

These full and frank independent Kenya Adventure holidays reviews are from travellers who have booked directly through responsibletravel.com. They are not edited by us or any of the companies we work with. Find the real story, from real travellers below.

Whether you're a top triathlete or a sedentary office worker, as long as you have the desire to improve your fitness and wellbeing, get booking a fitness holiday with this operator. As one of the latter I had the most amazing 9 days.
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The most amazing holiday I have ever had. Like staying in 5* hotels but only better. Can't wait to go back...Most memorable was having elephants feed right outside our camp, visiting a traditional Maasai Village and watching a lion chase a Zebra on a night drive.
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The most memorable part of our holiday was the time spent in a very remote area of Tanzania with the Masai. We were privileged to visit their homes and witness their day to day living. An amazing experience!
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The game drives. Our whole point in going to Africa was seeing wildlife close up, and it was abundant. Both the Porini Camps on their private conservancies, and the Masai Mara National Preserve offered spectacular game viewing. We couldn't have asked for more.
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I felt this holiday was a win-win way of supporting African people. We got to see one of the most beautiful countries on earth and gained an insight into Kenyan culture, the local people gained employment and an incentive to protect the game life.
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The most memorable part of the holiday was the private walks with the Masaai and night drives in the Ol Kinyei Conservancy where we saw lions hunting & mating, a leopard on a stroll, porcupines, springhares, hyenas, etc.
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I would definitely give this holiday ***** and have been merrily recommending it to anyone and everyone who will listen!!!
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The host families helped us learn some of their language, customs, farming practices, crafts, cooking, and generally how to enjoy life without electricity! We didn't see another white person the whole week - wonderful!! I cannot recommend it highly enough.
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There were many memorable parts including singing and dancing with the Masai, trying to comprehend the sheer number of flamingos at Lake Nakuru, watching the vultures tear apart the carcass of a wildebeest and having a barbeque with the Masai.
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Amazing. Our guide / driver is a saint! No question was too stupid. No loo stop was inconvenient. He took such good care of us, and made us feel like valued friends instead of tourists. I will never forget Kenya and will go back as soon as I can.
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Community Work in Sasenyi Primary School - completing the foundations for a new classroom in record time & seeing how hard teamwork can make a crucial difference to people who have to live without much material support! But seeing six cheetahs was also very exciting!!
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Most memorable was definitely horse riding in and around Lake Malawi. It was soo much fun. Or maybe bush camping in the Serengeti.
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The most exciting part was being totally alone (or feeling like it) in the vast expanse of the Maasai Mara's rolling plains.
(more)We invite every traveller who books a holiday via us to send in a review. Because we don't run the holidays they're completely independent and unedited... remember to read between the lines though, as two people on the same holiday can have different views!
"Tourism can be a force for positive change in the developing world, but all too often the negative impacts on communities far outweigh the positive. Yet if community tourism enterprises can be linked into the formal supply chain in a responsible way, the benefits can be truly life transforming. A case in point is Tribal Voice Communication’s groundbreaking Maasai Villages Initiative in Kenya. This initiative has reversed over 30 years of exploitation of the Maasai villages’ tourism enterprises in Kenya (cultural manyattas) by the industry’s driver guides." Read more about The Masai Villages Initiative in Kenya in this Kenya article.
"It was nearly six years ago that when I was asked what my ideal job would be and I replied ‘I’d love to work for the BBC on Big Cat Diary’... there I was, six years later in the Masai Mara watching a cheetah stalking a Thompson’s gazelle." Read about this Kenya safari from someone who has been. Read the rest of Holly's Big Cat experience in Kenya in this Kenya holiday article.
"It was a hot, still Kenyan afternoon and I was nearing the end of my trip on Exodus’ Classic Kenya Safari. The Kicheche Camp Manager Williams had arranged a driver to take us across the plains on the thirty minute journey to Aitong Village. Aitong is home to many Masai families whose relatives work within the Mara camps such as Kicheche. Aitong is a small village with a few local shops and a water pump serving people who are up to 10km away. There is one government funded school further outside the village but it’s over subscribed and there are no plans to build and fund a new school. In 2004 the Kicheche Community Trust was set up by guests visiting the Mara. KCT fund and support many on-going projects in the Aitong Village region and one of them is Olkimitare School Project." Read the rest of Amelia's Kenya experience in this Kenya holiday article.
Community based tourism is rapidly gaining popularity in Kenya, East Africa and globally. So what has changed, has the notoriously competitive tourism industry suddenly developed a conscience? Read more about community based tourism in Kenya in this Kenya article.
"A busy township in the Maasai Mara. Market Day. We explore the bustling streets, conspicuous by the paleness of our skin. No tourist stop this, but a community doing business. A man makes shoes from old car tyres. A farmer drags his unwilling goat to the slaughter house. Two brothers load three sheep into the boot of a Toyota Corolla – they have to take the spare tyre out first. Another man staggers down the main street, drunk on the proceeds of his livestock sale. He brandishes a Maasai sword and yells insults at passers by. Suddenly he hurls the sword across the street. Sparks fly, people scatter. Elijah, our guide, ushers us back into the Land Cruiser and we move on. This is Kenya. Vibrant. Bustling. Alive. And we are going on safari." Read the rest of David's Kenya safari review in this Kenya holiday article.
"'Around me the plains ran out to the far mountains melting into the night, and above all, like an invisible present, Kilimanjaro drew a faint gleam of snow under the first stars.' Vivienne de Watteville penned this poetic description of Selenkay in one of my favourite books about Kenya, Speak to the Earth. She camped in the Selenkay area for two months in 1928, and recorded her adventures while photographing the abundant wildlife in what was then the Southern Game Reserve. Ernest Hemingway hunted on these scrublands and plains, and he too described their enticing beauty in his writings. Today, this corner of Kenya - situated just a few kilometres north of the Amboseli National Park - forms the Selenkay (or Eselenkei) Group Ranch on which 10,000 Kisongo Maasai people live." Read the rest of Dan Stiles' article in this Kenya article.
With a wealth of practical and background information, a Kenya travel guide is the essential companion for your holiday. With some useful information to help you prepare for your Kenya holiday, take a look at this Kenya travel information & map.
Tourism plays a hugely significant role in Kenya’s economy, contributing to approximately 25% of Kenya’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP). Wildlife tourism to Kenya’s numerous National Parks and Reserves represents a substantial part of this, with around 70% of tourism revenue in Kenya coming from wildlife tourism. Read more about Kenya wildlife tourism in this Kenya wildlife article.
"I am on my way to the Lake Bogoria National Reserve, a game park created in 1973 by the government, the object of the Endorois community’s struggle and the reason for my trip to Kenya. The Endorois are indigenous pastoralists, people who earn their livelihood through the rearing of livestock.They were evicted from their ancestral lands to make way for the Reserve, depriving them not only of prime pasture for cattle and goats during the harsh dry season but also of sites important for cultural activities such as initiation ceremonies. Minority Rights Group’s Trouble in Paradise Campaign is aimed at helping the Endorois get redress for the loss of their lands."
Find out more about minority rights in Kenya in this Kenya article.