|





| |
OFFBEAT
SAFARIS IN KENYA
These riding safaris
are perhaps the most exciting in all of Africa, and
participants need to be competent riders to maximise
their enjoyment. Safaris can be tailored to the
requirements of a small group, however the normal
format is for guests to join a set departure safari
(see lower down this page for the 2008 dates) on
itineraries that extend to 10 or 14 days. Two of these
days are usually spent relaxing at Deloraine, the
owner's sumptuous colonial mansion near Rongai, and the
remainder riding through either the Mara plains or the
Laikipia plateau in northern Kenya. The Mara offers
wide open plains and quantities of plains game
unrivalled anywhere else in the world - rides normally
begin from a delightful campsite beneath the Loita
Hills and finish on the banks of the Mara River over
one hundred miles distant. Some days call for early
starts and long rides, on others guests use the
campsite as a base from which to explore the
surrounding landscape. Nights are spent under canvas in
comfortable tents, and guests are served exceptionally
good food by uniformed waiters. Although riding with
Offbeat is both challenging and strenuous, every
concession to guest's comfort is made at camp,
including hot water bottles for the ladies, piping hot
bush showers, ice cold cocktails, and an efficient
laundry and shoe cleaning service.

Offbeat also organise
rides of a similar nature through the vast and remote
Laikipia plateau in the north, where the wildlife is
equally diverse, if not evident in such numbers as the
plains further south. In 2004 Offbeat Safaris and Wild and Exotic collaborated
to pioneer a third and equally exciting destination through Amboseli National
Park close to the border with Tanzania. Please scroll down the page to read the
itineraries for all three of these riding safaris. All safaris are lead by either
the owner, Tristan Voorspuy, or one of his experienced and charismatic guides.
Please do contact us to discuss the detail of
either Offbeat programme - we will be delighted to assist in the planning of
your adventure, and having done several riding safaris in both locations, are
eminently qualified to advise and help.
Below we have compiled a fact sheet, which
should answer many questions, sample itineraries based on our own experiences
with Offbeat, prices and availability.
Wild and Exotic are licensed by the Civil Aviation Authority (license number
6445) to sell the international flights necessary for this itinerary. Please
contact us for further details and our recommended airlines.
Please click on
the link below to view any of the articles recently written about safaris with
Offbeat:
Jane
Wheatley: My Dream Date in Africa, The Times January 2007
Geoffrey Dean: Getting a leg
up, Travel Africa July 2007
Lady
Celestria Noel: Close Encounters, Private Air 2006
Wild and
Exotic fact sheet for Offbeat Safaris
Accommodation:
Spacious 10ft x 9ft
sleeping tents with fly windows and built in floors.
All are furnished with bedside tables, camp beds
(double on request), mattresses, sheets and blankets,
hot water bottles are supplied in the evenings, as are
towels, soap and torches. There are gas lamps and
hurricane lamps in each tent. Each double tent has its
own private loo and hot showers are available at any
time should you wish to clean off.
Activities:
On non-moving days there is the opportunity to walk,
swim and take game drives; sometimes we can arrange
bird shooting, even fishing trips to Lake Victoria are
possible for an extra charge provided that Wild and
Exotic receive sufficient notice. At night we take
powerful spotlights and have often been rewarded with
experiencing the sensational sights that normally take
place under the cover of darkness.
Cash:
Suggest you change US$100 on arrival and get $30
in small change Kshs.20, 50 and 100 notes.
There are no opportunities to change money once you
have left Nairobi and small attractive items are on
sale from the Masai.
Children: Children
are accepted on riding safaris but they must be
competent riders.
There are no discounts for children.
Clothing List:
Clothing list will be sent on request. A free laundry
service is provided on all non-moving days and boots
and shoes are cleaned daily by the Offbeat staff.
Drinks: Beers
and Sodas are free, as is all alcohol on tailor made
safaris.
Set departures request for wines, spirits to be
covered at cost. Duty fee whisky is offset against
this if brought. Ice and lemon is supplied for drinks
at all campsites.
Game:
Is plentiful everywhere on riding safaris, including
elephant, buffalo, lion, leopard and cheetah, as well
as the countless tens of thousands of plains game that
congregate in the Mara at certain times of year.
Although rides take place where dangerous game abounds,
the guides are knowledgeable and conversant with the
habits and likely reactions of the game in any
situation.
How to Get There:
There are daily flights from the UK to Nairobi. Unless you wish to spend a
night in Nairobi (Wild and Exotic can recommend hotels and book on your behalf)
you are advised to take flights that arrive into Nairobi in the morning. Wild
and Exotic are licensed by the Civil Aviation Authority (license number 6445) to
sell the international flights necessary for this itinerary. Please contact us
for further details and our recommended airlines. A representative of
Offbeat will meet you on arrival and you will be driven
to join the start of the safari, enjoying a picnic
lunch en route. Nairobi is three hours ahead of
Greenwich meantime, so there is little adjustment
required by the body clock.
Insurance:
Whilst Offbeat carry public liability insurance
and take all possible care we strongly advise you to
have full medical and holiday insurance. Wild & Exotic
Sport can arrange this if instructed.
Length of Rides:
4 – 6 hours in the saddle.
Picnic lunch carried in saddlebags on moving days, with
lunch breaks of up to two hours.
Some walking on foot may be necessary over very rough
terrain.
Meals:
Delicious full breakfasts that comprise fruit,
porridge, bacon, sausages, eggs, tomatoes and fresh
bread are served every morning. On moving days you
carry saddlebag picnics, otherwise lunches may be
served at campsite or by barbeque over an open fire.
Dinner is three courses of fresh ingredients served by
candlelight under the stars and besides a roaring
campfire. There are supplies of dry ice and cubes, and
camps are self sufficient for a week.
Bread is baked daily on open fires and the chefs
are extremely good and versatile.
Medical and safety: A
medical kit is on hand in camp and in the saddle.
Radio contact is maintained from camp with the
Flying Doctor Service.
Clients should take an anti malarial drug as a
precaution.
Non-Riders:
Offbeat
will take non-riders but this should be
discussed with Wild and Exotic first. The full set
departure trips are not recommended for non-riders.
Riding Ability:
You should be comfortable at all paces and able to
gallop out of trouble.
Rides are in big game country.
You should be fit enough to ride between 4 and 6 hours
a day.
Single Supplement:
Is only charged for those who are not prepared to share
accommodation.
Size of the Rides: Maximum of 12 guests.
Tack:
English. Various saddles,
polo, wintec, French Trekking and Australian stock. Mainly snaffle bridles.
Terrain:
Most of the rides in Masai land and the Northern
ranches are on open savannah (black cotton soil)
interspersed with bush. They are short grass plains ideal for riding.
Care must be taken for aardvark holes, but
canters and gallops are taken across the open spaces,
where it is often possible to experience the unique
sensation of galloping amongst herds of game that
extend into literally thousands of animals.
Type of Horses:
Well schooled
thoroughbred and thoroughbred cross. Many are home bred
out of our best mares and are used as polo ponies. They
are responsive, tough and fit, capable of jumping bush
obstacles, swimming rivers and galloping besides
wildebeest.
Types of Safari: Riding and land rover safaris are operated
from luxury mobile-tented camps in remote areas.
All are supported by lorry and a full complement of
trained and attentive staff.
Riding safaris are always accompanied by land
rovers, which drive ahead using a completely different
route taken by the horses to prepare the new campsites.
These vehicles are used for game drives, particularly
with spotlights at night.
Visas: Visas can be
purchased on arrival in Nairobi for £35 or $50.
Weather: There is no winter or summer, as the areas in
which Offbeat operate are so close to the Equator.
There are two rainy seasons November and April
to May.
The hottest months are February and March,
September and October but there are no hard and fast
rules on this. Rides
are at an average of 5500ft.
This makes for a cool climate, and also means there are
very few mosquitoes and other biting insects.
Weight Limit:
Maximum weight is 200 lbs for a novice rider and 210
lbs for an advanced rider (15 stone or 95 kg).
Sample Itineraries
Offbeat safaris operate
both in the Mara (but not the touristy area of the Game
Reserve) and the Laikipia plains in the north of the
country. The normal safari is a ten-day one that
departs on set departure dates, however Wild and Exotic can book your group on
an exclusive use / tailor made safari with an itinerary and dates to suit your
own group. Please contact us to discuss which you prefer. The itinerary shown
below is the ten-day safari in the Mara.
Offbeat Safaris riding safari in
the Masai Mara
Day
1:You
will be collected from Nairobi airport and driven to
the starting point of your riding safari.The journey
will be broken for a picnic lunch, taken under the
shade of an acacia tree, before continuing through the
fertile Kikuyu Highlands and dropping 2000 feet into
the Great Rift Valley. After crossing the
volcano-studded floor of the Rift Valley you ascend the
Mau Escarpment on the far side, and thence to the Masai
capital of Narok. The 2008 rides all start with the guests flying from
Nairobi to the start of the safari in the Mara. The campsite, which is besides
a small stream that flows beneath a grove of fever
trees, is reached in time for tea. Afterwards there
should be time for an evening ride, or perhaps a walk
through the Loita Hills. The accommodation is in roomy
twin bedded tents, complete with bedside table and
personal washbasin and mirror outside. Dust from the
journey is washed off underneath a piping hot bush
shower. Dinner is served in the mess tent or underneath
the stars besides a blazing campfire.
Day
2:
Wake to the magical sounds of an African dawn, and the
reassuring tinkle of hot water being poured into the
washbasin outside your tent. Enjoy a delicious
breakfast in the early morning sunlight before
preparing your lunchtime snack and saddlebags for the
30-kilometer ride ahead. Your horse will be presented
to you fully tacked up, and within an hour the Loita
Hills are left far behind as you cross vast plains,
populated by giraffe, gazelle, hartebeest, impala,
wildebeest and zebra. The journey is broken for a
picnic lunch and siesta in a suitably shady location,
after which the ride continues to the Olare Lamun
Springs. Here you will find your tent re-assembled, and
your suitcase and other belongings neatly stowed
besides your bed. Enjoy a hot shower before relaxing
with a cold drink, as a prelude to a superb
three-course dinner.
Day
3:
Today is spent exploring the landscape surrounding this
lovely area. You will be given the opportunity to leave
at dawn for an early morning ride amongst the herds of
plains game that carpet the plains in all directions.
Afterwards return to a well deserved breakfast, and
then set off to climb a nearby Kope, a steep rocky
hillside with commanding views across Maasailand.
During this walk your armed guide may be able to point
out lion, buffalo, and leopard that frequent the area.
Return to the camp for a late lunch and siesta,
followed by a visit to a nearby Masai village. Here you
are granted an insight into the extraordinary lifestyle
of the famous Masai tribe, who live in simple huts
constructed of mud and cattle dung, and whose wealth is
measured not in money, but according to the number of
cattle they own. After dinner join your guide for a
nighttime foray into the bush by land rover, and see a
multitude of unusual nocturnal animals, such as bush
babies, spring hares and the perhaps the rare serval
cat, illuminated by the powerful beam of a spotlight.
Day
4:
Today
you head off in good time for the longest ride of the
trip, a journey of some 50 kilometers through acacia
thickets, hidden valleys and huge savannah plains. As
the day continues the ride encounters an increasing
quantity of game on the fringes of the Mara River
ecosystem. Expect to see both elephant and buffalo, as
well as experiencing the unique sensation of galloping
amongst herds of wildebeest that swarm in countless
thousands across the grassy plains. Lunch – and a swim
for the adventurous – is taken besides a delightful
river that flows through a verdant wooded valley
populated by elephant and buffalo. Shortly before
arriving at the campsite on the edge of the Masai Game
Reserve the ride reaches a plateau from whose vantage
can be seen the far away plains of Tanzania’s Serengeti
wilderness in one direction, and the distant outline of
the Loita Hills in the other. Campsite for the next
three nights is located besides the Olare Orok Lugga.
The abundance of game in this area is very evident, and
at night both lion and hyena can be clearly heard from
besides the campfire.
Days
5 & 6:
The next
two days are spent riding, walking and driving in
search of game. There is the opportunity to ride out
from campsite early every morning, or you may prefer to
relax in bed and enjoy a late breakfast. The camp
landrovers come in useful for an expedition through the
Mara Game Reserve to the Mara River, followed a
delicious barbeque lunch close by. Whilst driving
through a corner of the reserve you may see other
vehicles for the first time since arriving on day one.
This is because the riding part of the itinerary
operates beyond the confines of the Game Reserve, and
therefore avoids the tourist activity that has
tarnished the Mara’s wilderness reputation. By taking
to vehicles guests are provided with astonishing
photographic opportunities, as it is possible to get
close to larger game in absolute safety. An absence of
Game Park restrictions also allows your guide to take
you out by night on amazing spotlighting expeditions to
witness the astonishing nocturnal activities of the
wildlife. Whilst camping besides the Olare Orok Lugga,
there will also be the chance to walk through dense
scrub to a remote hidden valley. Here a river runs
through the bottom of a towering gorge, and at its
source guests can enjoy a refreshing swim in a deep,
cool pool.
Day 7:
After breakfast you leave the campsite
that has been home for the previous three nights, and
follow the meandering course of the Olare Orok Lugga
upstream through rich grassland towards the Mara River,
where it flows deep and swift beneath the Sira
Escarpment. Camp should be reached in time for a late
lunch, and the remainder of the afternoon wiled away on
the riverbank. Here the waters boil with the activities
of a huge resident hippo population, and as guests
enjoy dinner, their raucous grunting permeates the
night air.
Day 8:
Today there is the opportunity to ride
across the Mara River shortly after daybreak, and
follow your guide along hippo trails that wind uphill
through thick scrub. Eventually you reach the summit of
the Sira Escarpment and enjoy breathtaking views across
Africa, including the faint outline of the Loita Hills
where the ride began. The ride returns to campsite
having crossed the river for a second time, again using
a crossing place favored by wildebeest and other game
as they migrate from one side of the river to the
other. After a well-earned breakfast, there is the
chance to enjoy a game drive or bush walk, to build up
an appetite for a delicious lunch. Another ride in the
cool of evening is a last opportunity to see Africa’s
game from the back of a horse, before returning to the
campsite for a final night under canvas.
Day 9:
Today you say goodbye to the bush, and
after a leisurely breakfast begin the drive back to
Deloraine, the headquarters of Offbeat Safaris. The
drive passes through several fascinating African
villages, as well as the green tea growing area of
Kericho, where you will enjoy a picnic lunch in the
sunshine, arriving at Deloraine in time for tea.
Deloraine is a magnificent colonial mansion, surrounded
by lovely mature gardens, complete with swimming pool
and croquet lawn. Cocktails on the veranda are followed
by dinner served in the spacious dining room.
Day 10:
Enjoy an early morning ride into the
hills behind Deloraine, and then visit Lake Nakuru
or Bogoria with a picnic lunch. The journey to Nakuru
takes less than an hour, and is broken by a visit to
the market place where there is the chance to bargain
for souvenirs, or just watch the bustle of this busy
African town. Nukuru is famous for its healthy flamingo
population, as well as an abundance of other game
including rhino, leopard and buffalo. You will return
to Deloraine for a relaxed farewell dinner in the
evening.
Day 11: There is the chance of a final
ride this morning, or you may prefer to relax in the
comfortable surroundings of Deloraine, and enjoy the
swimming pool and gardens. Before leaving for Nairobi,
guests are served a delicious lunch and depart early
afternoon in time to check-in for the evening flight
home.
Please note that whilst sample
itineraries provides an accurate description of what
you can expect to experience, campsites and itineraries
are deliberately flexible in order to maximise game
viewing opportunities according to the seasons and
movements of game through the areas in which Offbeat
operate.
Photo Gallery
for Mara Ride
|
|
 |
 |
|
Barkitabu Campsite
(first night) |
Camp besides
the Mara River (day 8)
|
Breakfast
at campsite |
Gallop across the plains |
 |
 |
 |
 |
|
Crossing the Mara
River (day 8) |
Deloraine (days 9 - 11) |
Bedroom at
Deloraine |
Your
hosts: Tristan & Lucinda with Archie and Imogen |
Sample itinerary for Laikipia or Northern
Ride with Offbeat Safaris
Day 1: You will be collected either from Jomo
Kenyatta Airport or your Nairobi hotel and driven
across the famous Rift Valley to Deloraine, a fabulous
colonial mansion built by Lord Francis Scott a
prominent settler and politician in Kenya, and now the
headquarters of your hosts, Tristan and Lucinda
Voorspuy. You will arrive in time for lunch, with
a choice of walking, riding, swimming, tennis and
croquet available afterwards – or you may prefer to
unwind besides the pool with a cold drink. Dinner and
overnight Deloraine.
Day 2:
Enjoy an early morning ride into the
hills behind Deloraine, and then visit Lake Nakuru or
Bogoria with a picnic lunch. The journey to Nakuru
takes less than an hour, and is broken by a visit to
the market place where there is the chance to bargain
for souvenirs, or just watch the bustle of this busy
African town. Nakuru is famous for its healthy flamingo
population, as well as an abundance of other game
including black and white rhino, leopard and buffalo.
You will return to Deloraine for a three-course dinner
in the evening.
Day 3: Drive from Deloraine, via Nakuru, Thompson
Falls and Rumuruti to Sosian Ranch. This is a
fascinating journey through African villages, farmland
and bush. The delightful and secluded campsite besides
the Ewaso Narok River is reached in time for a late
lunch, after which there is an opportunity to enjoy an
afternoon ride or game drive before dinner. Sosian is a
stunning wilderness property recently purchased by a
consortium of friends, including the owners of Offbeat
Safaris. Although there is a small herd of breeding
cattle, camel and sheep on the ranch, most of Sosian’s
24,000 acres are given over to indigenous
wildlife including healthy populations of elephant,
buffalo, giraffe, lion and leopard. Overnight Sosian.
Day 4: Today you will be woken at dawn for a
magical ride across Sosian ranch, and possible
encounters with elephant, buffalo and other game.
Return to campsite for a delicious breakfast of fresh
fruit, porridge and cream followed by a bacon, sausages
and eggs. Afterwards head out in a specially adapted
land rover for further game viewing, and the
opportunity to get even closer to the big herds of
elephant that populate this beautiful ranch. Lunch
today is a leisurely affair, taken on your return to
campsite during which the wine flows freely, and
discussions centre on the morning’s adventures.
Following an afternoon siesta, enjoy sundowners besides
the Ewaso Narok River a few miles downstream from
campsite. Here the waters plunge dramatically off the
edge of an escarpment into a deep pool to create a
delightful swimming spot - the adventurous can leap off
the rocks into the cool waters some thirty feet below.
Nocturnal game can be picked out by spotlight en route
to dinner back at campsite. Overnight Sosian campsite.
Day 5: Today is a moving day, and you leave camp
after breakfast for the five hour ride to Loisaba,
although frequent detours may be necessary in order to
avoid disturbing herds of big game that favour the
dense scrub through which you pass. Lunch is taken
under the shady veranda at Il Penguin ranch, the
charming home of Nick and Heather Day, before riding on
across Loisaba ranch and arriving at a delightful
campsite set up beneath a stand of tall yellow fever
trees. The nearby dam is a favoured place for lions to
congregate, especially in the dry season when the
surrounding environs are much favoured by other game
needing access to water. After dinner explore Loisaba
by spotlight from the safety of a land rover, and watch
nocturnal animals such as the African wildcat, striped
hyena and aardwolf. Overnight Loisaba campsite.
Day 6: Today is spent exploring some of Loisaba’s
sixty thousand acres of wilderness, beginning with an
exciting early morning ride before the temperatures
heat up, and game has not yet settled down into thicker
scrub for the day. Expect to find elegant reticulated
giraffe, distinguished by the clean white lines that
separate their rich chestnut markings, rare Grevy’s
zebra with bulb-like ears, and perhaps a lithe cheetah
bitch accompanied by her cubs, as well as impala,
Thompson’s and Grant’s gazelle, kudu, Oryx and other
plains game. After a couple of hours return for the
usual substantial breakfast, and then depart by land
rover for the Ewaso Ngiro River, where your guide will
select a suitable place for swimming and a late
barbeque lunch. As succulent lamb chops are prepared
over the fire, enjoy a refreshing dip in the swirling
waters, and then relax with an ice cold cocktail before
sitting down to a magnificent lunch of meat, salads and
quiches. On the way home search for game from the
comfort of your land rover, and perhaps enjoy an
encounter with one of Loisaba’s resident lion prides.
Overnight Loisaba Campsite.
Day 7: Today you ride to the next campsite on Mpala
ranch, owned by George Small, who has bequeathed the
property to the Smithsonian Institute in perpetuity.
This is a long journey of some forty miles through a
richly varied landscape of hidden green valleys,
sweeping escarpments, wide-open planes and thick
scrubland where the cruel wait-a-bit thorn lies in
ambush to tear and pluck at the unwary. After riding
for an hour or so, breast the summit of a small rise
and look out over miles of untouched wilderness to the
twin peaks of your destination – the Mpala campsite –
shimmering in the heat haze way out on the sunlit
plains that stretch interminably ahead. On a clear day
it may be possible to make out the silhouette of Mt
Kenya peering through the clouds that roll in to cloak
the mountain each dawn. Before reaching the Ewaso Narok
River where you break for lunch and a welcome swim, you
must first dismount from your horse and lead it down
the steep Ewaso Narok escarpment on foot. When weaving
through the thick thorn country beyond, expect to see
huge flocks of vulturine guinea fowl taking to the wing
in a shower of iridescent finery, or perhaps the shy
gerenuk antelope – it stands on its hind feet to browse
– or a Kudu bull disturbed from a secluded waterhole.
By late afternoon you reach the charming Mpala campsite
and discover tents set up besides the river on a level
plain dotted with mature fever trees. Enjoy a
well-earned cold drink or two before sitting down to
dinner served beneath the stars. Overnight Mpala
Campsite.
Day 8: This morning you leave after breakfast for a
gentle five-hour ride to El Karama ranch, home of the
Grant family. After weaving southwards through miles of
whistling thorn and traversing part of the Segera
ranch, you breast the lip of the gorgeous Suguroi lugga,
a hidden valley frequently favoured by large and varied
herds of game. You may have to follow your guide
carefully as he circumnavigates herds of potentially
dangerous cow elephants and their young, sometimes
passing within metres of these ill tempered grey giants
and their huge fanning ears testing the wind for noise.
El Karama is reached early in the afternoon, and the
Ewaso Ngiro flowing through camp provides a refreshing
dip before lunch. After a siesta embark on a game drive
in the cool of dusk, returning to the roaring fire of
campsite in the dark. Overnight El Karama.
Day 9: This morning you set off after breakfast for
the final campsite in the Loldaiga Hills, a five-hour
ride eastwards across Ol Jogi, Mogwooni and Enasoit
Ranches. As the ride moves into higher ground the
landscape undergoes a subtle change to include
magnificent cedar trees in the foothills and the paths
become steeper and rockier as you climb into the
mountains, until eventually the horses are picking
their way up a precipitous elephant track that clings
to the contours of a dramatic gorge. Lunch is taken
besides a waterhole at the head of this steep valley,
and from there it is an easy ride to the final campsite
in the Loldaiga hills. Here the tents are pitched
around on the grassy floor of a small valley surrounded
by cedar forest, with peerless views across the plains
to the jagged, snow capped peaks of Mount Kenya – now
tantalisingly close, although the mountain was barely
discernible from the safari’s starting point a week
earlier on Sosian ranch. Overnight Loldaiga.
Day 10: The morning is spent exploring the lovely
Loldaiga hills by land rover with game sightings that
may include the rare Jackson’s Hartebeest, as well as
the usual elephant, giraffe, zebra and other plains
game. After breakfast the energetic may choose to climb
to the top of a steep rocky kopi and gaze out across
the plains towards where the safari began, before
returning to campsite for lunch and then a final ride
before night draws in and guests gather around the warm
campfire, which dispels the chill mountain air.
Day 11: Say goodbye to this beautiful campsite and
set off to Nairobi after a leisurely breakfast.
Notes:
Laikipia is a unique wildlife area and
contains an enormous diversity of wildlife. It is
famous as the last reserve of the Jackson’s Hartebeest
and is home of several rare species such as the
Reticulated Giraffe, Beisa Oryx, Grevy’s Zebra, Gerenuk
and Somali Ostrich amongst others. In recent
years landowners have turned their back on cattle
ranching in favour of wildlife conservation, and even
large predators such as lion and hyena are more
abundant now than they were 25 years ago.
Please note that whilst the sample itinerary provides
an accurate description of what you can expect to
experience, campsites and itineraries are deliberately
flexible in order to maximise game viewing
opportunities according to the seasons and movements of
game through the Laikipia region.
Offbeat set departure rates and dates 2008
15th - 25th January 8 days Mara
+ 2 Deloraine
1st - 10th February
8 Laikipia + 2 Sosian
15th - 25th February
8 Mara + 2 Deloraine
6th - 16th March
Laikipia / Mara
20th - 30th March
Laikipia / Mara
19th - 29th March
8 Mara + 2 Deloraine
5th - 15th June
8 Laikipia + 2 Sosian
19th - 29th July
8 Mara + 2 Deloraine
9th - 19th August
8 Mara + 2 Deloraine
23rd August - 2nd September
8 Mara + 2 Deloraine
13th - 23rd September
8 Mara + 2 Deloraine
11th - 21st October
8 Mara + 2 Deloraine
23rd October - 2nd November 8
Laikipia + 2 Sosian
The 2008 price of £3600 includes everything whilst
on safari including charters at both the start and finish of your safari, except
for spirits and staff tips.
There is a single supplement of £35 per day, however this will be waived for
guests that are prepared to share accommodation. The prices are fully inclusive
of all food, accommodation and internal transfers. Prices for tailor made groups
available on application from Wild and Exotic. The price of the optional
extension after the Laikipia ride is available on application, and varies
according to the activities selected by the guest, and the number of
participants.
Photo gallery for Northern ride, and kalatcha camp in
the Chalbi Desert - click on images to enlarge
 |
 |
 |
 |
|
Riding across Laikipia (day 5) |
Mpala
campsite (day 7) |
Loldaiga
camp (days 9 & 10) |
Mt Kenya
from Loldaiga |
 |
 |
 |
 |
|
kalatcha camp (opt extension) |
Swimming pool at kalatcha |
Gabbra tribe members |
South
Island, Lake Turkana. |
Sample optional extensions
for the 14-day Northern Ride:
Day 12: Head east across Kamwaki Farm and descend
out of the Loldaigas to enter Borana Ranch, the home of
Michael and Nicky Dyer. This is a working cattle
and game ranch. Overnight Borana Lodge.
Day 13: A full day of game drives and riding, with
the option of visiting the Lewa Wildlife Conservancy.
Overnight Borana.
Day 14: Return to
Nairobi
OR
We
also offer an exciting non-riding extension to the
Laikipia ride to visit the kalatcha desert and Lake
Turkana. kalatcha is an oasis on the edge of the Chalbi
desert in Northern Kenya and is home to the romantic,
nomadic Gabbra tribe of Cushitic origin living in
Northern Kenya and Southern Ethiopia. The lives
of these people have not changed in centuries and camel
caravans come down to the Doum Palm lined springs to
collect water every day. It is also home to the
chestnut bellied and Lichtenstein's sand grouse, which
fly in to drink in huge flocks every morning and
evening: Please see photos above.
Day 11: Kalatcha
Lodge is reached in time for lunch after a 1-½ hour
flight from Mpala. For those wishing to shoot, there is
a sand grouse flight in the evening.
Day 12: An opportunity to explore this
extraordinary landscape by foot or land rover,
including a visit to the Doum springs and the chance to
meet members of the local Gabbra tribe. There is also
the opportunity to flight the sand grouse that come in
to drink at dawn and dusk. Overnight at Kalatcha Lodge,
on the edge of the Chalbi desert.
Day 13:
Morning sand grouse flight followed by late breakfast,
before flying by light aircraft to South Island
on Lake Turkana for an amazing fishing excursion after
enormous Nile perch in this fantastic moonscape country
of the Jade Sea. The flight is a 40-minute hop from
kalatcha and you return to the lodge that evening.
Day 14: After an early morning shoot and breakfast
fly back to Nanyuki in time for the scheduled service
to Nairobi Wilson Airport at 11am followed by day rooms
in Nairobi and your evening International flight home.
The cost of this optional extra is available on
application.
Itinerary
for the Amboseli ride
This ride begins close to the border town of
Namanga, and crosses through Amboseli national park en route to the Chyulu Hills
away to the east, with Africa’s highest mountain, the snow capped Kilimanjaro,
as a constant backdrop to your adventures. The distance in a straight line is
some 90 miles, however you will cover a much greater distance exploring the
bush.

Day 1: You will be collected from
Nairobi international airport and driven to the first campsite at Lalahroi –
meaning swamp of the buffaloes – near Namanga, stopping en route for a picnic
lunch, there should be time for an evening ride before dinner. Overnight Namanga.
Day 2: Today you begin the ride
towards Amboseli, heading eastwards parallel to the Tanzanian border. You are
likely to see game such as giraffe, zebra, eland, gerenuk, a glimpse of a lesser
kudu, impala, wildebeest, Grants and Thompson's Gazelle on your way to the
Ngorambuni rocks, where a huge boulder on top of a rocky kopje provides a cool
and shaded picnic spot with panoramic views towards Amboseli. After lunch you
ride across the dried up lakebed to a campsite at Soit Nado (red rocks), where
your tents are pitched beneath a grove of lovely fever trees, some 200 yards
from the Tanzanian border, and home for the next three nights. Overnight Soit
Nado camp.
Day 3: From this base you are able
to ride and drive out from camp in any direction, exploring the defunct
Meerschaum mines, the extraordinary landscape of Lake Amboseli Lake, and the
surrounding marshes. These provide shelter to thousands of head of game,
including large herds of buffalo and the famed herds of Amboseli elephant who
spend hours of their day like dinosaurs in the swamp before wandering out onto
the desert like features of the lake bed with its shimmering mirage of heat
haze. Overnight Soit Nado camp.
Day 4: Another morning exploring
the area on horseback, perhaps crossing the border to explore the foothills of
Mt Kilimanjaro. We will take a day drive into Amboseli with a barbeque lunch,
so will be able to get some close up shots of big game from the landrovers.
Approaching large and peaceable bull elephant of 70 lb+ tusk size per side by
horse and landrover is one of the more exciting prospects from the Soit Nado
area. Overnight Soit Nado camp.
Day 5: Today we move camp from Soit
Nado heading northeast across the National Park, skirting the green swamps and
passing large amounts of game as you canter across the lake bed, which provides
near perfect going for horses without any of the dreaded aardvark holes to trap
the unwary. You will break for lunch on the far side of the lake bed, and a
welcome siesta beneath the shade of an acacia before riding a further 10 miles
to camp at Risa, on the plains between Amboseli and the Chyulu Hills.
Day 6: The ride continues towards
the Chyulu Hills, which rise from the plains to a height of 7000ft. These hills
are recent volcanoes only 500,000 years old and some of the craters and lava
flows are only 200 years old. This evening you will camp at the foot of a small
hill, amongst beautiful groves of Balanites and Acacia Tortilis trees with
craters rearing up at intervals as if the ride were passing through some kind of
magical theme park. Overnight Millennium campsite.
Days 7 and 8: We
will spend two full days at the Millennium camp from where we will do an early
morning stalk accompanied by game scouts, to find fresh signs of the small but
closely guarded black rhino population that live in the Lava flows of the
Chyulus. We shall also do some game drives and take an energetic walk up Ol
Donyo Sambu, one of the conical craters found towards the western end of the
range. There will also of course be the opportunity for some early morning and
evening rides in this stunning scenery with soft volcanic ash as great going for
the horses. Overnight Millennium campsite.
Day 9: After breakfast you will
fly direct to Deloraine for your final two nights in Africa. Deloraine is a
fabulous colonial mansion built by Lord Francis Scott, a prominent settler and
politician in Kenya, and now the headquarters of your hosts, Tristan and Lucinda
Voorspuy. Here you can choose between walking, riding, swimming, tennis or
croquet - or relaxing besides the swimming pool with a cold drink. Dinner and
overnight Deloraine (below).

Day 10: Enjoy an early morning ride
into the hills behind Deloraine, and then visit Lake Nakuru or Bogoria with a
picnic lunch. The journey to Nakuru takes less than an hour, and is broken by a
visit to the market place where there is the chance to bargain for souvenirs, or
just watch the bustle of this busy African town. Nakuru is famous for its
healthy flamingo population, as well as an abundance of other game including
black and white rhino, leopard and buffalo. You will return to Deloraine for a
three-course dinner in the evening.
Day 11: After an early last ride
and breakfast we can relax in the comfortable surroundings of Deloraine, enjoy
the swimming pool, gardens and attendant sports. We will leave for Nairobi after lunch by the pool
by vehicle for an approx 3 hours drive on reasonable tarmac road. Arriving in
time for your onward transfers as necessary.
Notes:
The cost of this itinerary is £3600 per person
providing there are at least 4 guests on the ride.
There is a special offer of a 10% discount on the
ride for 4 - 14 June 2008. Please see special
offers and late availability for more information.
The cost includes shared accommodation, food and
drink (excluding champagne), internal transfers as mentioned in the itinerary
and park fees.
The cost excludes international flights, staff
tips, single supplements and visa fees.
The single supplement charge is £40 day but this
charge will be waived for those prepared to share accommodation.
As ATOL license holders (no. 6445) we can arrange
your international flights to Nairobi. Please contact Wild and Exotic for more
information on Tel: 01439 748401 or Email
info@wildandexotic.co.uk
Please note
that whilst the sample itinerary provides an accurate description of what you
can expect to experience, campsites and itineraries are deliberately flexible in
order to maximize game viewing opportunities according to the seasons and
movements of game. Neither Wild & Exotic Ltd nor Offbeat Safaris can accept
responsibility for changes to itineraries or dates that may arise due to weather
or other circumstances. This
holiday is subject to Wild and Exotic’s terms and conditions, a copy of which is
enclosed with your booking form.
|