambia, or walking safaris lead by camels in northern Kenya. A water safari is just as fun: what about travelling by mokoro (a dug-out tree trunk) across the Okavango Delta, or by motorboat across the Rufiji River in Tanzania's Selous Game Reserve? Perhaps you would prefer to come face-to-face with an elephant while canoeing across the Zambezi River?
And last but not least, you could always go on a safari by plane. It would be unthinkable to miss the view from the air of the Sossusvlei sand dunes. Viewing the Masai Mara from a hot air balloon is also an experience that you will never forget. Or would you like to spot game from an ultra-light aircraft flying across Zambia's Luangwa and then get even closer in a Land Rover?