WILDLIFE
WILDLIFE
An encounter with Africa’s increasingly precious wildlife in its own habitat is impossible to adequately describe; it is a full-scale sensory experience. It’s not just about what you see but what you hear, smell, and feel. Whether it is an extravaganza such as the thousands of wildebeest dropping their calves on the southern plains of the Serengeti or a quiet instant watching a jewel-like kingfisher in the Okavango, it is hard to remain unaffected when you are an integral part of the moment.
Depending on where you travel, there are opportunities to view wildlife from entirely open vehicles, while out on foot, or even from a boat. Each of these approaches offers advantages, and a good guide knows how to choreograph a trip to make the most out of these opportunities and cater to the interests of his guests.
There are few things more special or evocative than the first time you hear and feel a lion’s roar resonate through your very being, nor the astonishment that a giraffe’s neck is really that long (while having the same number of vertebrae as a human's), but there really is a great deal more to an African safari than these well-known creatures. It would take much more space than we have here to list it all, so we’d like to leave you with a glimpse of that chimpanzee in the canopy above your head and the meerkat climbing onto your shoulder for a better look across the desert and trust that we have the opportunity to talk to you further about all the countless possibilities.
As an ethical safari company, we will always be sensitive to the animals’ welfare in addition to the safety of our guests.