The Best African Wildlife Holidays for 2019 - Whatever Your Budget

by Brian Jackman, The Telegraph, February 4, 2019

Whatever your budget, situation or level of ability, there's a wildlife holiday waiting, and for animal magic you can't do much better than Africa

1. Meet Zambia’s big game on foot

The Luangwa Valley is where the concept of walking safaris was reinvented, and at Tafika, an idyllic camp on the banks of the Luangwa river, it has been fine-tuned to perfection by John Coppinger, one of Zambia’s most respected guides. Accompanied by a guide, an armed scout and a tea-bearer, you follow elephant paths and game trails across South Luangwa National Park, staying overnight at exclusive small bush camps (six guests maximum).

Seven nights, including three at Tafika and four at Chikoko Trails Camps, cost from £4,525 per person with Aardvark Safaris (01980 849160; aardvarksafaris.com).

2. Chad’s Zakouma national park

Welcome to unknown Africa’s last wild secret, a savage wilderness heaving with big game and huge flocks of birds. French-speaking Chad is the fifth-largest country in Africa – five times the size of the United Kingdom. Just to fly to Zakouma from N’Djamena, the capital, takes three hours. But you’ll have it all to yourself, just like Ennedi in the country’s north-eastern corner, a desert region of rock towers and nomadic people.

Nine days cost from £4,800 per person with Steppes Travel (01285 601050; steppestravel.com).

3. Elephant magic in north Kenya

Nowhere else in Africa can you get closer to wild elephants or learn more about them than at this exotic eco camp in the Samburu National Reserve. Hardly surprising when you discover its creator is Oria Douglas-Hamilton, whose husband Iain is the world’s leading authority on elephant behaviour. It’s now run by Saba, Iain’s eldest daughter.

A seven-night safari, including four nights at Elephant Watch Camp and three nights at Samburu Intrepids, costs from £5,000 per person with Audley Travel (01993 838510; audleytravel.com).

4. Exclusive Okavango

A bespoke mobile camping safari with Barclay Stenner recalls the golden age of Hemingway’s Africa with a generous dash of 21st-century creature comforts thrown in. Living under canvas, cheek by jowl with elephants, leopards, lions and wild dogs, there’s no better way to explore Botswana’s incomparable Okavango Delta.

Seven nights cost from £7,000 per person for two sharing, including return flights from London with Cazenove + Loyd (020 7384 2332; cazloyd.com).

5. Catch the Great Migration

This tailor-made trip is perfect for first-time safari-goers looking for unparalleled game viewing and all the action of the Great Migration coupled with a little R&R in Zanzibar at the end. It includes two nights at Ngorongoro and four nights in the northern Serengeti at Lemala Mara, a great, little mobile camp ideally placed for watching the wildebeest river crossings.

Eleven nights from £4,503 per person including return flights from the UK, through Yellow Zebra Safaris (020 8547 2305; yellowzebrasafaris.com).

6. Meet the Lion King in Kenya

Kenya is where safaris were born and lions still rule the savannah. Fly from Nairobi to Elsa’s Kopje, a five-star lodge in Meru, the park where George and Joy Adamson lived the legend of Elsa, the Born Free lioness. Then move on to Laikipia see the Big Five before a grand finale in the Maasai Mara in the migration season (July until October).

A 10-night safari costs from £6,600 per person including three nights at Elsa’s Kopje, two nights at Lewa Wilderness camp and three nights at Elephant Pepper Camp in the Mara, plus flights. Safari Consultants (01787 888590; safari-consultants.com ).

7. Quintessential Kenya

From the big cats of the Maasai Mara to the flamingo lakes of the Great Rift Valley, this affordable four-wheel drive safari includes return flights from London Heathrow with Kenya Airways.

Seven days from £2,279 per person with Hayes & Jarvis (01293 762456; hayesandjarvis.co.uk).

8. Rent a house in Zambia’s bush

Not just any old house! Chongwe River House is an architectural fantasy of thatch and timbers overlooking the lower Zambezi National Park. It comes fully self-contained and staffed with a host and hostess, guide, chef and housekeeping team, allowing you complete freedom to plan your days. Children need to be 12 or over to go on canoe trips or walking safaris, but the staff love to arrange alternative activities for youngsters. 

Six nights for a family of four costs from £17,600 (£4,400 per person) excluding international flights, with Expert Africa (020 3405 6666; expertafrica.com).

9. Bush and beach in Tanzania

Watch the children’s eyes light up at the sight of elephants, big cats and zebras in the Serengeti and Ngorongoro. Then wash off the dust in the Indian Ocean on Zanzibar’s coral sand beaches and take in a turtle conservation project.

From £3,099 per adult, £2,199 per child including 10 nights’ half-board accommodation, six lunches and transfers, but not flights. Families Worldwide (01962 302062; familiesworldwide.co.uk).

10. Meerkats of the Kalahari

Tswalu is South Africa’s largest private wildlife reserve. Owned by the Oppenheimer family, it’s a wilderness twice the size of Norfolk with just two luxury lodges and a wealth of rare species. Explore it by private vehicle with your own personal guide and tracker, looking for desert rhinos, black-maned lions, meerkats and sable antelopes.

Seven nights from £9,352, excluding flights, with Journeys by Design (01273 623790; journeysbydesign.com).

11. Gorillas in your midst

Capture your own David Attenborough encounters with the mountain gorillas of RwandaBisate is a luxury lodge set in the amphitheatre of an extinct volcano with stunning views of the Virunga Massif, home to half of the world’s mountain gorillas. From here you can set out to track one of 10 groups that live in the Volcanoes National Park.

Three nights at Bisate combined with three nights at Ol Seki costs from £15,950 with Scott Dunn (020 8682 5070; scottdunn.com) .

12. See the Big Five in style

To immerse oneself in Royal Malewane’s colonial splendour is to experience life in the bush at its most outrageously luxurious. Thornybush private game reserve, adjoining the Kruger National Park, provides the setting, with Africa’s most highly qualified guiding team on hand.

An eight-day trip costs from £8,100 per person including four nights at Royal Malewane and three nights at the Silo, Cape Town’s swanky high-end hotel, booked through Bailey Robinson (01488 689700; baileyrobinson.com).

13. The best flying safari ever

Take off from Kilimanjaro Airport in your own private jet for the trip of a lifetime. First stop, the Serengeti with the wildebeest calving season in full swing. Spend three nights here and continue to Brazzaville in the Congo for three nights’ trekking in search of western lowland gorillas. Next, to Namibia for three nights in the desert and three nights in the Okavango Delta before flying home from Nairobi. Try not to flinch at the jaw-dropping price…

Thirteen nights on the ground cost from £45,220pp, based on six people travelling. Price includes private charter flight with pilot guide, private guides and vehicles and exclusive camps. The Explorations Company (01367 850566; explorationscompany.com).

14. Magical Madagascar

Having broken away from the African continent 65 million years ago, Madagascar is a world apart, marooned in the Indian Ocean with unique wildlife. On this 15-day guided group tour you’ll explore rainforests, nature reserves and national parks in search of the lemurs and exquisite chameleons for which the island is renowned. 

Travel advice | How to stay safe on safari

From £2,899 (add £365 for single room) including flights with Explore (01252 883055; explore.co.uk).

 

This article was written by Brian Jackman from The Telegraph and was legally licensed through the NewsCred publisher network. Please direct all licensing questions to [email protected].

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