from 0 review
5 to 7 hours
Daily Tour
Unlimited
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Majority of our clients being Airline employees your safety, security and overall satisfaction are our our biggest priority in all our tours price not withstanding.
We craft in mind Multiple tours customised to families and kid friendly hence less hassle for you. We also offer a chance for a brief souvenir and artifacts shopping as complementary along the tour.
Speciality lunch is included as an experience in it self.
Majority of our clients being Airline employees your safety, security and overall satisfaction are our our biggest priority in all our tours price not withstanding.
We craft in mind Multiple tours customised to families and kid friendly hence less hassle for you. We also offer a chance for a brief souvenir and artifacts shopping as complementary along the tour.
Speciality lunch is included as an experience in it self.
Itinerary
This is a typical itinerary for this product
Stop At: Giraffe Centre, Duma Rd, Nairobi Kenya
For the trip to the Karen area of Nairobi, a leafy suburb at the edge of the Ngong Road Forest. Learn about the work of the African Fund for Endangered Wildlife that’s headquartered at the Giraffe Centre, and hear the story of the Giraffe Centre’s most famous resident, a rescued giraffe calf from western Kenya named Daisy Rothschild.
– Explore the non-profit Giraffe Centre, where Rothschild giraffes mingle with a herd of local warthogs in a semi-wild environment. Watch the giraffes cluster around their feeding station, extending their long, black tongues to lap up food. Leave the crowds behind on a small nature trail, listen to east African birdsong, and take in the plants that grow along the Gogo River—try to spot the resident giraffes as they sway through the forest.
Duration: 1 hour
Stop At: David Sheldrick Wildlife Trust, Mbagathi Road Kws Workshop Entrance – Nairobi National Park, Nairobi 00503 Kenya
At the David Sheldrick Animal trust, Expert team leaders retrieve orphan animals from the wild and rehabilitate them to return to their natural environment. Keepers bottle-feed babies every three hours, 24-hours a day, and often sleep with elephants until they can be returned to the wild. While visitors are not allowed to feed the animals, the trust offers a rare opportunity to see the offspring of Africa’s largest mammals up close.
– The orphanage is open from 11 a.m. to noon, for an hour each day. Those who opt to sponsor an orphan elephant for $50 can arrange a private viewing outside the 11 a.m. to noon window.
The orphanage is open from 11 a.m. to noon, for an hour each day.
Duration: 1 hour
Stop At: Bomas of Kenya, Langata Rd Mageso Chember, Nairobi 00200 Kenya
Here you will experience the rich culture of Kenya’s 42 different ethnic groups as they live on their day-to-day basis. This is clearly demonstrated through traditional dances, music, song, and folklore. There is a splendid arena where acrobatic shows are performed.
The Bomas of Kenya put on displays of traditional dancers and spread over many acres, it also has a wonderful display of mud huts and traditional Kenyan homesteads. The Bomas of Kenya is the ideal place to bring energetic children as they can freely run in and out of the traditional houses & mud huts, climb up ladders and generally have a wonderfully active time.
These traditional houses are set out in clusters according to the region. The homes are grouped with the first wife’s hut, second wife’s hut, granary etc and you can see where the livestock are kept and the enormous variety between the huts.
Bomas of Kenya was initiated in 1971 after Kenya’s independence (1964) and it is run by the Kenyan Government and aims to promote Kenya’s rich cultural heritage.
In addition to the main attractions (the dancers and the traditional homesteads), there is also a large, wooden play area for young children, a small, low-key village of craft shops and other attractions.
Duration: 2 hours
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