Three nights in a wilderness so raw it resets everything you thought you knew about safari. Back in Zanzibar by Day 5.
Ruaha National Park is Tanzania's largest park, and one of its least visited. It sits in the remote central south of the country, and the travellers who reach it tend not to go to the Serengeti for years afterwards — because once you have experienced wildlife in a landscape that does not manage itself for tourism, you find it difficult to return to places that do.
Ruaha has one of the highest lion densities in Africa. It has elephant herds with genuine tuskers — the old bulls with ivory that reaches the ground — almost extinct elsewhere. It has wild dogs, Africa's most endangered predator.
It has leopards. It has all of this with almost no other vehicles, no group tours, and a landscape so raw and untouched that the word 'wilderness' finally means what it is supposed to mean.
Getting here from Zanzibar requires a connecting flight through Dar es Salaam — a journey of approximately two hours total. It is worth every minute of it. Into Ruaha is not the easiest of our five fly-in packages. It is, by a significant distance, the most extraordinary.
Morning flight from Zanzibar to Dar es Salaam, then connecting flight to Msembe Airstrip in Ruaha National Park. Total flight time: approximately two hours.
As the second plane descends over Ruaha, the landscape below is immediate and undeniable — miles of dry riverbed, ancient miombo woodland, and the Great Ruaha River cutting through terrain that looks sculpted by something older than memory. Your guide meets you at the airstrip and drives you to camp through the park.
There are no tarmac roads. There are no other vehicles. The first elephant appears within ten minutes, an old bull with ivory nearly touching the ground. This is Ruaha.
Ruaha has one of the highest lion densities in Africa. This is not a marketing claim — it is a consequence of the park's enormous size, its abundant buffalo and zebra populations, and the fact that very few vehicles disturb the ecosystem. Your guide knows the pride territories, the seasonal movements, the individual lions.
This morning you find them at a kill from the previous night — six adults and three cubs, entirely unconcerned by your presence, doing what lions do in a landscape that belongs to them completely.
Afternoon game drive along the Great Ruaha River — where the dry season concentrates wildlife at the water's edge in densities that rival the Serengeti's best moments.
Africa's most endangered predator — the African wild dog — has one of its last significant strongholds in Ruaha. Your guide has tracked the resident pack's movements.
The morning begins early, following their hunt through the open woodland — a spectacle of speed, coordination, and successful teamwork that most wildlife travellers never witness in a lifetime of safaris.
Afternoon: the Great Ruaha River elephants. The old bulls that gather at the river in the dry season are among the last genuinely large-tusked elephants on earth.
You watch them in silence — the guide knows there is nothing adequate to say. The evening is a sundowner on a rocky outcrop above the river, the bush below turning gold, the day ending exactly as it should.
Ruaha at first light is a different animal from Ruaha at any other hour. One final drive before the airstrip — your guide finds the leopard that has been watching you from the fig tree above camp for three mornings.
Then transfer to Msembe Airstrip. The flight back to Zanzibar stops in Dar es Salaam. By early afternoon you are back on the island, sitting with cold feet in the Indian Ocean, trying to explain to the other guests at your beach bar what Ruaha was like. You will not find the right words. That is fine. You know what you saw.
| Start dates | Solo | 2 people | 3 people | 4 people | 5 people | 6 people | 7+ people |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mid-Range Safari | n/a | $2,275 | $2,010 | $1,820 | $1,820 | $1,820 | Get Quote |
| Luxury Safari | n/a | $2,400 | $2,140 | $1,950 | $1,950 | $1,950 | Get Quote |
Prices are per person sharing, in USD. Group discounts apply — contact us for custom or larger-group pricing.
Yes — every departure is private with your own guide and vehicle. The route, dates, and accommodation level can all be tailored to you.
Several tiers per night, from comfortable mid-range camps and lodges to premium and elite options. See the day-by-day list above.
Yes — all park entry fees, government taxes, and the meals listed in the itinerary are included.
The dry season generally offers the best game viewing, but we'll advise the ideal timing for your chosen route and dates.
Absolutely — our safaris are family friendly and we can tailor the pace for younger travellers.
Start planning today — a free, personalised itinerary within 24 hours. No commitment required.