ATMOSPHERE & PLACE
Africa, written slowly
Field notes from the people who actually go. Photography, lodge stories, conservation features, and the small moments that explain why we keep coming back.
Sit with one for ten minutes
WHY WE WRITE THESE
The bush is louder than a brochure
A safari does not feel the way most travel writing makes it sound. The dawn is colder. The silence is bigger. The third lion sighting is more unsettling than the first. We write the version we wish we had read before our first trip.
These are the pieces we think about on the long drive between camps. What a guide noticed at five in the morning. The way Sabi Sand sounds in November when the rains arrive. The conversation a tracker had with us that we have never forgotten. Read them with a coffee, not a search bar open.
5 pieces
Read the journal
Stories
Lion Sands Ivory Lodge. What their redesign gets right
I visited Lion Sands Ivory Lodge in the Sabi Sand. The redesigned spaces are quiet, bold, and rare. Here is what they got right.
Stories
Sabi Sand, the reserve that built modern safari
Why one strip of bush on Kruger's western edge changed how the world watches leopards
Stories
A day on safari, hour by hour
From the knock at the door to the second sundowner
Stories
The Okavango is the second river
Why the Delta floods in the dry season, and what that does to a safari
Stories
The smell of the bush at 5am
Why we still get up before dawn after twenty years in the bush. The case for the early game drive, written from the back of a Land Cruiser at five in the morning.
WHEN A STORY MAKES YOU CURIOUS
Tell us where it took you
We plan around feelings, not features. If something here pulled at you, send us the link and one line about why. We will start there.
Start with a conversation