docnico
FR
Visited:
October 2006
Reviewed: Sep 4, 2012
35-50 years of age
| Experience level: first safari
5 / 5
5
/5
5 / 5
5 / 5
5 / 5
/ 5
Serengeti is so vast, and yet you can find remote places where you'll find yourself face to face not with tourists coaches, but wildbeest migration instead. You can't be disappointed with Serengeti and a good guide.
Perry Peace
US
Visited:
September 2007
Reviewed: Sep 6, 2012
Email Perry Peace
| 35-50 years of age
| Experience level: 2-5 safaris
5 / 5
5
/5
5 / 5
5 / 5
5 / 5
3 / 5
Awsome experience.
Code Redsniper
BE
Visited:
September 2010
Reviewed: Nov 11, 2012
35-50 years of age
| Experience level: over 5 safaris
5 / 5
5
/5
5 / 5
3 / 5
5 / 5
5 / 5
excellent park but too much tourism here.
T SharpVisited:
August 2012
Reviewed: Jul 29, 2013
4 / 5
4
/5
5 / 5
3 / 5
4 / 5
3 / 5
The Serengeti is one of the most famous areas in Africa, and has the crowds to prove it. Though the front areas of the park were a little crowded for my taste, once we got further north and away, we saw unrivaled amounts of game. We were blessed with some late afternoon rainstorms, which brought even more animals out, and made everything seem so much more lush. Being in the Serengeti is like living in a photograph or painting, as we have all seen the famous landscapes at some point or another. There is more game there than most of us could ever see. Definitely worth a visit, but you might want to consider going at a time other than the high season.
Peter
AU
Visited:
July 2013
Reviewed: Jul 31, 2013
50-65 years of age
| Experience level: first safari
5 / 5
5
/5
5 / 5
5 / 5
4 / 5
/ 5
Just brilliant
Mary Lee Tennant
US
Visited:
December 2012
Reviewed: Jan 28, 2014
The Serengeti was outstanding in animal numbers ... wildebeast lined the horizon , Momma Cheetah sunning with her two offsprings until the " boy" decides to wander and Momma yelps him back from over the creek and a mile away , vultures waiting their turn on a " kill" because maribou storks ( the ugliest ever ! ) and hyenas feast first, and the beauty of a grey crested crane nearby a group of lions ( two mating) , and a huge bull elephant leading new borns thru the ticket ... after he pulled up small trees for their eating. We watched all species of Mother animals nurse their young and care for them , uninhibited by us or visible predators . Our guides Brian , Jarad, and Francis of Ecological Wildlife Adventures made sure our viewing was excellent. They knew where the animals where and how they would react. At all times our viewing was safe, and most interesting. Food was excellent .We loved breakfasts on the trail, warm weather, safe accommodations and the wild, natural
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scenery with few other tourists or nature viewers. Lodges were " first class" and excellent contrast to the wilds. But the serengeti is a " must " visit for an African Safari .
LilianVisited:
December 2013
Reviewed: Aug 1, 2014
Seronera - in central Serengeti
5 / 5
5
/5
5 / 5
5 / 5
5 / 5
5 / 5
Seronera in central Serengeti is truly a magical place you want to be while on safari.
There are abundant number of animals to see including the big five, as well as many different species of birds.
The landscaping is also beautiful....
The Kudrna Family
US
Visited:
August 2014
Reviewed: Sep 22, 2014
It was our first safari, so we were overwhelmed, but in our jeep several participants had quite some experience. They stated they never saw such wildlife in other parks in other countries (number of animals as well as diversity). We wonder now what this park looks like during the rain season...
Curiosity : due to a flat tyre we were late at the gate to leave the park. In spite of clear evidence (pictures and the spare wheel in place) the guards rewarded him with a 300 US $ fine (taken care of by Sunny Safaris). My conclusion is that the gate keepers of Serengeti are wild animals as well...
OnthechaseVisited:
May 2010
Reviewed: Oct 21, 2014
Tanzania proved me that real wildlife is still possible to be experienced in this threatened world!
5 / 5
5
/5
5 / 5
4 / 5
5 / 5
3 / 5
Luck, good karma, faith... I don't know what it was and I truly don't care.
To be able to see close up the big five and the little five during the same safari is no easy and in some cases not very likely.
I want to think that it was my true conviction that with good intensions, positive energy and vibe to nature everything is possible. And the proof is the 10 pics I have of this threatened, magnificent and extraordinary beautiful inhabitants of our planet in this corner of Africa: lion, elephant, buffalo, leopard and white rhino also known as the Big Five, and elephant shrew, buffalo weaver, leopard tortoise, lionant and the rhino beetle known as the Little Five.