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Elephants,
Elephants & Elephants of
East Africa
Samburu,
Tsavo & Amboseli
National Parks
March
9-18, 2009
Join
acclaimed elephant author and photographer
Daryl Balfour
(African Elephants ? A Celebration of
Majesty) and well-known Kenyan professional
safari guide Phil West on a safari taking in the
very best elephant viewing areas in
Kenya
in March 2009.
The
safari, which will specifically be about elephants,
photographing elephants, seeing elephants, tracking
elephants and everything you ever wanted to know
about elephants, visits three of the continent?s
best areas for seeing and experiencing truly wild
elephants. (Of course, we will see other wildlife
on this safari too!) We will spend quality time
with scientists active in the field of elephant
research while optimising our opportunities to see
and photograph elephants in the remote and scenic
northern sector of Samburu National Reserve, the
wild corners of Tsavo East National Park and the
spectacular Amboseli National Park, where we will
hope to encounter elephants on the open plains
beneath the stunning backdrop of the snow-capped
Mount Kilimanjaro. The snows and glaciers of
Kilimanjaro are disappearing at a rapid rate, so
this is a scene that is unlikely to be around for
many more years, but the timing of our safari in
March offers a good chance of snow on the
peaks?with countless elephants on the plains
below!
If
time allows we will also arrange a special visit to
the elephant orphanage where Dame Daphne Sheldrick
has done such remarkable work with baby elephants
orphaned by poachers, and attempt to find some of
the young elephants she has returned to the wild in
Tsavo East.
ELEPHANT
WATCH CAMP - SAMBURU
Our
first stop, after a morning flight from
Nairobi
, will be the stunning Elephant Watch Camp (which
you can see at www.elephantwatchsafaris.com
or
see a great article in the September 2008 issue of
National Geographic) in northern Samburu. Started
and operated by Iain and Oria Douglas-Hamilton,
Elephant Watch runs in parallel to Iain?s Save
the Elephants foundation. Our time at Samburu will
be spent visiting the elephants and chatting to
some of the scientists currently doing research
here.
Samburu
National Reserve offers shelter to 66 known
elephant family units numbering 900 elephants in
total. These 66 families, which typically consist
of a matriarch and her offspring, are assigned to
one of three groups: the ?Residents,? the
?Migrants,? and the ?Sporadics.? As the
names suggest, the Residents remain in the Reserve
for most of the year, the Migrants move between
Samburu Reserve and other areas, and Sporadics only
pass through the Reserve from time to time.
Each
elephant family is named, and each elephant within
that family is named accordingly. For example,
Queen Elizabeth, Cleopatra, and Anastasia belong to
the Royals, (Residents) who are the dominant family
in the Reserve, while
Babylon
,
Jerusalem
and
Nazareth
belong to the Biblical Towns, (Migrants) making
random visits. Then Naivasha, Natron and Turkana
belong to the Rift Valley Lakes (Sporadics) and
only visit the Park in July and August.
Crossing
Uaso Nyiro, Samburu?
Daryl Balfour
In
addition to all these families, are the
?bulls,? the adult males numbering 200 who live
in solitude and wander far and wide in search of
food and females, a high risk and gain strategy,
and these bulls often get shot by poachers for
ivory or because of crop raiding. We have already
lost some of Samburu?s biggest bulls, Mungu,
Picasso, Martin Luther King, Gorbachev amongst
others, to the poachers? bullets.
During
our 3-night stay at Elephant Watch we will endeavor
to make the acquaintance of at least some of these
special animals. Samburu?s elephants are
generally very approachable, and close-up
encounters for intimate photography should be
assured.
SATAO
CAMP ? TSAVO EAST
From
Samburu we will fly due south to our next stop,
Tsavo East National Park.Tsavo East and elephant
conservation are inextricably intertwined and the
?Tsavo Story? is one of the classic tales of
letting Nature take its course. We will tell you
this story one evening at the fireside! Tsavo was
where Daphne Sheldrick and her husband David
resided, and where Daphne still to this day
re-introduces and releases many of the young
elephant orphans she rescues and revives. Tsavo is
legendary for its massive elephant herds and big
tuskers, and I have recently received pictures of a
magnificent bull photographed here in September
2008 that must rank among the biggest in
Africa
. Of course, Tsavo is also famous (notorious) for
the classic tale The Man-Eaters of Tsavo,
seen on the big screen as The Ghosts of
Darkness.
Near
Satao Camp;
Photo
? 2008 Johan Marais
We
have chosen the romantic yet rustic Satao Camp (www.sataocamp.com)
for its prime location with a popular elephant
drinking hole right on its doorstep. When we arrive
in Tsavo we will collect our own 4x4 safari
vehicles which Phil and I will drive for the
remainder of our safari. We will explore the
magnificent countryside of Tsavo ? this is where
Phil spent much of his boyhood and he knows the
area exceptionally well. We spend three nights in
Tsavo East.
From
Tsavo we undertake an interesting drive across wild
country and past some amazing volcanic formations
to our next stop,
Amboseli
National Park
.
TORTILIS
CAMP ? AMBOSELI
Amboseli
is where those classic, iconic images of East
Africa are taken ? the spectacular conical
snow-capped
peak
of
Mount Kilimanjaro
with wild animals in the foreground. These scenes
are unforgettable ? and are not difficult to
achieve if your guides put you in the right place
at the right time!
Near
Tortilis Camp; ? 2008
Daryl Balfour
Tortilis
Camp (www.tortilis.com)
is one of my favourite locations in
East Africa
and a camp I visit every year, at least once or
twice. Located on a small hill facing Mt
Kilimanjaro, some of my best wake-up calls in
Africa have taken place here, with coffee served on
the tent veranda facing the gleaming white peaks of
the highest mountain in Africa (and the highest
free-standing mountain on the planet, too.)
Like
Samburu, Amboseli is home to a long-running
elephant research project, in fact the Amboseli
Elephant Research Project is the
longest study of wild elephants in the world. AERP
works to understand the lives and ensure the future
of nearly 1,500 elephants in the Amboseli ecosystem
fed by the waters of Kilimanjaro. Studies here
conducted by Cynthia Moss, Joyce Poole, Harvey
Croze, Norah Njiraini, Soila Sayialel and others
have created a database and knowledge of this
elephant population unrivalled by elephants
anywhere else in Africa. We are likely to see some
of these researchers at work in the field and will
endeavor to have at least one of them join us for
an evening at our lodge to discuss their field
work. Our
days will be spent enjoying the incredible elephant
viewing and photography this park offers, and we
hope to observe some of the famous herds and
matriarchs such as Echo and others. We spend three
nights in Amboseli before setting off for the
scenic drive back to
Nairobi
.
DATES
AND COST OF THE SAFARI
The
safari runs from March 9 to 18, 2009 and begins and
ends in
Nairobi
,
Kenya
. We suggest that safari particpants arrive in
Nairobi
on March 8 and overnight there, as our flight to
Samburu departs early on the morning of the 9th.
We can assist with hotel or guest house
reservations for that evening should you require
them.
Our
return to
Nairobi
on the 18th will be about midday, early
enough for most outgoing international flights
departing that afternoon or evening.
The
cost of the safari is US$8195 per person sharing,
from
Nairobi
. Included in the cost of the safari will be a
signed copy of the book Great Tuskers of
Africa by Johan Marais, which has a
classic painting of the final photograph I took
before the great tusker Tshokwane trampled
me in December 1992, on the cover.
All
park and conservation fees, full board
accommodation, internal flights & charters,
house wines with meals, spirits, soft drinks and
bottled water and the services of
Daryl Balfour
& Phil West are included in your safari fare.
For
more information about this safari, or to reserve
your place, please contact daryl@wildphotossafaris.com
or
wildphotos@mweb.co.za
now!
WILD
DOGS & BIG CATS OF SERENGETI
One Departure in February 2009
FEBRUARY 15-24, 2009
Daryl
Balfour?s Wildphotos Safaris
are proud to offer one very special departure for
2009, taking in the very best predator viewing areas
in the southern Serengeti during the wildebeest
migration.
Included
in this safari is the possibility of viewing the
rare and endangered African Wild Dog (or painted
wolf) Lycaon pictus, which was considered to
be almost extinct in
East Africa
until recently. Discoveries of emergent packs in
several areas have given conservationists renewed
hope for these fascinating predators, and we have
planned this safari to enable us to have the best
possible viewing and photographic opportunities of
these animals as well as the other predators that
follow the migrating wildebeest at this time of
year.
Apart
from wild dogs, the trips are focussed on excellent
predator opportunities, including lion, leopard,
cheetah and hyaena and I am confident that this
safari will result in superb photo opportunities.
Of course, apart from the carnivores we will have
ample opportunity to view and photograph the wealth
of other wildlife the Serengeti has on offer.
The
safaris will be led by Daryl & Sharna Balfour, two of
Africa
?s leading wildlife photographers and authors for
the past two decades.
Accommodation
will be in a small, rustic private mobile tented
camp chosen to maximise our proximity to the best
viewing areas. This is NOT a luxury camp, though
guests will have spacious walk-in tents with en
suite hot bucket showers and a ?long-drop?
latrine toilet, comfortable beds with fresh linen,
and well-prepared, tasty meals prepared by our camp
staff and served either al fresco or in our
cosy mess tent. A good selection of wines, beers,
spirits and soft drinks are included in the safari
price.
The
safari is for a maximum of 8 guests each, with only
4 passengers in specially built
Toyota
4x4 vehicles to maximise space, comfort and
convenience.
We
have been extremely fortunate to secure dates for
this exclusive safari, using a small, upmarket
lightweight mobile camp that will allow us to set
up camp in the heart of the best wild dog area at
Piyaya or Nasera in the south-eastern Serengeti, as
well as visit Ndarabit and Ndutu. The beauty of us
using this camp is that it allows total flexibility
and we will even be able to move it according to
the movements of the wild dogs or other predators
if considered necessary.
The plan is to spend 4 nights in the Piyaya
area of the southern Serengeti and then move camp
to the Ndutu area further west, actually
sited in the Ngorongoro Conservation Area for 3
nights.
An
additional benefit of this camp is that the
spectacular wildebeest migration should be massed
in this area during February ? the time of the
annual calving when 400 000 young are born each
year ? adding to the predator excitement. This
area has also rewarded with good sightings of rarer
carnivores such as bat-eared fox, aardwolf,
aardvark and even caracal in recent years.
This
safari starts in
Arusha
,
Tanzania
(
Kilimanjaro
International
Airport
) on February 15 followed by a charter flight from
Arusha
Domestic
Airport
to the safari area in a Cessna Caravan on the
morning of February 16, seven nights in camp on an
all-inclusive basis, followed by a return charter
to Arusha on February 23. A night will be spent in
a country hotel in Arusha at the start and end of
this safari.
This
safari costs US$7295 per person sharing, from
Arusha.
As
demand for this safari is expected to be extremely
high we have set a cut-off date for bookings of
December 1 this year. If you are keen to
participate in this unique safari please contact us
immediately!
THIS
SAFARI IS EXPECTED TO BE HUGELY POPULAR AND LIKELY
TO SELL OUT QUICKLY, SO DON?T BEAT ABOUT THE BUSH
CONTACT
US NOW IF YOU ARE INTERESTED!
Daryl
& Sharna Balfour
wildphotos@mweb.co.za
********
--------------------------------
SERENGETI
MIGRATION, NGORONGORO CRATER
&
AMBOSELI?S ELEPHANTS
19
- 30 March 2009
A
Safari with Daryl Balfour
?For the wildebeest it is a period of birth and renewal. For the
predators a time of plenty??
The
annual migration of more than a million wildebeest
across the plains of the Mara-Serengeti ecosystem
has neither beginning nor end, for the migration is
an endless cycle as the animals wander in search of
food and water. However, if there is any beginning
it can only be at the moment of birth, an annual
event that sees more than 400 000 wildebeest calves
delivered on the short grass plains of the southern
Serengeti in
Tanzania
over a period of a few weeks.
Join
acclaimed wildlife photographer and author Daryl
Balfour
on an exclusive safari timed to take in this annual
spectacle early in 2009. The trip, limited to a
maximum of eight people and designed for optimum
comfort and convenience with only four passengers
to each customised 4x4 game viewing vehicle, starts
from
Kilimanjaro International Airport
,
Tanzania
and will take in the Eighth Wonder of the World,
Ngorongoro Crater, the Cradle of Mankind (Oldupai
Gorge) and the southern reaches of the Serengeti.
We
have designed these expeditions to be small enough
to offer each group personal attention and optimal photographic
positioning, but will still offer non-photographers
superb game viewing opportunities. The Serengeti at
this time of year is at its best, with great
sightings of lions, cheetah, hyaenas and most of
the other wildlife species the area is acclaimed
for.
Enthusiastic
photographers will be able to call on Daryl
Balfour?s expertise in this field for assistance
and advice on how to improve their skills behind
the lens, or simply enjoy the fireside tales of his
experiences in some of the remotest corners of
Africa
over the past two decades.
Itinerary
at a glance:
March
19:
Fly to
Kilimanjaro
International
Airport
,
Moshi
,
Tanzania
, transfer to New Arusha Hotel for overnight,
briefing etc
March
20:
transfer to Arusha airport for a private charter
flight to Ndutu Lodge in the southern Serengeti
region, for 4 nights
March
24:
Morning drive via Oldupai Gorge ? the Cradle of
Mankind ? to Ngorongoro Crater with picnic lunch
and afternoon spent on the Crater floor. Overnight
Ngorongoro Sopa Lodge for 2 nights
March
26:
Return to Arusha later afternoon for shopping
(Tanzanite, Tsavorite gemstones, curios etc);
Overnight New Arusha Hotel.
March
27: We
travel by good tarred road about 2 hours to the
Tanzania/Kenya border where we cross into
Kenya
then drive cross-country to our next camp, the
luxury tented Tortilis Camp, facing Mt Kilimanjaro
on the western edge of
Amboseli
National Park
. We spend three nights here.
Amboseli
National Park
is one of the treasures of
East Africa
, and probably the best place on the continent for
seeing and photographing elephants really close.
This is where the classic images of the snow-capped
Mt Kilimanjaro with animals, particularly
elephants, in the foreground are taken, and we have
timed our safari to give us an excellent chance of
seeing the mountain with heavy snow cover. Apart
from elephants, Amboseli also offers good viewing
of a multitude of other wildlife species.
March
30: Travel by private charter
flight to
Nairobi
?s
Jomo
Kenyatta
International
Airport
, arriving about midday, for onward flight
connections.
Expanded
itinerary information:
Due
to the arrival times of flights in to Kilimanjaro,
the first night of the safari will be spent in a
comfortable hotel in the heart of Arusha. Meals
will be for your own account here, as many guests
opt for room service after their late arrival.
The
first day on safari will see guests travel by road
through the bustling safari capital of Arusha
before taking a private charter flight across
Maasailand and over the scenic Ngorongoro highlands
to the renowned Ndutu Lodge, ideally situated under
classic umbrella-thorn acacias in the heart of the
southern Serengeti. At this time of year Ndutu
buzzes with international photographers and film
crews, attracted by the spectacle provided by the
wildebeest.
The
next four nights will be spent at Ndutu Lodge, from
where we will head out early each morning,
exploring the grassy plains and woodlands in the
area, tracking the massed herds of wildebeest and
zebra, watching the birth of new calves if we?re
lucky, and seeking predators such as lion, cheetah
and hyaena on the hunt. The area also teems with
other wildlife, including elephants, eland, various
gazelle species, Kirk?s dik-dik, giraffe and, if
we?re lucky, the elusive leopard. Last year I was
rewarded with a record 18 different cheetah in one
day, as well as my best ever sightings of aardvark
in 22 years of photography!
On
leaving Ndutu we will travel by road across the
Serengeti plains, visiting Oldupai Gorge, the
?Cradle of Mankind? en route to the
famous Ngorongoro Crater, home to a very high
density of lions, some of Africa?s best black
rhino viewing, spectacular elephant bulls and a
wide variety of other game species including
Thomson?s and Grant?s gazelles, Coke?s
hartebeest and golden jackals.
At Oldupai we will enjoy a brief informal
lecture about the palaeo-anthropological diggings
and discoveries that have taken place here over the
years, by, among others, the famous
husband-and-wife team of Louis and Mary Leakey.
After enjoying a picnic lunch on our way up into
the highlands from Oldupai we will spend the
afternoon in the Crater floor. That night we stay
at the Ngorongoro Sopa Hotel situated right on the
crater rim, overlooking the crater itself. After an
early start the next morning we?ll tour the
crater floor once more.
The
last day of the Tanzanian leg of our safari sees us
bidding farewell to the Crater and making our way
back overland to Arusha where we spend the night at
the same hotel in town. There will be an
opportunity in Arusha to shop for the acclaimed and
rare Tanzanite and other gemstones, which
are mined at the only known deposit on the planet
near the town. I have an excellent contact with an
international wholesale dealer here, and high
quality stones at bargain prices can be expected.
From
Arusha we travel by paved road to the
Kenya
border, about 2 hours away, where we pass through
Immigration and Customs formalities and enter
Kenya
. From here we turn east and travel across country
to the spectacular
Amboseli
National Park
.
This
is where the classic African scenes of wildlife ?
in particular elephants - with the snow-capped
peaks of Mt Kilimanjaro are taken. Amboseli is
without doubt one of the best places in the world
to observe large numbers of elephants going about
their daily lives. The Amboseli Elephant Research
Project, under the leadership of Cynthia Moss, has
been studying the elephants here for 40 years now,
and every elephant in the park is known, most by
name! (I suggest you read Cynthia?s book, Elephant
Memories, if you are at all interested in
the lives and behaviour of these wonderful
animals.)
We
spend 3 nights in Amboseli at the luxury tented
Tortilis Camp, located on a small hill facing Mt
Kilimanjaro. Italian-owned, Tortillis offers great
cuisine, much of it with an Italian flavour!
Our
last morning at Amboseli, March 30, 2009, sees us
bidding farewell to the mountain and the elephants
before we board our private charter flight to
Nairobi
?s
Jomo
Kenyatta
International
Airport
, for connection with onward international
departures.
Flight
Details:
International flights from your home to
Kilimanjaro
,
Tanzania
and back again are for your own account and
arrangement. You should plan on being in Arusha for
the first night in our lodgings on March 19, and
for departure from
Nairobi
on the afternoon or the night of March 30. You can
either fly from the
USA
via
Johannesburg
with SAA or Air
Tanzania
or via
Amsterdam
on KLM. There are daily flights from
Johannesburg
Contact us for information of flights if
required. There are excellent direct flights from
South Africa
to and from both Arusha and
Nairobi
at the start and end of the safari.
The
cost of this safari is US$7995 per person sharing.
The single supplement is $3795.
The
price includes: Full board accommodation sharing double rooms, the private charter flight
from Arusha to the Serengeti, all viewing and park
entrance fees including three visits to the
crater floor, the private charter flight from
Amboseli to Nairobi, all drives in customized four
wheel drive transport and two experienced
professional guides including professional
wildlife photographer Daryl Balfour and Kenyan
guide Mike Cheffings.
The
price excludes: International
flights, drinks, laundry, airport departure taxes,
Tanzania
and
Kenya
visas (available on arrival at the airport) and
items of a personal nature, and meals at the hotel
in Arusha.
For
further details on prices and availability please contact
us now as these safaris have sold out rapidly
in previous years.
CONTACT
US NOW IF YOU ARE INTERESTED IN JOINING US !
www.wildphotossafaris.com
wildphotos@mweb.co.za
--------------------------------------
DARYL
BALFOUR?S WILDPHOTOS SAFARIS
WILDEBEEST
MIGRATION 2009
?THE
GREATEST SHOW ON EARTH?
&
?THE
WORLD CUP OF WILDLIFE!?

Once
again in 2009 Daryl Balfour?s Wildphotos Safaris
will be offering a number of exclusive wildebeest
migration safaris in
Kenya
?s acclaimed Masai Mara National Reserve. As we
have done in past years, we will be setting up an
exclusive private tented camp, accommodating a
maximum of 12 guests.
Acclaimed South African wildlife
photographers and authors Daryl & Sharna
Balfour will be on hand to offer insights into
this wildlife spectacle as well as specialist
advice about how to take better photos of your
safari-in-a-lifetime. The annual wildebeest
migration, one of the natural wonders of the world,
has been termed ?the greatest show on
earth?
as well as ?the world cup of
wildlife? by
past guests, and it is truly something that is
impossible to describe or even adequately film or
photograph.
An
exclusive private tented camp ? a new camp used
for the first time in 2007 - offering top quality
catering, and flush toilets
will be erected solely for the use of these
safaris, at a secluded private location in one of
the best game viewing areas of the Masai Mara. The
camp will feature spacious walk-in safari tents
with private en-suite ablution facilities (private
HOT bucket showers in an enclosed attached cubicle
and a flush toilet for each tent), while meals will
be taken under the stars or in a large, airy mess
tent at linen-covered tables set with fine china
and stemware. This is the way Ernest Hemingway and
Robert Ruark experienced and wrote about
Africa
, and is the best way to avoid the over-crowding
mass-market tourism of the bigger commercial lodges
and safari hotels.
Your
eventful and full days will be spent exploring
this, the northernmost limits of the Mara-Serengeti
ecosystem, seeking the area?s abundant wildlife -
including the migrating herds of wildebeest and
zebra that by this time of year should be massing
for their return to the Serengeti in the south. We
have timed these safaris hopefully to coincide with
the best possibilities of seeing the spectacular
river crossings, when tens of thousands of
wildebeest & zebra pour across the
crocodile-infested
Mara
River
. We have a 100% record over the years of showing
our guests these crossings, often with spectacular
crocodile action too!
Our
daily schedule, which we adjust and fine-tune
according to the likes and wants of safari
participants, usually involves a pre-dawn wake-up
call followed by tea, coffee and a light breakfast
in the Mess before we head-out in search of the
day?s offerings. Each vehicle is equipped with a
?tea & coffee basket? along with freshly
baked cookies, cinnamon buns or even egg &
bacon jaffles for a mid-morning stop out in the
wilds. We return to camp around 11.30am for a
slap-up brunch, after which most safari-goers enjoy
a well-earned shower and siesta. Afternoon tea is
served around 3.30-4pm followed by the afternoon
drive. Sundowners are often enjoyed in the field,
(if we have the time with all the wildlife
viewing!) after which we return to camp for
pre-dinner drinks at the fireside followed by a
three-course dinner. Some days we may modify this
schedule and take a picnic lunch with us, staying
out all day as we explore further afield. The
animals and the wilderness dictate our schedule ?
we place more emphasis on the wildlife experience
than we do on camp timetables!
The
Masai Mara is renowned for its predators ? lions,
leopards and cheetah are there in abundance - all
attracted by the large numbers of herbivores, and
is regarded as one of the best wildlife viewing
destinations in
Africa
by Daryl & Sharna Balfour, as well as by many
other top wildlife photographers and film makers.
The Mara is specifically featured in the BBC?s
acclaimed documentary series Big Cat Diary and
we are likely to see many of the lions, leopard and
cheetah that have become the stars of this TV
series, as well as the stars of the film crew
itself!
Birding
in the area is also excellent, and first-time
visitors to the area are sure to tick off a number
of ?lifers?.
Transport
will be in comfortable customised
Toyota
4x4 safari vehicles with a maximum of four guests
to a vehicle (as opposed to the East African safari
norm of eight or nine). Each person will have their
own open window as well as a large open roof hatch.
All
safaris begin and end at
Nairobi
?s Jomo Kenyatta International Airport (JKIA) on
the safari dates specified below. You should make
your own flight or other arrangements to be on (or
at the airport simultaneously with the arrival of)
South African Airways flight SA 182 from
Johannesburg, which arrives at 14h50 local time
daily. This flight is the recommended means of
travel to
Nairobi
from
South Africa
and departs
Johannesburg
daily at 09h35. The return flight is SA 183 out of
Nairobi, departing about 15h40 daily and arriving
back in Johannesburg at 19h00 SA time. Delta
Airlines are introducing direct flights from
New York
to
Nairobi
in 2008, while BA and KLM also offer direct flights
from the
UK
and
Europe
. We have a private charter flight direct from Jomo
Kenyatta International to the Masai Mara shortly
after all guests have passed through immigration
formalities in Nairobi, and returning direct to
JKIA at the end of your safari, arriving about
midday well in time for outgoing international
connections.
Should
you require hotel accommodation and transfers in
Nairobi
either before or after your safari, we will be
happy to make these on your behalf.
The
cost of the safari excludes airfares
to
Nairobi
, allowing you to make your own personal flight
arrangements, utilise frequent flyer air miles,
arrive from other destinations, etc.
Dates
for the 2009 safaris are: August 29 -Sept 4; Sept
5-11; Sept 12-18; Sept 19-25
The
cost of the safari includes a private charter
flight by 12-seater Cessna Caravan upon arrival in
Nairobi on the start day of your safari, to the
Masai Mara, full board in camp, all drinks, park
fees, services of the camp staff (including
complimentary daily laundry), and the
assistance & guiding of world-renowned wildlife
photographers and photo-journalists Daryl &
Sharna Balfour. Our other guides, Phil West,
Johann du Toit and Pierre Burton are
among the leading guides of East Africa and are
indeed involved in the training of other
up-and-coming guides in
Kenya
.
The
fully inclusive cost of the tour is $4995 nett
per person sharing. Single supplements are $1995
nett but are limited to 2 singles at this rate.
Please note that due to currency fluctuations and
other possible increases beyond our control the
tour price remains subject to change until full
payment has been received by the operator. A 25 %
non-refundable deposit will be payable to confirm a
booking. Full payment is required 90 days prior to
commencement of the safari. The price does not
include the airfare from your home to
Nairobi
, visas, airport departure taxes, curio purchases,
gratuities for guides and camp staff or other
personal expenses.
THE
WILD DOGS OF
BOTSWANA
AUGUST
12-19, 2009
The
Kwando Private Game Reserve in northern Botswana
has developed a reputation as being one of the
best, if not the best, places to observe wild dogs
in southern Africa, perhaps the whole of Africa.
The dogs have denned and produced pups within a few
kilometres of our camp every year save one for the
past 8 seasons and we have planned this safari to
tie in with the probable emergence of the new pups
from the den, one of the most exciting spectacles
in wildlife viewing.
This
safari is limited to four persons only and we will
spend 4 nights at Kwando Lagoon camp on the Kwando
River, the closest facility to where the dogs
usually locate their den (in 2008 we were less than
25 minutes from the den site), followed by 3 nights
at the new Little Kwara Camp, on the eastern edge
of the permanent waters of the Okavango Delta.
Kwando
Lagoon Camp is a classic tented camp built on
raised wooden decks overlooking a tranquil lagoon
off the
Kwando
River
(which becomes the
Linyanti
River
and subsequently the
Chobe
River
on its journey to join the Zambezi near the
Botswana
border with
Zimbabwe
at Kasane). In recent years it has become one of my
favourite camps in
Botswana
, both for its excellent game viewing as well as
its traditional old safari style ? none of that
?Gucci game lodge? frippery here!
The camp exists for the game viewing and
there is none of the pressure of many other camps
to return from outings to fit in with the camp
kitchen timetable?
The
Kwando concession is the most remote in
Botswana
, situated as it is in the far north-eastern corner
of the country bordering on to
Namibia
?s
Caprivi Strip
, and Lagoon Camp is undoubtedly the most remote
and isolated in the country too.
Apart
from its wild dogs ? as already mentioned they
have denned here every year apart from one over the
past 9 years ? the region is renowned for its
lions and elephants and other big game. Sable and
roan antelope also occur here, while
Kwando
makes a special effort with its night drives, often
following predators hunting until late in the
night.
From
Kwando Lagoon we move to the newly built Little
Kwara Camp. Beautifully located on high decking
under spectacular jackalberry, sausage and
knobthorn trees, this luxury tented camp is
situated on the very edge of the permanent
waterways of the Okavango Delta. I have chosen this
camp to give a complete change from the activities
of Kwando Lagoon and while game drives will
certainly be an option (and wild dogs, lion,
cheetah and leopard all occur here in numbers) we
will also be able to undertake boat and mokoro
(traditional dug-out canoe) outings. Kwara in fact
has easy boat access to the two largest expanses of
open water in the Okavango Delta, Gadikwe and
Gobega Lagoons, my old stamping grounds when
running a safari camp in the Delta back in the
1980s.
This
safari is limited to four persons only and will
have the sole use of vehicles and boats for the
duration of the safari. We have also chartered a
large 8-seater Airvan aircraft for our party to
avoid the stress and hassles associated with flying
in small aircraft, particularly insofar as excess
baggage is concerned. Charter flights in
Botswana
usually limit passengers to 15 kilograms of baggage
each, including camera gear, so we have eliminated
this hassle by using a larger aircraft!
The
safari cost of $8400 per person sharing includes
all accommodation, meals and drinks at both camps;
all activities including drives and boating
excursions; medical evacuation insurance with MRI;
daily laundry service at both camps; all park fees
and government tourism levies and taxes; private
charter flights between Maun and the camps and back
to Maun.
The
scheduled flights on Air
Botswana
from
Johannesburg
to Maun and back have NOT been included in this
quotation, but these flights can be booked on your
behalf. Please let us know if you require this
service.
A
deposit of 25% will be required to confirm your
booking within 21 days of making your reservation.
Please
contact us now should you be interested in this
safari.
Daryl
& Sharna Balfour
wildphotos@mweb.co.za
Tel +27-13-7440611
--------------------------------------
BLUE
WATER EXTREME DIVING
Daryl Balfour has spent the past several months
investigating new areas of operation for WildphotosSafaris
and is now able to offer diving safaris to some of the
world?s best Freediving hotspots.
Among the trips we can offer include Freediving with
Orcas and Whale Sharks and cage diving with great white
sharks for amazing underwater photo opportunities, as well
as freedive spearfishing for the ultimate trophies of giant
yellowfin tuna, dogtooth tuna, wahoo and even billfish.
All excursions are professionally guided and safety
considerations are uppermost. Daryl has been freedive
spearfishing for more than 40 years, has worked as a
commercial diver and is a qualified master scuba diver.
Cape
Town
,
South Africa
is one of the best places in the world to attempt to spear
giant yellowfin tuna of 200 lbs or more, and we are able to
offer tailor-made trips specifically with these fish in
mind.
Contact us now for more information about a trip
tailored just for you.
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