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guest safari stories

Wild Encounters: Unforgettable Safari Moments from Our Guests

One of the great privileges of this work — twenty-five years and counting of designing Safaris — is that we get to witness the moment Africa gets under someone's skin. It happens differently for everyone. For some, it's the scale of the Serengeti at dawn. For others, it's a single, fleeting wildlife encounter that they'll spend the rest of their life trying to describe at dinner with friends. For children, it can be a pride of lions or a Samburu warrior in full ceremonial dress and suddenly the world is bigger than it was the morning before.

We've been collecting these moments for years. Some arrived as long, glorious emails. Some came as voice notes, late at night, still buzzing from the day. One arrived as a series of text messages sent in real time from the back of a Land Cruiser. All of them made us deeply proud of what we do.

Here are some of our favorites — stories from guests who went to Africa and came back changed. We keep adding to this, as a bit of a “Guestbook” or Safari Journal of what our guests are feeling, seeing and saying about their Journey to Africa Safari.


Zambia & Tanzania and a Safari that was so good it didn’t feel real.

John & Gayle Mead - Victoria Falls, Serengeti, Nyerere, and Tanzania Safari

“I had to keep saying: this is real”
John and Gayle Mead — Victoria Falls, Serengeti, and Selous, Zambia and Tanzania
— John and Gayle Mead — Victoria Falls, Serengeti, and Selous, Zambia and Tanzania

John reached out wanting something epic. We went back and forth over emails and calls until we landed on a journey that took them from the thundering spray of Victoria Falls in Zambia all the way through Tanzania's Serengeti and the wild, boat-accessed wilderness of Nyerere (Selous) Game Reserve in Southern Tanzania.

When Gayle wrote back, she opened with exactly the feeling we'd hoped for:

"I had no idea what I would really feel once I saw the animals in the wild. I had to keep saying 'this is real.'" Gayle Mead

That's it. That's the whole thing, really. No photograph prepares you for the moment you realize there is nothing between you and the animal except open air and the hum of the bush. Gayle put it perfectly — and we've never forgotten it.


Three photographers, one Tanzanian Safari, and 800 kilometers of pure magic

George, Joey, and Henry — Northern Tanzania

When George first got in touch, he mentioned he'd be bringing a Phase One camera. I knew immediately: this Safari needed to be entirely private. One guide, one vehicle, total flexibility to chase the light wherever it went.

We sent them deep into Northern Tanzania — Serengeti, Ngorongoro, the works — for nine days with guide Nathan, who logged over 800 kilometers with them across Tanzania's most iconic landscapes.

“Nathan was not only a wonderfully knowledgeable guide but an excellent and patient travel companion. Life in the Land Cruiser was great — even with the free African Massage, as Nathan described traveling down some of the roads.”
— George, Northern Tanzania Safari

If you've ever been on a Tanzanian bush track in the back of a Land Cruiser, you'll know exactly what Nathan meant!

Old bull elephant in Ngorongoro Crater

When we were in the crater, we watched this big old bull elephant saunter across the crater floor towards the marsh where Nathan had us positioned. The old boy stopped maybe 12 ft away and just stood there, dust bathing and looking at us for about 15 minutes and then just continued on his way.

Handsome Male Lion
Stargazing on Safari

Stary nights on Safari

“Being a city boy, I don't see the Milky Way very often due to light pollution so I hoped to get a night sky shot at some point on the trip. At Kichuguu, what was just as memorable was the honor guard of camp staff we had around us, simultaneously ensuring we didn't get eaten and just as keen to look at the results.”

George Hart, Northern Tanzania Safari

Makes us so happy when our Safari goers get to fulfill their Tanzanian Safari dream.

What is your Safari dream? We can help make it a reality.


The family Safari where nature provided the birds-and-bees talk!

Angela and the Hall family — Lake Eyasi and Northern Tanzania

When Angela wrote to say she wanted her children — twins aged 12, a 15-year-old, and a 17-year-old — to experience more than just wildlife on their family Safari, I knew exactly where to take them. We added a visit to the Hadzabe tribe at remote Lake Eyasi, one of the last hunter-gatherer communities in East Africa, alongside the classic Northern Circuit.

Sunset over Lake Eyasi

Sunset over Lake Eysasi - the ancestral home of the Hadzabe people.

The feedback came in three distinct voices. Sydney, the eldest at 17, was so moved by the visit to the Rift Valley Children's Village that she started talking about going back. The twins were wide-eyed and honest about the sounds the bush makes at night (a white noise machine may have been helpful — lesson learned for our packing guide!).

And Angela had this to say about one particular morning game drive: the wildlife had, unprompted and with perfect comic timing, delivered the birds-and-bees conversation she'd been meaning to have with her boys. Nature, as always, does things in its own way and on its own terms. Their reactions, she said, were priceless!

The family enjoyed the Night Safari & Walking Safaris on every the single evening/morning at Oliver’s Camp, Tarangire - this is why we love Tarangire - aside from the huge

Family Safari stories and memories that will shape lives and be shared around the dinner table for generations to come - this is why we do what we do. What will your Family Safari stories be?

Team photo before a morning bush walk


A private journey built entirely around photography - and where the wildebeeste didn’t disappoint!

Ravi — Serengeti, Tanzania

Ravi came to us with a very specific Safari in mind: a private journey built entirely around photography, with the wildebeest migration as the centerpiece. We routed him through Central Serengeti before positioning him in the north — exactly where the migration crosses the Mara River in August — staying at Kiota Camp and then Serengeti Safari Camp.

After the Safari, he wrote back with one short and sweet line that said everything:

“Can’t thank you enough.”
— Ravi, Serengeti Safari
A Giraffe in the Serengeti

Texts from the bush: "Next level, Mefi!!!!"

Soraiya's multi-generational family & a life changing Safari for the books — Ngorongoro, Serengeti, and Pemba Island, Tanzania

Soraiya wanted a family Safari that worked for everyone — from the youngest to the grandparents. Her asks: wildlife, the wildebeest migration, and scuba diving. Not a small order. We positioned them in Central Serengeti at Lahia House and then north to Mkombe's House — a private home where the kids could roam freely — before finishing on Pemba Island at Fundu Lagoon for some of the best diving in the Indian Ocean.

Thanks to Soriaya for these behind-the-scenes, blow-by-blow short and sweet texts of her multi-generational family Safari unfolding in Tanzania. Texts like these are gold and what keeps us going. Let’s start at the beginning:

“Arrived in Kilimanjaro, with Sia in the car, super smoooth!”

“Ali and Gabu are phenomenal!” [About the guides]

”Hey hey! Excellent day in Serengeti! We have seen SO many animals and an amazing migration already!!!”

”Rooms are amazing [at Lahia] and the place is a small slice of heaven on Earth!!”
— Soraiya's Texts

A Family Affair - all the family with the Mkombe House Team. Memories that will last a lifetime.

“Mkombe House in PHENOMENAL!!! Wowowow!”
— Soraiya's Safari Texts

After their Safari, we called Soriaya and heard in more detail how amazing this family Safari really was. A comment Soraiya made after their Safari was confirmed was, “That was easy!”.
That is our goal! To make your Safari planning as easy for you as possible. We know the right places to take you, for the right times. We can’t wait to show you our Tanzania.


An East African Adventure: Kenya & Tanzania from Serengeti plains to Mahale Mountain Chimps

Ken, Nan, Julie, and Clyde — Kenya and Tanzania

This was the Safari that had everything. Ken and Nan joined forces with friends Julie and Clyde and wildlife photographer Randy Hanna — Kenya is Randy's second home — and together they explored elephant-rich Amboseli National Park and the Mara North Conservancy. After Kenya, they continued into Tanzania: the World Heritage Site of Ngorongoro Crater, the remote chimp-filled wilderness of Mahale Mountains in Western Tanzania, and the beaches of Zanzibar.

Ken wrote to us about the elephants at Amboseli — a memory that will clearly stay with him for a very long time:

Elephants roam the dusty Amboseli lands

Elephants in dusty Amboseli - a magical experience.

“We woke to an elephant eating leaves just five feet from our heads — felt his movement through the canvas. Another day we watched a line of elephants marching across the Amboseli flats towards water, so close you could hear their feet crunch on the dust.”
— Ken on Amboseli

Hearing feet crunch on the dust. That detail. That's what Safari does. It makes you notice things you didn't know you could notice. Next they headed to the remote and utterly beautiful Mahale Mountains National Park in Western Tanzania. Here’s what Julie said about their time at Greystoke Mahale:

Two hours of close interaction with chimps as they wandered thru our Mahale camp (a magical experience).

Mahale was our favorite lodge by far. It was the boat ride , the lake shore location, the smaller size, the rustic remoteness, and Butati that elevated Mahale above the others. We felt more immersed in nature, with very little separating us from jungle life.
— Julie on Greystoke Mahale, Western Tanzania

Your Safari story is next.

Every single Safari we design is different — because every guest we work with is different. Different dreams, different travel styles, different moments that end up mattering most. But the through-line is always the same: Africa gets in. And it doesn't leave.

If you've been on a Journey to Africa Safari, we'd love to hear your wild encounter. The moment that made you catch your breath. The morning that changed something. The thing you keep telling people about.

And if you haven't been yet — let's change that.