SOUTHERN AFRICA · BOTSWANA

Two Brothers, One Kill,
No Witnesses

Two brothers, both sub-adults, sprawled across low branches in the late afternoon shade. Below them, barely concealed in the brush: an impala, their kill. The afternoon belonged to them—and to us.

They dozed. They fed. They watched. We watched back.

There were no other vehicles. This was our sighting, found by our guide, and it stayed ours. For hours, it was simply us and two leopards living out their afternoon.

In Botswana, that’s not luck. That’s how it works. You track. You search. You earn the sighting.

About Botswana

The Okavango Delta is one of the last places on earth that has remained genuinely untouched—a vast inland delta that floods seasonally and recedes, sustaining one of Africa’s most extraordinary concentrations of wildlife. What you find here is raw in a way that is increasingly rare: wilderness that hasn’t been softened for the visitor.

Rachit’s Note

There’s a version of safari that’s become almost a formula—the radio crackles, coordinates are shared, jeeps converge. You find the leopard surrounded by fifteen other vehicles, engines idling. The animal is right there, and somehow the moment is diluted. Botswana works differently. Your guide isn’t competing for space or racing to a sighting. They’re tracking, reading the land, making calls. When you find something—and you will—it feels earned. And the moment, it’ll only be between you and the wilderness.

— Rachit, Co-Founder

Experiences in Botswana

Wildlife Encounter

The Magestic Beasts of Okavango

Families led by their matriarchs gather at the river’s edge—hundreds of elephants at once—drawn by water and the promise of safety. Calves press close, trunks brush in quiet recognition, and deep rumbles travel through the earth, an ancient, living rhythm unfolding before you.

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Remote Stay

Sleeping Above the Waterhole

A raised platform beside an active waterhole, open on all sides to the night. Elephants arrive after dark, giraffe move at the edge of visibility, and the sounds of the bush come and go without interruption. There is no barrier between sleep and the wild — just the slow realisation, sometime in the night, that you are already inside it.

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Begin Your Story

Would you like us to create something like this for you?

Every journey starts with a single conversation — with us, not a form.