Mountain Gorilla Trekking
A silverback's gaze through the undergrowth, a few meters away — Bwindi's defining encounter.
These aren't optional add-ons — they're the reason the itinerary exists. From a silverback's gaze in Bwindi to a whale shark's silhouette off Mafia Island, every experience below is engineered for maximum discoverability and built directly into our tailor-made routes across Uganda, Kenya, Tanzania, Zanzibar and the Seychelles.
Every experience below links straight into the itinerary that features it. Filter by category or destination to explore, then bring your shortlist to our specialists — most of our best-loved routes combine four to six of these into a single trip.
The classic safari moments, done properly — face to face, on foot, or from a private vehicle at first light.
A silverback's gaze through the undergrowth, a few meters away — Bwindi's defining encounter.
Kibale Forest's chimp communities — East Africa's highest primate density, in full voice at dawn.
A blaze of orange fur moving fast through Mgahinga's bamboo — one of Africa's rarest primates.
Lion, leopard, elephant, buffalo, rhino — the five that defined what a safari means.
Two million wildebeest and zebra, one river crossing, and a noise you feel in your chest.
Downwind, on foot, closing the distance to a white rhino under an armed ranger's guidance.
No engine, no roof — just you, an armed guide, and the bush at eye level.
Leopards, genets and civets — the safari that only starts once the sun goes down.
Uganda's rivers, channels and lakes — the wettest, wildest side of East Africa.
One of Africa's highest hippo concentrations, drifting past at arm's length.
The entire Nile forced through an 8-meter gorge — the most powerful waterfall by volume on Earth.
Stand where Lake Victoria becomes the Nile — then raft, kayak or simply watch the river begin.
Grade 3-5 rapids on one of the world's great rafting rivers, minutes from where it begins.
A dugout canoe, still water, and the Virunga volcanoes rising directly out of the lake.
See the plains from a balloon basket, a saddle, or a small aircraft window.
The migration from above, in total silence, as the plains turn gold beneath the basket.
Skip the road entirely — a light aircraft delivers you straight from one camp's airstrip to the next.
Cover ground alongside zebra and giraffe at a canter — no engine noise, no vehicle smell.
A camel caravan crossing Samburu's red-earth plains — the safari style local pastoralists have used for generations.
Zanzibar and the Seychelles beyond the beach chair — reefs, tides and centuries of Swahili trade.
Swim alongside the largest fish in the ocean, gentle giants that gather off Tanzania's coast each season.
Resident pods of bottlenose and humpback dolphins off Zanzibar's southern coast.
Living fossils that can outlive three human generations, roaming free on Curieuse and Bird Island.
Sailfish, marlin and dorado in some of the Indian Ocean's least-fished deep-water grounds.
Coral gardens, reef sharks and technicolor fish across two of the Indian Ocean's healthiest reef systems.
A private villa, a house reef, and nothing on the schedule but the tide.
Cloves, vanilla, cardamom and cinnamon — the trade that gave Zanzibar its name.
Volcanic peaks and highland trails across the Albertine Rift.
From Kilimanjaro's snow-capped summit to the volcanic peaks ringing the Virunga Massif.
The moments that aren't about wildlife at all — and end up being the ones guests remember longest.
A Maasai village visit, a Stone Town elder's stories, a Swahili cooking lesson — the human side of the journey.
A candlelit table set on the open plain, drinks in hand, as the sky turns from orange to violet.
Built for travelers chasing a specific shot, list, or level of expertise.
Bean-bags, low vehicles and a guide who understands light as well as wildlife behavior.
Over 1,000 recorded species between three countries — from the shoebill stork to Albertine Rift endemics.
No experiences match that combination of filters yet — but that's exactly what our tailor-made process is for.
Request a Custom ItineraryA silverback's gaze through the undergrowth, a few meters away — Bwindi's defining encounter.
Trek through Bwindi Impenetrable Forest's ancient canopy alongside expert trackers until you reach a habituated mountain gorilla family. You get one hour with them — most guests say it's over too soon.
Two million wildebeest and zebra, one river crossing, and a noise you feel in your chest.
Nothing in nature moves at this scale. Positioned correctly — by guides who track herd movement week to week — you'll watch the migration's dust, noise and sheer number close enough to feel the ground move.
The migration from above, in total silence, as the plains turn gold beneath the basket.
Lift off before dawn and drift over the Mara or Serengeti as the sun breaks the horizon — herds scattering beneath you, the only sound the occasional burst of the burner. Every flight ends with a champagne bush breakfast laid out on the plains.
Skip the road entirely — a light aircraft delivers you straight from one camp's airstrip to the next.
Fly-in safaris trade long game-drive transfers for short scenic flights between remote camps, maximizing time in the field and opening up areas that would otherwise cost a full day's drive to reach.
A private villa, a house reef, and nothing on the schedule but the tide.
Whether it's a private-island resort in the Seychelles reachable only by boat or seaplane, or a barefoot-luxury stretch of Zanzibar's northern coast, this is the deliberate, unstructured close to almost every itinerary in our library — the reward after the safari.
Yes — treks are graded by fitness level where possible, porters are available to assist on steeper terrain, and rangers set the pace. No prior trekking experience is required, though a reasonable base level of fitness makes the experience more enjoyable.
October through March is the whale shark season off Tanzania's coast, with sightings peaking November through February. We build these excursions directly into our Zanzibar-finale itineraries during that window.
Not on the same morning — they're in different countries — but both feature regularly in our multi-country Uganda-Kenya-Tanzania itineraries, typically a hot air balloon safari over the Mara or Serengeti paired with a Kazinga Channel boat safari earlier in the same trip through Queen Elizabeth National Park.
Combined is the default. Every experience on this page is designed as a building block — our specialists typically fold three to six of these into a single multi-country itinerary rather than booking any one in isolation.
6-10 months ahead is ideal for gorilla trekking permits, which are limited in number, and for peak migration-season balloon safaris. Most other experiences on this page can be arranged with far shorter notice.