Best African safaris by cheetahsafaris.co.ke

Kenya and Tanzania cheetah safaris recommendations in 2021? Our popular safari packages allow you to venture into new places and encounter unmissable wildlife. With a pre-organised trip, you will have an itinerary planned out for you, telling you where you will visit and when you will be there. Our safari packages also run throughout the year, so if you’re looking to experience the hot season weather or prefer to go during low season, we will have something for you. Be inspired with some of our most popular safari holidays, where you’re guaranteed a once-in-a-lifetime experience.

It’s very possible to extend your Safari from Samburu National Reserve to other destinations like the Lake Nakuru National Park for lesser and greater flamingos, Lake Naivasha to view the crescent island, Aberdares National Park, Amboseli National Park, waking up to the majestic views of Mt. Kilimanjaro, The Masai Mara National Reserve to spot the big five species and the Wildebeest Migration, or either choose to relax and unwind by the cool waters of the Indian ocean at the Kenyan Coast, Diani, Watamu, Lamu, Kilifi beaches. The Reserve is known for its amazing sundowners’ views, Hiking of Mt. Ololokwe and dining in the wild. Do game walks with Samburu Warriors, and visit some scenic spots that will take your breath away.

Short & Long Haul Kenya Safari Holidays: Whether you are looking for a family safari holiday, a day-long safari adventure or a 2-week Kenya safari expedition, you can be sure that Cheetah Revolution Safaris will have the package that suits you. Take a look at our selection of Kenya Wildlife Safaris below to find your dream African safari. Most of our short and long haul safaris cover major parks in Kenya including the award-winning Masai Mara National Reserve, Amboseli National Park to view the Mt. Kilimanjaro, Samburu National Reserve home to the special five, Lake Nakuru National Park home to the white rhinos and greater and lesser flamingos, Lake Bogoria National Reserve home to the greater and lesser flamingos, Tsavo East and Tsavo West National Parks, Aberdares and Mt. Kenya National Parks, Olpejeta Conservancies and Nairobi National Park. See many more information on Wildebeest migration safaris. There are many things to see and do in Kenya! From the dream beaches on the coast of the Indian Ocean, unique flora and fauna, savannahs, the transhumant sea, the islands of the Kenyan archipelago – Lamu Island with its forts built by Arabs, then Pate Island, further away, where the basic task is lobster fishing – continuing with the thrilling “safari” (by the way, the word comes from the Swahili language and means “travel”) in national parks and nature reserves such as Tsavo East and West, Masai Mara, Amboseli, Lake Turkana – the largest desert lake and also alkaline of on the globe, with a unique color from which it is also called the “Sea-of-Jad”, lake at the foot of Mount Kulal on the Kenyan side of the Great African Rift Valley – continuing with the natural complex Samburu, Buffalo Springs and Shaba, then Lake Nakuru and not least with the impressive Mount Kenya (5199 m).

Africa is a fabulous place if you are searching for raw nature feeling. The Kruger Park covers almost two million hectares of protected bush, and is home to almost 150 species of mammals, nearly 120 different reptiles and over 500 bird species. It’s wild, wonderful, and easily accessible from Johannesburg. Spend a couple of days exploring Kruger’s vast array of habitats and wonderful wildlife, before setting off into Zimbabwe, where you can marvel at the intricate, ancient, Zimbabwe Ruins and the scenic Matobo National Park, with its impressive boulders. At Hwange National Park, you’re sure to see elephant by the dozen and, if you’re lucky, the rest of the Big Five. Then it’s off to the magnificent, thundering Vic Falls with all of its beauty, and pretty much any adventure activity your heart could desire!

Kenya is the country where you must come to discover the richest African wildlife. When you get to Masai Mara National Park, you just have to turn your head and immediately you will encounter an antelope, a giraffe, a zebra. But Kenya has many more national parks that are not the same – each with its own specificity. The coasts of the Indian Ocean have that fine white sand and big, green phosphorescence that every European dreams about, especially when in the old continent it is cold and sad. Along the coast (as in Tanzania), an extremely rich civilization developed from the contact between Arab merchants and locals of color. The historical traces can be found in Mombassa, but especially in Lamu, this traditional small town, isolated for centuries on an island not far from the border with Somalia. Find even more info on https://cheetahsafaris.co.ke/.