

These full and frank independent South Africa Cultural tours 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.

There are very many wonderful bits to the holiday. I particularly enjoyed my time in Lesotho and the town tour there and the township tour in Oudtshoorn. I was very thrilled by the countryside.
(more)
There were many moments, but if i had to choose it was whilst driving through Kruger Park a group of five elephants crossed the road, we stopped the car and waited for them to pass. The last elephant before crossing altogether raised its trunk at us as a sign of thank you for letting them cross. It was fantastic.
(more)

Thanda Game reserve has to be the most memorable although it was hard to pick a specific part of it. It was fantastic and we couldn't have been treated better or had a more pleasant experience ... we will be back.
(more)
Most memorable was hiking up table mountain in the morning and doing two wine tastings in the afternoon on one day.
(more)
The Drakensberg mountains and Didima camp at Cathedral Peak provided a magical start to the holiday, with stunning scenery, fantastic hiking and lovely accommodation; we could easily have stayed much longer there.
(more)
The trip surpassed our expectations tenfold. In our wildest dreams we couldn't contemplate or imagine the experience we would or could hope to achieve on this trip. It was amazing from beginning to end.
(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!
"Maoko, the black rhino bull, was not in a good mood. We were doing nothing more offensive than taking a few photographs of him when he decided enough was enough. We had rather foolishly parked between him and cover and, rather than go round our Land-Rover, he decided that we should move out of his way. He trotted idly in our direction before suddenly putting his head down and charging headlong at us. In the back of the vehicle I could clearly hear his angry snorts and thundering footfalls before, with engine racing, we left him behind. Honour satisfied, he wandered off into the bush. Quite why Maoko should be so cross is not obvious for he must be one of the safest black rhinos in Africa. Black rhinos are becoming increasingly rare but Maoko lives in the 75,000 hectares of Madikwe Game Reserve which is surrounded both by an electrified fence and a series of local communities for whom the reserve is something of a fairy tale come true, a real golden goose."
Read the rest of this South Africa safari story by Michael Woods in this South Africa article.