Kenya has defied all expectations of being a conventional wildlife safari destination, offering a great mix of cultures, old-world towns, and modern cities.
- Amboseli National Park
A safari in the Kenyan wilderness will be an experience you will always remember, whether you have travelled the world or are leaving home for the first time. Leave the world behind and join us on a journey of a lifetime!
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Spending time in the wilderness and reconnecting with nature is a joy.
During the day, you will scout for the Big Five before retiring to the comforts of a lodge or tented camp for the night.
Elephants, buffaloes, leopards, monkeys, various wildlife animals, and over 250 bird species live in Amboseli National Park. Kenya has numerous national parks.
- Mombasa Beaches with fine white sand
There are many beautiful beaches in the world, but there’s no denying Kenya’s South Coast is blessed with some of the most pristine and stunning of them all.
Imagine the fine sandy beaches of Diani Beach, lined with coconut palms and dotted with restaurants and beach bars, or the crystal-clear waters of the Indian Ocean.
You will find this stretch of paradise only a short flight from the capital Nairobi. Alternatively, you can reach it by car via a trip to the Likoni Ferry in Mombasa.
It must be a paradise for water sports lovers.
Take a walk along the uninterrupted 13-kilometre-long tropical coastline of Diani Beach, where white and wide beaches are exactly what they should be: white and wide.
Restaurants and beach bars invite you to relax over fine food and cocktails while you play with your toes in the sand and let your gaze wander across the azure-blue Indian Ocean.
The coral reef and many sandbanks are ideal spots to discover Diani Beach’s colourful underwater world. Continuous winds will keep kites and windsurfers happy on their boards.
- Desert Safaris at the Chalbi Desert
Immerse in a magical desert safari and unearth the secrets of the sand in Kenya.
The Chalbi Desert is a desert in the northern part of Kenya near the border with Ethiopia. It is east of Lake Turkana and has Marsabit as the closest major urban center.
Chalbi Desert was created after a lake that dried 10,000 years ago to drench the craters of Marsabit.
The Chalbi desert sustains high winds. In fact, the area has some of the strongest and most sustained wind systems of the world.
The most heartwarming part of Chalbi Desert Safari is dune bashing, camel safaris, donkey safaris, camping in the wilderness, biking safaris, hiking, walking, quadbikes and much more.
- Hike Mount Kenya
Hiking up Mount Kenya, the second-highest mountain on the African continent, is on the bucket list of many travelers and a fantastic trekking adventure for nature lovers.
You will hike through the lower slopes' thick montane and bamboo forests, where zebras and eland antelopes often graze. Passing babbling brooks and dark blue mountain lakes, you might be lucky to spot our mountain's big brother, Mount Kilimanjaro, in the distance.
Nature lovers appreciate Mount Kenya for its impressive landscapes and diverse wildlife, acknowledged even by UNESCO as a world heritage site. Adventure seekers long to conquer the rugged cliffs and ice walls, navigating the highest ferrata in the world.
The 3rd highest peak of Mount Kenya is usually the summit reached by most hikers, and many guided trips run along different routes to get there.
- Hell’s Gate National Park
Hell’s Gate National Park is the most atmospheric Parks in Africa, located in the southern part of Lake Naivasha, Kenya. It was established in 1984.
The park is home to a wide variety of wild animals like lions, cheetahs, leopards along with the rare lammergeier vultures, Hyraxes, eland, African buffalos, zebras, hartebeest, Thomson’s gazelle, baboons and Hyenas.
Hell’s Gate is famous for its spectacular towering cliffs, intense geothermal activity, scrub clad volcanoes, stark rock towers and water-gouged gorges.
- Experience a Hot-air Balloon Safari MASAI MARA
You can combine thrilling land-based game viewing in 4x4 vehicles with Maasai-guided nature walks and crown your Masai Mara safari with an unsurpassable hot-air balloon experience.
The best flight paths follow the course of the Mara River, allowing you to peek down into the forests, float past vultures’ nests and observe the early-morning routines of boisterous hippos.
After touching down onto the plains, you’ll be treated to a delicious bush breakfast with champagne.
- Sundowner at a Private Conservancy
The Masai Mara National Reserve can get crowded during the safari high season (about June to October), so we recommend a Sundowner staying in one of the neighbouring private conservancies.
We also have Ol Pejeta Conservancy in Nanyuki, one of the largest black rhino sanctuaries in East and Central Africa and the home to the world's last two northern white rhinos.
In a Sanctuary created to provide rehabilitation for animals rescued from the black market, it is also the only place in Kenya to see chimpanzees.
It runs a highly effective livestock program and has some of Kenya's most significant predator populations.
- Watch the Great Wildebeest Migration
During the Great Migration, which takes place between July and October, millions of wildebeest, antelope, and zebra travel from the nearby Serengeti Plains and the predators that pursue them.
A game drive, an airplane or hot-air balloon flight, a strolling safari, or a safari on a horse are all options for viewing the show.
- The Kenya Metro - SGR
Initially known as the "Lunatic Express" because it looked like such a strange notion to build a railroad through the African bush when it first began operating in 1901, the storied line underwent a complete modernization in 2017 with an update to the tracks and passenger trains.
The Madaraka Express departs from Nairobi and Mombasa every day at 9 a.m., taking 4.5 hours to complete the trip.
- Get over your fear of snakes
Get scarily close to Kenya’s most dangerous snakes – like the black mamba, spitting cobra, bush python and puff adder – at the various Snake Parks.
These parks offer snake safaris to track, catch and release serpents in the bush and cages. Several crocodile species can be found in the snake park, including the American alligator, freshwater terrapins and tortoises.
Several crocodile species can be found in the snake park, including the American alligator, freshwater terrapins and tortoises.