18 Feb 2008 04:53:04 | Ian Williamson
Lodge Safaris in Tanzania - I will try to avoid the travel
clichés of - 'unique' - 'off the beaten track' and 'renown
for...' these tired and overused terms are used over and over
again for almost every destination in Africa! The lodge safari
in Tanzania is the best way to see this lovely country. Tanzania
has so much to offer, so many parks that have few visitors and
high concentrations of game animals. Some National Parks boast
just one lodge in a million hectares. Your Lodge safari in
Tanzania can truly offer a taste of what the early explorers
experienced.
When choosing your lodge safari, choose a lodge with care. Many
visitors want to see the great migration and the Serengeti. Some
lodges are in fact hotels and although very nice; they do not
contribute to that 'out of Africa' experience. What is called
for is a camp experience; these private camps are ideal for the
intimate African experience. So when you look to plan your trip
do not go for the 'lodge safari' but the private camp safari.
Your choice of lodge or camp is an important part of the whole
safari experience.
These camps are usually made up of a small number of tents; not
your two man tent with no standing room, sleeping on the hard
and sometimes damp ground. Not the cooking over a stove and
eating grass and sand with your tinned food. No, these private
camps have tents that have large comfortable beds, bathroom en
suite and butler service. The food is of the highest quality and
you dine from bone china and drink champagne [or beer] from
crystal glasses.
If you want to listen at night to the song of the African bush
with the occasional distant [or sometimes close] roar of a lion;
if you want to open your tent in a morning to be greeted by
Impala and Zebra grazing so close to your tent you could touch
them; then choose one of these camps. If you want to be in a
remote part of the park but close to the animals; if you want to
stand in to open plains of the Serengeti and not be joined by a
caravan of twenty other safari vehicles then the private camp is
the option above the mere mass tourist lodge.
There are several such camps scattered throughout the Serengeti.
Your choice of camp will depend on what time of year you visit
Tanzania. A good camp is Kusini Camp in the Southern Serengeti,
small luxurious, and in an ideal spot from the end of December
until March, as the great migration is in this area at this
time. However, the rest of the year this camp is a bit isolated
and animals may be harder to spot.
A problem with planning a safari round the migration is that the
migration follows the rains and the rains are notoriously
unpredictable. Your camp may end up being in the wrong area of
the Serengeti. This year the migration was in the Northern
Serengeti at a time of year when normally the animals have
crossed into Kenya. Many safari expeditions finding themselves
in the wrong country!
This is a head ache for safari operators as a disappointed
client is not good for business. This can be solved with a
'mobile camp' this is by far the best option but also by far the
most expensive option.
There are a new breed of camps emerging, the semi-permanent
camp. This is a tented camp that moves maybe three or four times
per year. It will follow the migration ensuring that whilst the
migration is in the Serengeti the camp will also be in the mist
of the animals. One such camp I have heard good reports about is
EMC [Exclusive Mobile Camp - Serengeti]. They are friendly,
knowledgeable, embrace fair trade tourism and best of all the
camp is very good value for money. They have a web site and have
an office in Arusha and will give out details of the migration
and the position of their camp. This is great for tour operators
and also for people wanting to plan a safari.
This is where the internet can help in a positive way; to help
you plan a safari that will truly be a holiday of a life time.
There is no need to hope your travel agent will do a good job in
planning your vacation. Take some of the responsibility your
self and plan your safari; check out your destination and
accommodation. If you travel agent or tour operator is not
cooperative or flexible change them to someone who is willing to
earn their commission.
About Author :
For a more information on Lodge Safaris in Tanzania contact Ian
Williamson through http://betheladventure.co.uk or Philemon Joel
http://www.aardvark-expeditions.com Using responsible tourism to
change lives.