1. The solitude and adventure of true wilderness
Campi ya Kanzi sits alone within 283,000 acres (400 square miles) of the most pristine part of the Amboseli-Tsavo ecosystem, directly in the migration corridor between two of the most legendary national parks in Kenya. Kuku Group Ranch, where we are the exclusive safari operator, is almost 5 times bigger than Amboseli National Park! 3/4 the size of the entire Maasai Mara. The Maasai Mara has room for 5,000 tourists, while Campi ya Kanzi hosts just 16 guests at a time. In Amboseli dozens of tourist white mini-buses from the coast roam along with you looking for a lion to encircle, while with us you will not see one single tourist who is not our guest. You will have an incomparably private safari experience and if we pass the main road and you see the vans racing each other to the parks you will sigh with relief that you haven’t traveled so far just to feel like you’ve gone to the zoo.
2. I want to get out of the car!
Go on safari in any National Park and that’s what you’ll be muttering to yourself within 3 days. But in the National Parks and Game Reserves it is not permitted. With us you can do more than just stretch your legs, you can walk for days. Stroll down through the foothills to the granite-topped outcroppings at the edge of the savannah and climb up for a view that will stop your heart and brings a tear to the eye of many people. Take a longer day hike across the hills and plains, accompanied by your Maasai scouts, learning to read the signs of the animals and hearing how the landscape was formed, crossing over ancient lava flows and ending in a tented camp under a baobab tree for the night. Or, best of all, take the rarest of walks up into the Green Hills and through the Chyulu Cloud Forest: wild forest hogs, rare Turaco birds, huge silver-cheeked Hornbills, antelope, elephant…all under the cool shade of giant strangler fig trees that rival the strangest most mystical trees in the world. A large percentage of our guests say that the experience of these walks was the highlight of their trip in East Africa. (And, yes, it’s very safe! You will always be accompanied by experienced Maasai armed escort).
3. An authentic encounter with a Culture
The Maasai you will meet going in and out of National Parks will be people hawking trinkets at the gate. Campi ya Kanzi is not just located within one of the largest intact Maasai group ranches in Kenya, our lodge is owned and staffed by the community. Almost everyone who works here was born and raised here. Many of our staff built the lodge by hand. The pride in ownership here is real and so is the excitement to welcome you into the community in a deep way. Visit homes of our staff, meet their families, visit their bomas, visit the schools or health dispensaries, ask questions and learn about the traditions of this famous nomadic warrior culture…and join in the dancing and singing that happens on many nights out by a fire in the hills under the moon or in one of the famous lava caves where Maasai warriors used to hide stolen cattle. You will meet people here who want to show you their true culture in a way you will not find elsewhere and you will end your trip with new friends.
4. Here you are family
Campi ya Kanzi is not a ‘ safari lodge’ like the big ones on the circuit. Here you are in our home in the bush with us. “Us” is Luca and Antonella Belpietro, your hosts in Paradise, and the Maasai who work here and are the landlords of everything around you. We have lived here nearly twenty years and we are raising our three children here. Maasai are the lords of the bush and Italians are lords of the kitchen and gracious hosting…we think it’s the perfect combination! Whether you want intimacy, privacy and quiet service in your own luxury tent or villa, or a long night of Italian wine and stories by the fire…we are here to make your visit ‘perfetto’.
5. And more
Scenic flights around Kilimanjaro and over the Chyulu; visits to Tsavo and the famous hippos of Mzima Springs; an old-fashioned ‘fly camping’ tented overnight safari; horse-back riding; transcendental meditation course; visits and presentations by conservation scientists at the nearby Chyulu Conservation and Research Center…the list of things to do here that you will find nowhere else goes on and on.
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Rates are all inclusive, nothing extra unless you want to tip the staff. All safari activities are included.
Excluded are these special activities and services: scenic flights, horse-back riding, massages, optional excursions to Tsavo West (by car) and to Amboseli (by air) National Parks, guaranteed guiding by Luca Belpietro.
Other extra activities offered are a transcendental meditation course, yoga classes, a photographic course, fly camping, a night in Tsavo East at the Sheldrick elephant orphanage: these last activities needs to be pre-booked in advance.
The conservation fee is levied by the community and paid in full to the Maasai Wilderness Conservation Trust, an award winning conservation and economic development organization working to preserve the ecosystem and strengthen the welfare of the community. The conservation fee funds a program called Wildlife Pays, which compensates the community for losses of livestock to predators and employs community rangers to stop poaching.
The Trust has won the United Nations Equator Prize and Samson Parashina, head guide of Campi ya Kanzi and Chairman of the Trust, has been named by the UN Champion of the Earth.
Campi ya Kanzi staff can organize all aspects of your safari from arrival in Nairobi, including hotel reservations, transfers, flights and bookings at other camps and lodges in East Africa, all according to your tastes and desires.
There is so much to do at Campi ya Kanzi that we think it takes at least 5 days to get a taste of all of it. One week with us would be the perfect safari.
During you seven days with us we would recommend spending a night in the fly camp, a night at Ithumba with the orphan elephants, enjoy a Kilimanjaro scenic flight and spend a day in Tsavo West. A very complete and diverse safari.
You can even stay 10 days and do something different every day.
And almost every type of experience can be enjoyed by anyone, no matter what your level of fitness, we can adjust things to suit your abilities.
The camp is open year round and there isn’t a month which is better than the others.
Altitudes range from 7,000 ft. in the Chyulu Hills to 3,000 ft. in the plains in front of Mt. Kilimanjaro. The many different habitats host many different species of mammals (more the 60 big mammals, including elephant, buffalo, rhino -rarely seen – lion, leopard, cheetah, giraffe, zebra, wildebeest, impala, gazelles, etc.), birds (more than 400 species), trees (more than a 1,000 different species).
If conservation and biology research interests you especially, have a closer look at the activities of the Maasai Wilderness Conservation Trust, which you are supporting with your conservation fee.
Download the MWCT Executive Summary
Contact us at bookings@maasai.com or in contact page!