From ancient forests to jade lakes — Kenya's most extraordinary places, unlocked for you.
We specialise in Kenya's most special — and often overlooked — destinations. These aren't the tourist brochure picks; these are the places that change you.
Kenya's only tropical rainforest is a world unto itself. Over 330 species of birds, rare primates like the De Brazza's monkey, and giant fig trees older than any living memory. Walking the forest paths at dawn — mist hanging low, hornbills calling — is an experience that resets you entirely.
A birdwatcher's paradise — including the rare Great Blue Turaco and African Crowned Eagle.
Guided nature walks through 240km² of protected old-growth forest.
The world's largest permanent desert lake — known as the Jade Sea for its extraordinary jade-green waters. Stretching into Ethiopia, Turkana is wild, remote, and utterly unlike anywhere else on Earth. Wind-sculpted lava fields, crocodile-rich shores, and Turkana communities whose traditions trace back millennia.
The mineralised water creates an otherworldly green colour — most dramatic at sunrise.
Meet communities whose pastoral traditions have defined this landscape for centuries.
Kenya's only true desert. A vast salt flat that shimmers in the heat, with camels crossing ancient caravan routes and nomadic Gabbra communities moving with the seasons. At night, with zero light pollution, the sky is so dense with stars it feels like you're standing in space.
Cross the desert the traditional way — slow, quiet, and deeply immersive.
Some of Kenya's darkest skies — Milky Way photography at its finest.
A hidden gem in Lake Victoria — Rusinga is where Kenya's largest lake meets a relaxed island pace. Famous as the birthplace of Kenya's first VP, and for its incredible fish eagle sightings, hippo watching, and the warmth of Luo hospitality.
Lake Victoria's iconic bird call — Rusinga offers some of the best viewing in East Africa.
Experience authentic Luo fishing communities and traditional cuisine.
Africa's most iconic safari destination needs no introduction — but we experience it differently. While other operators stack tourists at the same viewpoints, we take you into the private conservancies bordering the Mara: quieter, more intimate, and genuinely wild. The Big Five, the Great Migration, the Maasai culture — all without the crowds.
Year-round wildlife including lion, elephant, leopard, buffalo, and rhino.
Access to conservancies like Naboisho and Mara North — beyond the main reserve.