Day 1: Pick up at 7.30am at Nairobi Hotel or the airport then drive to Ol Pejeta Conservancy. Arrive in time for hot lunch then have an afternoon game drive, Ol Pejeta Conservancy is home to the captive population of orphaned chimpanzees relocated from Burundi by the Jane Goodall Institute in the 1900. It is also home to three of the world’s last remaining three northern white rhinos, and a sanctuary for 111 critically endangered black rhinos. All members of the “Big five game” (lion, Cape buffalo, African elephant, leopard and rhinoceros) can be found on the Ol Pejeta Conservancy. Both black and white rhino thrive here. In 2013, Ol Pejeta recorded the birth of its 100th black rhino. This means the Conservancy is now a “Key 1” black rhino population on the IUCN African Rhino Specialist Group categorization. It is one of only eight sanctuaries in Africa with this distinction. Other rare animals that can be found on Ol Pejeta include the endangered African wild dog, oryx, Jackson’s hartebeest, Grevy’s zebra, serval, cheetah and bat-eared fox. The more common African wildlife can, of course, be found here too, including giraffes, vervet monkeys, baboons, hippos, impala, eland, Grant’s gazelle, dik-dik, plains zebra, silver backed jackal, hyena. There are also over 300 bird species on the Conservancy. Dinner and Overnight at Camp or Lodge.
Day 2: We will have an optional sunrise game drive, breakfast then drive to Lake Naivasha, after lunch we will have an afternoon guided walk at the Crescent Island including boat ride. . Lake Naivasha is particularly famous for its rich birdlife. The shores host abundant birdlife including pelicans, cormorants and fish-eagles with their haunting cry. There are more animals per acre than any other Kenyan Park, hence many film companies have been to the Island to film the herds of Wildebeeste, Waterbuck, Zebra and Gazelle. We are not fenced to allow the wildlife on the mainland to come in as they lose their habitat to development and the ever increasing population. Hippo graze all over us at night then sleep under the acacia or rest in the water by day. The giraffe who were born on the Island return to give birth; sometimes you see three generations at a time. Hyena come to hunt at night but are not resident on the island, the many python who do live here can be seen occasionally with a kill. Groups of Buffalo come and go but they are always monitored. Dinner and Overnight at Camp or Lodge.
Day3: After breakfast, we will drive to Maasai Mara game Reserve. Arrive in time for hot lunch then have an afternoon game drive. This is the most visited and perhaps the most beautiful of all the country’s game reserves. Lying at an altitude of 1650m 5414ft it covers an area of 1,510 sq km (almost 600 sq miles) and forms the northern extention of the Serengeti National Park in Tanzania. The Mara is a maasi word meaning spotted or dappled. It is a mosaic of rolling grassland dominated by red oat grass, small bush coverd hills and along the Mara River and its tributaries flowing towards Lake Victoria, riverine bush and Forest. Dinner and Overnight at Camp or Lodge.
Day 4: Today we will have a full day game drive in Mara with picnic lunch provided. All members of the “Big Five” (lion, leopard, African elephant, cape buffalo, and black rhinoceros) are found in the Maasai Mara. The population of black rhinos was fairly numerous until 1960, but it was severely depleted by poaching in the 1970s and early 1980s, dropping to a low of 15 individuals. Numbers have been slowly increasing, but the population was still only up to an estimated 23 in 1999.
Hippopotami and crocodiles are found in large groups in the Mara and Talek rivers. Leopards, hyenas, cheetahs, jackals, and bat-eared foxes can also be found in the reserve. The plains between the Mara River and the Esoit Siria Escarpment are probably the best area for game viewing, in particular regarding lion and cheetah.
As in the Serengeti, the wildebeest are the dominant inhabitants of the Maasai Mara, and their numbers are estimated in the millions. Around July of each year, these animals migrate north from the Serengeti plains in search of fresh pasture, and return to the south around October. The Great Migration is one of the most impressive natural events worldwide, involving some 1,300,000 wildebeest, 500,000 Thomson’s gazelles, 97,000 Topi, 18,000 elands, and 200,000 zebras. These migrants are followed along their annual, circular route by predators, most notably lions and hyena.
Antelopes can be found, including Grant’s gazelles, impalas, duikers and Coke’s hartebeests. The plains are also home to the distinctive Masai giraffe. The large roan antelope and the nocturnal bat-eared fox, rarely present elsewhere in Kenya, can be seen within the reserve borders. There is an option of visiting a local Maasai village. Dinner and Overnight at Camp or Lodge.
Day 5: We will have a sunrise game drive, drive back to the camp for breakfast then drive back to Nairobi.
Kindly note this package can be organized as a flying package. If you want flights included please make sure to mention in your email.
Will you spot more elephants or zebra? Giraffe or impala? Experience the dream come true of spending three nights in the epic Serengeti National Park – home of the Annual Great Migration – as well as visiting Tarangire National Park.
+254 714 329066 Nairobi office Siana Adhiambo/
+255 755 303 340 Tanzania office James Massawe/
+31 615554413 Dutch office Patricia Ouko
Uniafrica House along Koinange street, 1st-floor room number 120A
Mon to Friday from 9.00AM to 5.00PM - Sunday CLOSED
CoC 73084891