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Today's Question Where in the United States can I stay overnight in a tree? answer Can you suggest a great African safari? answer
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Destinations: Spot On Tanzania Unfiltered By Julian Smith
Here's our problem with safaris: They're billed as authentic, up-close-and-personal wildlife experiences, but by Land Rover–bound definition, some are as canned as any Club Med junket. Closer to the real thing is Kiba Point, a brand-new luxury safari lodge in the heart of Tanzania's Selous Game Reserve. Selous is the largest game park in Africa, an undisturbed, 19,000-square-mile chunk of rivers, lagoons, and bush. It's also one of the rare African parks to permit walking safaris. Kiba visitors can hike from four stone-and-thatch cottages through dried-up riverbeds to stalk elephants, crocs, and any of the reserve's other 400 native species without the distractions (and assurances) of four-wheel drive. When the safari is over, cool off in a private plunge pool with a sundowner drink in hand. And because Kiba only books exclusively (a group of ten rents it out at once), there's no chance of encountering pith-helmeted impostors. $5,000 per night, all-inclusive, for ten people; sand-rivers-selous.com JULIAN SMITH is an award-winning writer, editor and photographer specializing in travel and science. A former naturalist guide and Canyonlands National Park ranger, Julian is the author of guidebooks to Ecuador, El Salvador, Virginia and the Southwest. Moon Handbooks Four Corners, his most recent guidebook, won the 2004 Lowell Thomas Travel Journalism Award for Best Guidebook from the Society of American Travel Writers. His writing and photography have appeared in National Geographic Traveler, the Los Angeles Times, the Washington Post, and many other print and online publications. His work has been syndicated worldwide by The New York Times. He is a co-founder of On Your Own Publications and helped launch and edit Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment, an international peer- reviewed scientific journal. Born and raised in New York, Julian has earned degrees in biology and wildlife ecology from the University of Virginia and Utah State University. He lives in Santa Fe, NM, where he gets outside as much as humanly possible. |
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