While every African safari opportunity is a gift, safaris can also come at a cost to the environment and communities in each destination. Our safari adventures sustainability are centered on empowering local communities and preserving their culture, ensuring that our travel destinations also thrive as homes for local communities, fostering local prosperity and cultural preservation.
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Our eco-friendly perspective is centred on three key pillars of sustainability: environmental pillar, Social pillar and economic pillar.
These pillars eases the burden of over-tourism and lightens our footprint on our planet.

The Environmental Pillar

We work to achieve environmental sustainability through creating processes, systems, and activities that reduce the environmental impact of our safaris. From our policy on single use plastic to carbon-neutral emissions, our mission is to further the transition to a clean-energy future.

The Social Pillar

Safaris in Kenya and Africa are (indirectly) responsible for as many as 3 in every 10 jobs. However, safaris often have a detrimental ripple effect. Our goal is to ensure our safari adventures take a socially-responsible approach to tourism, partnering with organizations that combat climate change, trophy hunting, hunting, sex trafficking, and commercialization of indigenous cultures.

The Economic Pillar

One of the longest-lasting benefits of safaris is the creation of job opportunities and distribution of spending within local communities, local communities benefit from sale of bead works to tourists, tips, Village visits and every money spent on local shops while on your safari. We ensure that as much as possible we book activities that benefit the local communities, accommodation facilities that employ from the local community and also source their supplies from the local community.

“Take nothing but pictures, leave nothing but footprints, kill nothing but time” – Aliyyah Eniath