The Majilis Resort is a privately owned luxury beach hotel on Manda Island in the Lamu archipelago, off Kenya’s Northern Coast. The boutique hotel offers 25 exquisite deluxe rooms and suites divided into three beachfront villas. With a superb beachfront location and breathtaking views over the bay and Lamu Island, it offers the perfect setting and the ideal accommodation
for barefoot luxury and informal pampering on your trip to Kenya. Relax on the beach, stroll along the long-sweeping beach, enjoy a cool drink at the ocean-facing bar as the sun sets and taste our open-fronted restaurants’ marriage of local ingredients and international cuisine.
Diani Blue is a charmingly small, intimate and exclusive beach lodge, lapped by the waters of the Indian Ocean. Featuring just six spacious Swahili-styled rooms clustered around a central pool and overlooking the silver-white sands of Diani Beach. Each room stands in its own stone-built chalet with a private entrance, vestibule and spacious en-suite bathroom. The property is accessed via a bridge over a lily pond and stands amid exquisite tropical gardens, which are home to a troop of Colobus monkeys. Ecologically sensitive, Diani Blue is committed to wilderness preservation, energy conservation, recycling and to ‘giving back’ to and supporting the local community that surrounds it.
Past and present intertwine in Loita Hills with stunning drama and beauty. This region inspires you to explore and immerse yourself in one of the best wilderness areas that Africa has on offer. Our sometimes strenuous, but splendidly rare, donkey-supported trek takes you over rolling hills, along perfectly preserved ancient elephant trails lavished with magnificent views, down into valleys of extraordinary fauna and flora. The emphasis is not on big game, although you are likely to see 2,000 colobus monkeys roaming the canopies, elephant, buffalo, baboon, bushbuck, bush pig, leopard, hyena and maybe even hippopotamus. It is also a birding Eden for bird lovers.
Chem Chem Lodge is found nestled between Tarangire National Park and Lake Manyara within a privileged region known as the Burunge Wildlife Management Area. The lodge is situated in the picturesque reaches of the wildlife concession and boasts eight secluded canvas suites with an opulent main house, evoking the spirit of the vintage safari. Sip a cool beverage and watch as giraffe and zebra saunter single-file to the camp’s water hole.
Oliver’s Camp invites you into a tranquil retreat in the heart of one of Tanzania’s least visited, but most rewarding national parks. Set in the beautiful Baobab-studded wilderness of Tanzania’s Tarangire National Park, the intimate Oliver’s Camp provides guests with easy access to some of East Africa’s most prolific and diverse wildlife viewing experiences, including abundant populations of big cats and large herds of elephants. Located in a remote corner of southern Tarangire National Park, Oliver’s Camp exudes all the spirit and romance of a classic African safari camp.
This oasis of beautifully crafted tents sits in the breathtaking UNESCO World Heritage Serengeti National Park and blends world-class comfort with a raw, inspiring landscape, rich in extraordinary game. From June to November, it’s right in the middle of the wildebeest migration corridor. A beautifully designed, contemporary camp in an excellent location, just fifteen miles from the Mara River and on the turning circle of the Great Migration between June and November.
Singita Sasakwa Lodge offers stately opulence reminiscent of an Edwardian manor house while isolated within a remarkable swath of African wilderness. One of just three small camps in an enormous private concession, the lodge enjoys a peerless location in the Serengeti, perched atop an escarpment with sweeping views over the plains. This is an opulent, top-of-the-line accommodation, as memorable as the wildlife that surrounds it.
Situated in the remote northern Serengeti, Sayari Camp is ideally positioned for exclusivity and wildlife viewing. This luxury tented camp is located minutes from the Mara River, famous for its amazing crossings of thousands of wildebeest and zebra as the annual migration moves through. The rest of the year offers excellent resident wildlife, from big cats and elephant to giraffe and gazelle. The camp also has access to the Lamai wedge, a remote northern corner of the Serengeti, where few other people go.
Built around the Kogakuria Kopje, a rocky outcrop acclaimed for its outstanding views of local wildlife, Lamai Serengeti boasts the most commanding vantage point in these far reaches of the northern Serengeti. The camp is just minutes from the Mara River, where more than a million wildebeest and zebra cross annually following the rains, braving the crocodiles below. When the migration moves south again, the area remains green and lush, maintaining impressive populations of resident predators and plains wildlife.
Beho was the first camp to be sited in The Selous Game Reserve, not on the banks, or the flood plains of the mighty Rufiji River, but in the cooler highlands so as to enjoy the ‘cooling breezes’ from which its name derives. Always designated as a ‘private camp’ it has fiercely protected its individuality and privileged location as one of the most ‘magical’ places it is possible to visit on safari in Africa.