home about us reviews videos travel tips travel services eco shop ezine blog contact us

Nairobi to Cape Town overland tour

country:Botswana, Kenya, Namibia, South Africa, Tanzania, Zambia, Malawi
departures:2008: 8 Dec
2009: 12 Jul, 6 Dec
price:From £1995 (55 days) excluding flights. Price includes highlights, ground transport except Zanzibar, road tolls, vehicle taxes, camping & cooking equipment and services. Local Payment of US $1290 covers all food (except Zanzibar) and camping fees/accommodation
 
the amazing things you'll be doing
Travel from Kenya to the Southern tip of Africa via Victoria Falls in Zambia with a maximum of 16 person in our custom build full size expedition truck. With over a meter of legroom in your seat sit back, relax and experience the wonders of the continent. Explore five of Africa's great National Parks and last great wilderness areas, soak up the sun on the beaches of Zanzibar and Lake Malawi and stand on the edge of the Victoria Falls.

We are unique in providing the services of an expert photographer and digital download facility on all our overland tours! One of our crew (normally the Tour Leader) is a full-qualified, semi-professional, photographer who will be available to give advice on photographic (and video) techniques; and will organise "workshops/tutorials" on photographic subjects and techniques (eg landscape, wildlife and bird photography, night shots, close-ups and portraits) to assist our guests to improve their photographic experience and technique. We also provide a laptop computer with multi-card reader for those clients with digital cameras to enable you to download your memory cards and burn those special memories to CD or DVD while on tour.

Highlights:
Highlights of this trip include visiting Lake Nukuru National Park for a game drive. You will also experience game drives at Serengeti National Park, Ngorongoro Crater, South Luangwa National Park, Chobe National Park and Etosha National Park. Other parks you will visit are Cape Cross Seal Colony, Victoria Falls National Park, Fish River Canyon and Namib Desert.

You will go on a tea plantation tour as part of a local community project and visit a cheetah conservation project in Namibia. Experience local communities with visits to a Masai tribal village and Himba Tribe and relax on Malawi beaches.

Enjoy a Zambezi sunset cruise and 3 night/4 day mokoro trip to Okavango Delta. View Twyfelfontein rock engravings and Brandberg Mountains. Join in with the activities in a 3 hour guided desert walk in Sossusvlei dunes and have a go at canoeing in the Orange River.
day-by-day itinerary
Day 1-2:Starting in Nairobi the tour heads for Nakuru National Park camping our first night on the fringes of the National park in a conservancy area. Next morning we explore the Nakuru National park, giving you a very good chance of seeing leopard and rhino. Camping
Day 3:Crossing the border into Tanzania we camp near or on the shores of Lake Victoria. Camping
Day 4:We make our way to the Serengeti National Park, where we stay one night and go for afternoon and morning game drives. Camping
Day 5:Leaving the Serengeti around noon, we drive up the escarpment to the lush vegetation of the Ngorongoro Crater, spending the night on the crater rim which has its own wildife encounters. Camping
Day 6-7:Next day we do a full-day game drive in 4x4 vehicles into the crater itself, returning to spend the night in a campsite on the outskirts of a town near the crater rim. Next morning we head to Arusha stopping to visit a local Masai village. In Arusha you can do some curio shopping at the ebony market or do a spot of emailing before heading off to camp the night in the foothills of Kilimanjaro. Camping
Day 8:The following day is a long drive to Dar-es-Salaam, passing though many African villages. That night we camp on a beach on the outskirts of Dar. Camping
Day 9-12:Thereafter you have 4 nights (5 days) to explore the island of Zanzibar at your leisure. Take in the sights, sounds and intricate winding streets of Stone Town and its people, join a spice tour, swim with dolphins at the southern tip of the island or just soak up the sun. Bungalow accommodation
Day 13:Returning to the mainland we camp in Dar that night before setting out for the Tanzanian Highlands and spending the night at a farmhouse in the area. Camping
Day 14-15:Next day we make our way toward the Malawi boder stopping near a small Tanzanian town called Tukuyu where you can visit a local tea plantation and join the locals in harvesting their crop. We spend two nights here which also gives you time to explore the area with a local guide and visit a waterfall in the area. Camping
Day 16-18:Crossing the border into Malawi spend the next 3 days on the lakeshore at a beautiful spot called Kande Beach. Here you have the opportunity to visit local African villages, interact with the villagers, scuba dive in the lake or just relax on the sandy beaches and swim in the fresh water. Horse riding is also available. Camping
Day 19:Today we head south to the town of Lilongwe, where you will have the opportunity to do some curio shopping. Crew stocks up with supplies. Camping
Day 20-21:Leaving Malawi we cross into Zambia and head for the South Luangwa National Park. This is one of the best national parks in Africa and leopard sightings are quite common. Here we have time for a morning and evening game drive in the park and an early morning walk on the fringes of the park while camping on the banks of the Luangwa River. Camping
Day 22:Leaving this beautiful valley behind us we drive through the interior of Zambia sending the night on the Luangwa River where the following morning you can take a walk in the forest landscape or have a paddle in a traditional dugout canoe (own expense) before we head to Lusaka, the capital of Zambia. Camping
Day 23:After the morning activities we have a brunch before heading off to our next campsite on the outskirts of Zambia's capital city. Camping
Day 24:Leaving early we continue on to our last highlight of the tour, the Victoria Falls, arriving into Livingstone in the afternoon we camp on the banks of the Zambezi some 8km's above the falls, where from the bar with a cool drink you can view the spray from the falls.
Day 25-27:Arriving at Victoria Falls you have the opportunity to do any number of the adrenaline activities on offer in your own time. We visit the Victoria Falls from the Zambian side and take a sunset cruise on the Zambezi river giving you a different view of this great river. For those that wish you can cross into Zimbabwe but visas and activities are for your own expense. Visa from US$30-US$60 depending on nationality. Victoria Falls entry from Zimbabwe side is US$20-30.
Day 28:There is one day free between the two sections of the tour. This is free for you to relax while your crew get ready for the next section of the tour.
Day 29-31:We continue to stay in the Falls area to give those joining the tour to do activities and see the falls giving those doing the whole tour time to relax. Camping
Day 32-33:Leaving the Falls we enter Botswana and spend two nights camped on the banks of the Chobe River. We take a morning game drive into the Chobe National Park and then spend the afternoon on the river with a sunset game cruise. Camping
Day 34:The following day we head for Maun, spending the night just outside town. Relax for the afternoon or get a different perspective of this vast inland waterway from a small aircraft. (flight optional) Camping
Day 35-37:We then head north to the town of Etosha where we begin our Delta experience. This is the panhandle of the Okavango region. Transfer with 4x4 truck and motorboats. Camping
Day 38:Driving north to Namibia we spend the night in a beautiful campsite on the banks of the Kavango river. Camping
Day 39-41:We head west to Etosha National Park spending the next 3 days game driving in the park. In the evenings you can sit at the floodlit water holes and watch the "nightlife". Game drive in Etosha. Camping
Day 42:After Etosha we head to a local cheetah conservation project, where you have the opportunity to interact with these special mammals. Camping
Day 43:Today we make our way north to visit a Himba tribe village. Camping
Day 44:Today our destination is a campsite near the Twyfelfontein Rock engravings, which we will also visit. Camping
Day 45:A short drive takes us to the Brandberg, Namibia’s highest mountain. Here we bush camp for the night. The views are spectacular, and we also walk into the mountain reserve to visit the famous “white lady” bushman painting. Bush Camping – Truck facilities only
Day 46-48:Next morning we continue to the coast to visit the Cape Cross seal colony, then on to the old German town of Swakopmund where there are more adrenaline pumping activities on offer. Spend the day enjoying the activities that Swakopmund has to offer. Explore this colonial town, with its Germanic architecture. Bungalow accommodation
Day 49-50:Heading through the Namib Desert we arrive at the dramatic red sand dunes of Sossusvlei. We rise early to watch the sunrise from Dune 45, soaking up the tranquil atmosphere. The rest of the morning we explore Dead Vlei and the massive dunes with a local Guide. Camping
Day 51:Our next stop is the Fish River Canyon. We spend one night here and view the sunset while having a drink on the canyon's rim. Camping
Day 52:We then travel to a lush campsite on the banks of the Orange River. Take a short canoe trip down the Orange river. Camping
Day 53:We head into South Africa today camping at a Hot Spring resort a few hours outside of Cape Town. Camping
Day 54:After a relaxing early morning swim we head off to visit two wine farms in the area and have a chance to taste some of the fine wines on offer from the Citrusdal area. We stay at the same campsite for our last night of tour.
Day 55:Arrival in Cape Town. Tour ends on arrival in Cape Town
small group adventure holiday
Typically you will be sharing your experiences with between 4-20 like minded travellers (depending on the trip, operator and how many others are booked on the trip) and you'll have a group leader with you. Whether you are travelling alone or with friends its good value, and a great way to meet new people! While itineraries are pre-planned there is some flexibility and you'll have plenty of privacy. This trip will appeal to travellers of all ages who enjoy meeting new people as well as seeing new places.
how this holiday makes a difference
Our tour from Nairobi to Cape Town via Victoria Falls travels through some of the world’s poorest areas therefore a number of activities and excursions make use of locally operated tour companies and guides. As part of our commitment to Responsible Travel and responsibletravel.com we now have incorporated a visit to community based tourism program in the South West of Tanzania. Set up by the tea farmers association consisting of 15,000 tea farmers, spread over 108 villages and is the only tea association in Tanzania that sells tea to a fair trade organization in the UK. We pay a fair tour fee that includes a village development fee. With this fee the villages can build classrooms and buy schoolbooks or medical equipment for the local dispensary. On this tour we have time for a ½ day tea tour where a tea farmer will tell you everything about tea while showing you around their smallholder shamba and the expansive tea estate with its great views.

With our visit to the South Luangwa National park we have selected an accommodation establishment that donates 60% of your accommodation fees paid to the Wildlife and Environmental Conservation society of Zambia and in that way you are contributing to support local wildlife and education for Zambian school children in the conservation of their natural history. We also make use of local guide on the island of Zanzibar to visit the Spice farms as well as our visit to a Masai village.

Local guides are used in Botswana where the Okavango Delta bush trip is an experience in living in the bush as many people in Africa do, and an opportunity to get to know the local culture more in depth. While the traditional cultures of Botswana have used wooden dug-out canoes (mokoro’s) in past decades made from slow growing hardwood trees the local co-operative of polers we use have invested in fibreglass mokoros thereby reducing the number of hardwood tress to be cut down.

We also endeavor to create awareness of endangered wildlife within Namibia by visiting a local cheetah conservation project that homes injured or orphaned cheetahs. Our visit to the Himba tribe in the north of Namibia provide a source of income for the local community and also provide basic food stuffs for the tribe which the group buy together in the local shop and then offer to the tribal elder on our arrival at his village.

In Damaraland, at the Brandberg Mountains clients walk to the well known White Lady rock art accompanied by locals that are now certified guides and are part of The Tsiseb Conservancy providing employment to the local population, this after a local mine closed down in the early 1990’s. On our visit to the Namib dune-fields a knowledgeable guide will introduce you to the local ecosystems and bushman culture. We encourage our passengers to purchase goods made locally, and to be aware that craft market income is the only income for many families. Food is purchased at local markets where possible.

Freeplay Foundation
Finally, as part of our commitment to responsible tourism, we support the Freeplay Foundation. This charity supplies wind-up radios (needing no electrical or battery power) to children in Africa who have been orphaned by Aids or genocide and who are trying to bring up their younger siblings alone and unaided. Each radio costs only £35. It provides these children with health care information and how to obtain free testing and drugs, as well as general education and help on growing their own food crops and advice on issues such as safe pesticides. We aim to donate at least one radio per overland trip to help these children. If you would like to make a contribution towards this and would find it easier to do so before departure (rather than into the collection box on the truck).

Tourism can be good and bad for destinations & local people.

We carefully screen every holiday against our criteria for responsible travel.

'Look behind the brochure' to find how each holiday makes a difference (see left).

We don't claim to be perfect - there is no global accreditation - but we've led the way since 2001 and screened 1000's of holidays.

We invite every traveller to write a review about their experiences and responsible tourism.

This valuable feedback is sent to the people who run the holidays. We keep a very close eye on it and take off holidays that don't live up to our standards.

Convert currencies