Explore our Destinations
Kwando Private Concession
Be left in awe. The Kwando Private Reserve in the greater Kwando-Linyanti region spans an area 40 times the size of Manhattan. Sprawling over 232,000 hectares of unspoiled wilderness in northern Botswana (opposite Namibia's Zambezi Region), this is a piece of very wild bush, and its astonishing ecological integrity supports incredible biodiversity. The northern tract, near Lagoon Camp, is dominated by the Kwando River and its rambling riverine forests. Head south towards Lebala (on a free game drive transfer), and the region opens up into massive grasslands and floodplains hedged in by wild sage. Off-road adventures track lions, leopards, cheetahs, and the swift African wild dogs.
Kwara Private Concession
The Kwara Private Concession spans 175,000-hectares in the northern reaches of the Okavango Delta and it's where the wild things truly are. Sharing a 30km watery border with Moremi Game Reserve, it boasts all the wildlife drama without the crowds or activity restrictions. Here, papyrus-fringed channels weave through floodplains and savanna scrub, which leads to mopane woodlands, creating a mosaic of habitats that shelter everything from elusive sitatunga to swaggering lions. Whether you’re gliding silently in a mokoro, tracking African wild dogs with our eagle-eyed guides, or cruising to the bird-filled Godikwe Lagoon, Kwara delivers the Delta’s greatest hits. It’s raw, remote, and ridiculously rewarding — just how a safari should be.
Pom Pom Private Concession
A UNESCO World Heritage Site, the Delta is a haven for notable animal species, and Pom Pom is the place to find them. Wildlife is prolific, and big cats steal the show in our monthly sightings reports. Nestled in the heart of the Okavango Delta, the area around Pom Pom is very open and pretty, notable for many tiny islands amid wide floodplains, which submerge during the floods, transforming into a watery wonderland with reed-fringed lagoons. Spot leopards lounging in trees or witness African wild dogs on the hunt. Birdlife is equally impressive, with regular sightings of Pel’s fishing owl and African wattled cranes.
Gunn's Private Concession
This is a dreamy slice of the southern Okavango Delta, where nature’s soundtrack features hippo grunts and the rustle of palm fronds. Overlooking Chief’s Island and bordering Moremi Game Reserve, it’s a paradise for off-road tracking on game drives and slipping into a mokoro during flood season. Or, set off on a nature walks and spot wildlife, such as elephants and giraffes from the comfort of your tent veranda all year round.
Dinare Private Reserve
Operated in collaboration with the Sankuyo Community Trust, Rra Dinare Camp and Mma Dinare Camp provide an authentic experience of Africa's extraordinary wilds. This ecosystem is a remarkable blend of ancient floodplains with acacia forests, fertile grasslands and sheltering mopane woodlands that cheetahs like to patrol, and gorgeous riverine landscapes with mature, towering trees. Both camps lie in close proximity to the Gomoti River, which is a year-round water source attracting a magnificent variety of animals, including elephants, hippos, red lechwe and the legendary buffalo herds.
Nxai Pan National Park
Nxai Pan National Park is where epic skies meet shimmering salt pans and ancient baobabs pose like giant bonsai trees. It is dazzling, dusty terrain during the dry season with white pans stretching to the horizon, scattered with springbok, oryx, and the occasional lion padding across like royalty. When the rains arrive, Nxai Pan flips the script: lush grasses spring up, and a flood of zebras pour in, followed closely by opportunistic predators. Game drives here are about wide horizons, surprise sightings, and the magic of big, empty spaces, but you can also expect elephants at the waterhole and bat-eared foxes scrambling through the scrubland while giraffes gaze on.
Central Kalahari Game Reserve
A massive, arid wilderness famous for its desert landscapes, this is the Kalahari of legend: endless golden grasslands, fossil riverbeds, ancient pans, enormous skies and sunsets that melt into star-blanketed skies. This is the domain of black-maned Kalahari lions, cheetahs, bat-eared foxes, and shimmering herds of oryx and springbok. Our game drives stretch across a cinematic wilderness punctuated by rare sightings of brown hyenas and honey badgers. Sunsets? Outrageous. Silence? Deafening. The CKGR doesn’t just show you Africa’s soul — it makes you feel like the last human on Earth, and you’ll love every second of it.