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African Walking Safaris
Walking the wide, open African savannah in the company of an expert guide is the ultimate African safari experience. The guide can point out medicinal plants and tiny creatures and tells you stories of life in the bush. A long walking safari will give you a greater understanding of the ecosystem, and its animals and plants than any jeep safari ever can. When you do see animals, it comes with the thrill of knowing that nothing stands between them and you. Altogether, a long walk through the African wilderness might be one of the greatest and most rewarding adventures you embark on.
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4-Day Wilderness Trail in Greater Kruger
$6,999 to $7,543 pp (HKD)
South Africa: Private tourBudgetTented Bush Camp
You Visit: Hoedspruit (Start), Balule NR (Greater Kruger), Hoedspruit Airport (Hoedspruit), Hoedspruit (End)
Jumbari Family Safaris
4.9/5 – 14 Reviews
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Best Seller
5-Day Mana Pools National Park Safari Experience
$10,856 pp (HKD)
Zimbabwe: Shared tour (max 6 people per group)BudgetCamping
You Visit: Harare (Start), Mana Pools NP, Harare (End)
Khangela Safaris
4.9/5 – 12 Reviews
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Top Rated Operator
3-Day Kruger Walking Safari
$5,823 pp (HKD)
South Africa: Private tourBudgetCamping
You Visit: Johannesburg (Start), Greater Kruger, Johannesburg (End)
Safari With Us
5.0/5 – 136 Reviews
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3-Day Greater Kruger Klaserie Sands Trail Safari
$7,294 pp (HKD)
Scheduled Start DatesSouth Africa: Private tour
Mid-range Tented CampYou Visit: Hoedspruit (Start), Klaserie NR, Hoedspruit Airport (Hoedspruit), Hoedspruit (End)
Indigo Safaris
4.8/5 – 56 Reviews
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5-Day Night Game Drive L Manyara and Trekking Ngorongoro
$13,570 pp (HKD)
Tanzania: Shared tour (max 4 people per group)BudgetCamping
You Visit: Arusha (Start), Lake Manyara NP, Ngorongoro Crater, Arusha (End)
AAA Express Adventure
4.9/5 – 55 Reviews
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Top Rated Operator
7-Day Hwange Walking & Mobile Camping Safari (Guided)
$30,691 to $30,900 pp (HKD)
Zimbabwe: Shared tour (max 10 people per group)
Mid-range CampingYou Visit: Victoria Falls Town (Start), Hwange NP, Victoria Falls (End)
Falcon Safaris
4.6/5 – 141 Reviews
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5-Day Out of World Adventure (Honeymoon & Anniversaries)
$11,112 to $13,779 pp (HKD)
Kenya: Private tourLuxuryLodge & Tented Camp
You Visit: Nairobi (Start), Hell's Gate NP, Masai Mara NR, Nairobi (End)
Apodiformes Adventures
4.7/5 – 32 Reviews
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5-Day Ngorongoro Highlands to Lake Natron Trek
$10,995 pp (HKD)
Tanzania: Private tourBudgetCamping & Bush Camp
You Visit: Arusha (Start), Ngorongoro Crater, Olmoti Crater (Ngorongoro Highlands), Empakaai Crater (Ngorongoro Highlands), Lake Natron, Arusha (End)
Galloping Safaris Ltd
4.4/5 – 28 Reviews
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6-Day Amboseli, Lake Naivasha, Maasai Mara Safari
$10,863 to $14,275 pp (HKD)
Kenya: Private tour
Mid-range Lodge & HotelYou Visit: Nairobi (Start), Amboseli NP, Lake Naivasha, Masai Mara NR, Jomo Kenyatta Airport (End)
Kichaka Tours and Travel
5.0/5 – 34 Reviews
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Top Rated Operator
3-Day Zanzibar Selous Zanzibar Last Minute Fly-in Safari
$9,305 to $10,701 pp (HKD)
Tanzania: Shared tour (max 7 people per group)
Mid-range LodgeYou Visit: Zanzibar (Start), Selous GR, Zanzibar (End)
Tomodachi Tours & Safaris
4.9/5 – 106 Reviews
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3-Day Selous Game Reserve, Walking Boat & Village Tour
$3,799 to $4,497 pp (HKD)
Tanzania: Private tour
Mid-range LodgeYou Visit: Dar Es Salaam (Start), Selous GR, Dar Es Salaam (End)
Smile with us tours in Africa
5.0/5 – 68 Reviews
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5-Day Private Safari in the Northern Parks of Tanzania
$11,345 pp (HKD)
Tanzania: Shared tour (max 7 people per group)
Mid-range LodgeYou Visit: Arusha (Start), Lake Manyara NP, Ngorongoro Crater, Tarangire NP, Moshi (End)
Safari Avventura Ltd
5.0/5 – 44 Reviews
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8-Day Chikoko Trails
$63,118 to $71,647 pp (HKD)
Zambia: Private tourLuxuryLodge & Bush Camp
You Visit: Lusaka (Start), South Luangwa NP, Lusaka Airport (End)
Timbuktu
5.0/5 – 21 Reviews
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10-Day Best of Kenya Cultural & Wildlife Adventure
$17,602 pp (HKD)
Kenya: Private tourBudgetCamping & Lodge
You Visit: Nairobi (Start), Mt Kenya, Laikipia, Lake Naivasha, Hell's Gate NP, Masai Mara NR, Maji Moto (Village), Nairobi (End)
BuyMore Adventures
4.8/5 – 21 Reviews
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3-Day Wildlife Safari in Queen Elizabeth Park
$4,187 to $5,971 pp (HKD)
Uganda: Private tour
Mid-range LodgeYou Visit: Kampala (Start), Queen Elizabeth NP, Kazinga Channel (Queen Elizabeth NP), Igongo (Highlight), Kampala (End)
Forever Africa Safari
5.0/5 – 12 Reviews
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3-Day Amabere Ga Nyina Mwiru & Semuliki Safari
$3,644 pp (HKD)
Uganda: Private tourBudgetHotel & Banda
You Visit: Entebbe (Start), Semuliki NP, Entebbe (End)
Ecovic Tours & Travel Uganda
5.0/5 – 22 Reviews
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8-Day On Trail of the Big Cats
$21,401 pp (HKD)
Tanzania: Shared tour (max 7 people per group)
Mid-range Lodge & Tented CampYou Visit: Arusha (Start), Tarangire NP, Lake Manyara NP, Serengeti NP, Olduvai Gorge (Highlight), Ngorongoro Crater, Mto wa Mbu (Town), Arusha (End)
Eyes on Serengeti Ltd
4.9/5 – 14 Reviews
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7-Day Private Camping Safari Adventure to Serengeti
$14,989 pp (HKD)
Tanzania: Private tourBudgetCamping & Hotel
You Visit: Arusha (Start), Arusha NP, Lake Manyara NP, Serengeti NP, Central Serengeti, Ngorongoro Highlands, Ngorongoro Crater, Tarangire NP, Arusha (End)
Lappet Faced Safaris
5.0/5 – 8 Reviews
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5-Day Hwange National Park Fly Camping Safari
$18,222 pp (HKD)
Zimbabwe: Private tourBudgetCamping & Tented Camp
You Visit: Victoria Falls Town (Start), Hwange NP, Victoria Falls Town (End)
Aritsamaye Safaris
5.0/5 – 7 Reviews
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4-Day Kruger National Park Walking Safari
$7,246 to $8,767 pp (HKD)
South Africa: Shared tour (max 8 people per group)BudgetCamping
You Visit: Johannesburg (Start), Kruger NP, Greater Kruger, Johannesburg (End)
The Mzansi Experience
5.0/5 – 9 Reviews
6 Questions About Walking Safari Tours

Answered by
Stuart Butler
Stuart Butler is a travel writer and author of many guidebooks for Lonely Planet, Rough Guides and Bradt, including guides to Kenya, Ethiopia, Rwanda and Tanzania. He has traveled widely in Africa, often on foot. He spent five weeks walking across a swathe of southern Kenya with a Maasai friend.
6 Questions About Walking Safari Tours

Why should I choose a walking safari?
“While a classic jeep safari allows you some super-close encounters with large mammals, an African walking safari allows you to see, smell, touch and hear the African wilderness in a way that no jeep safari can. Walking will see you gain a far greater depth of understanding of the African bush. You can see all the little creatures and plants that are so vital in the ecosystem and easily overlooked when traveling in a jeep. You will also be working your muscles by walking, a rare thing on a jeep safari! Combine this closeness to nature with the sheer pleasure of not being jeep-bound for perhaps the most memorable safari holiday you’ll ever go on.”
1What exactly does a walking safari involve?
“There are two different kinds of walking safari. The easiest, and most advertised, is a short bush walk lasting anything from an hour to half a day. Many safari companies, camps and lodges offer these. They are not always in national parks, where walking is often forbidden. During this type of walking tour, your guide will point out various medicinal plants, the tracks and marks of passing animals and interesting insects. With a little luck, you’ll see larger mammals from a distance. A longer and more challenging multiday trip involves a lot more effort and energy. These kinds of safaris involve camping in remote spots in the bush. Your guide will wake you at dawn with a hot drink. While you eat breakfast, the tents will be dismantled. Walking will start early while it’s still cool and you’ll go at a relaxed pace for a few hours. The guide will point out things of interest and tell you stories from the bush. Lunch will probably be a generous picnic under the shade of an acacia tree. After lunch, there will be another couple of hours’ walking to the night spot. Camp will have already been set up. All you have to do is remove your boots, sit back with a drink and enjoy the sunset. An excellent camp dinner will be served before an early night. You’ll lie in your tent listening to the growls and squeals of the African bush at night. It’s an experience you’ll never forget!”
2How fit should I be for a walking safari?
“Most walking safaris are little more than gentle walks of no more than an hour or two, along flat ground. For these sorts of tours, also known as bush walks, you don’t need any exceptional level of fitness. Some safari companies offer much more serious, multiday walking safaris. Again, the walking itself is normally easy, and along flat or gently undulating terrain. Day-to-day distances are moderate as well; 15–20km/24–32mi would be the max. There’s always lots of time to rest and take in the scenery and wildlife. The challenge on such walks is often the sun. Lower altitude parks in particular can get very hot and this heat can drain energy levels quickly. Always try and avoid a walking safari at the hottest time of year. Your guides will be your eyes and ears and constantly alert for wildlife dangers. However, they are not superhuman, and can miss things. Therefore, it’s important that you keep your wits about you as well, which can be tiring on a long, hot walk. Broadly, if you can walk across easy land all day at home then you can likely do it on a multiday African walking safari.”
3What wildlife will I see while on a walking safari? How safe is it?
“To animals, humans are bad news and should be given a wide berth. Most large creatures run away at the first indication of people walking through their environment. While you will see large mammals, mostly these sightings are fleeting, or from a distance. Very occasionally, however, we have had some heart-stopping and memorable close encounters on foot with almost all of Africa’s most large animals. And this is where the training of your guide is most valuable. Most usually though, what you will see are all the little things: marching safari ants, sun-bathing lizards, slow tortoises, colorful birds, and more. All these encounters will deepen your understanding of the African savannah. How safe is a walking safari? An experienced guide will reduce your chances of a dangerous wildlife encounter to a bare minimum. A good guide will read the situation, understand the temperament of the animal and calmly and safely remove you from a situation before it develops. It is therefore very important to do your research and choose your operator, and therefore guide, carefully. This particularly applies to budget safaris.”
4What are the typical costs of a walking safari?
“If you’re heading out on a couple of hours’ bush walk, it’s not likely to cost very much at all. Note that if you’re staying in a top-end camp, bush walks are usually included in the overall package price. For a multiday walking tour, you’ll naturally pay much more. In most cases, these kinds of safaris tend to be operated by upper-end safari companies and you’ll pay accordingly. Even though you’ll be staying in small tents and roughing it, this kind of safari often costs more than a standard luxury jeep safari. In some areas outside protected zones, local communities can organize longer walking safaris. These are much more affordable and allow more opportunities for genuine cultural interaction, and there’ll still be plenty of wildlife to see.”
5What should I consider when choosing a walking safari
“If you’re planning on a longer multiday package. it’s important to pick the right time of year for your destination. It’s best to avoid the hotter times of year and the heart of the wet season. Often the best period is just after the rainy season has finished. The landscapes will be fresh and green, and the temperatures pleasant. If you’re hoping to walk around a national park or other protected area, check in advance that walking safaris are allowed. While many national parks don’t allow walking, reserves and conservancies often do. You should also consider whether you have the stamina to walk under the burning African sun for several days. Do your research about the possibility of an on-foot encounter with a large animal. Ask your tour operator for advice on how to respond in the unlikely event of this happening. In almost all cases, a walking safari with children in areas rich in large mammals is not likely to be allowed, or simply isn’t safe.”
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