Call us to talk about Photography.
Most people will want to take photographs of what they see on safari. You don’t need a super-duper camera, though, to get perfectly reasonable pictures.
Fortunately the best time to take interesting photos tends to coincide with the typical game-drive times, i.e. early morning and late evening, but do keep the sun behind you to avoid shadows. Low-level sun tends to create more depth and more richness in wildlife and landscape photography, so get as many shots as you can during these times of day. A final warning though: do ask permission before photographing local people – and do not try to photograph military installations or personnel.
Digital photography does offer many benefits over traditional film, but particularly relevant in the safari environment is the ability to take as many shots as possible in order to get that one perfect image, much as the professional photographer, willing to shoot off hundreds of rolls of film, achieved in the past.
But do make sure you have enough film/memory. This is the golden rule – and in general if you think you have enough go back to the shop and order twice as much and you should be OK!
The smallest National Park in Tanzania - famed for its chimpanzees and the pioneering work of Jane Goodall.
Tanzania's 'best kept secret', the remote and unspoilt Katavi National Park is a veritable throwback to nineteenth century Africa.
An interesting small game park, lying close to the mighty Selous Game Reserve, bizarrely bisected by the mighty Tanzam highway.
The largest intact caldera in the world, the Ngorongoro Crater is one of the few areas in Africa where the ‘Big Five’ can all be seen together.
One of the least well known National Parks in Tanzania, Ruaha is also one of its finest, with breathtaking scenery and an exceptionally high density of game.
Tanzania's and Africa's largest game reserve. And, being a game reserve, rather than a National Park, with many fewer restrictions on activities.
The Serengeti is Tanzania’s oldest game park, famed for its wildebeest migration, and is known as "the place where the land moves on forever"