

Curious how people think about this:
Would you rather:
pack your itinerary with as many sightings as possible
or slow it down and take in the environment more
Which one actually made your trip better?


Curious how people think about this:
Would you rather:
pack your itinerary with as many sightings as possible
or slow it down and take in the environment more
Which one actually made your trip better?
Most people go on safari chasing sightings…
The Big 5.
The perfect photo.
The ‘checklist’.
But at some point, something shifts.
You stop chasing…
and start noticing everything else the silence, the space, the feeling of being completely removed from the world.That’s when the experience really begins.
Places like the Okavango Delta or the Makgadikgadi Salt Pans have a way of doing that.
For those who’ve been did you feel that shift?
If you had to choose:
waterways (mokoro, channels, water-based)
or dry open landscapes (salt pans, savannah)
Which do you think gives a better experience?
If you had to choose:
waterways (mokoro, channels, water-based)
or dry open landscapes (salt pans, savannah)
Which do you think gives a better experience?
A lot of people jump straight into prices or lodges, but I’ve found it’s easier to break it down:
•type of experience (water vs land)
•style (camping vs lodge)
•timing (season)
Curious how others approached planning their first safari?
A lot of people jump straight into prices or lodges, but I’ve found it’s easier to break it down:
•type of experience (water vs land)
•style (camping vs lodge)
•timing (season)
Curious how others approached planning their first safari?
Not just wildlife could be anything:
the atmosphere, the people, the space, the pace.
Curious what stood out to people who’ve been.