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Safari in Maasai Mara National Reserve

Safari in Maasai Mara National Reserve

Overview: Safari in Maasai Mara National Reserve

If you’re staying in a camp inside the Maasai Mara National Reserve or just along its perimeter, you’ll do all your game drives (safaris) in the reserve itself. However, if you’re staying in a camp in one of the Maasai-owned conservancies, you have a choice: by default, most of your activities (games drives or quite often bush walks) will be in the conservancy where your camp is located, but you also have the option of doing a safari in the Maasai Mara National Reserve – usually for a full day.

The reserve isn’t fenced, and the wild animals that were once restricted to its limits because of Maasai and livestock pressures around the perimeter are now widely dispersed across the conservancies, to the point where the wildlife experience is as good as you’ll have inside the reserve. And the landscapes, while sometimes a little hillier and bushier in the conservancies, are part of a continuous ecosystem. So there is a strong case for saying you don’t need to visit the public reserve.

What you can’t experience in the conservancies, though, is the full impact of the wildebeest migration, which is at its most dramatic at the river crossings where the Mara River meanders through the national reserve. Even out of season, it’s always enjoyable to potter along the Mara River, which is much bigger than the other watercourses in the ecosystem and harbours huge numbers of hippos and crocodiles.

Depending on your camp, the distances involved and your own preferences, you’re likely to leave either shortly after dawn with a picnic breakfast and lunch, and return to your camp at sunset, or leave after an early breakfast in camp and come back to camp having had a sundowner.

Driving through the Maasai Mara

The Maasai Mara is the one part of Kenya where the concentrations of wildlife that existed in the nineteenth century can still be seen, even if numbers have greatly diminished. The panorama is sometimes like one of those wild-animal wall charts, where groups of unlikely-looking animal companions are forced into the artist’s frame: you can see multiple species in one gaze: zebra, giraffe, Thomson’s gazelle, topi, jackal, ostrich and a pride of lions waiting for a chance.

Big dark-maned lions are the best-known denizens of the Maasai Mara and there are estimated to be several hundred in the greater Mara ecosystem. Lions are relatively easy to find, and there are usually several prides firmly in possession of their territories in the Musiara and Sekenani sectors of the reserve, as well as in the Mara Triangle on the western side of the river.

While lions sometimes seem to be lounging under every other bush, finding a cheetah is harder. Cheetahs are generally solitary and rather vulnerable to harassment by wildlife-watchers, not to mention competition by lions and leopards. Cases of cheetahs using vehicles as look-out hills have become quite common, though, as they lose their instinctive fear and adapt to close human scrutiny.

Leopards are often seen these days out and about in the daytime, and most camps and lodges will know where to go. Early and late are still the best times for them.

Giraffes – whose dream-like, slow-motion canter is one of the Mara’s most beautiful sights – are often good pointers for predators in the vicinity: look closely at what they are watching.

The Mara has one of Kenya’s few surviving indigenous black rhino populations – native rhinos rather than rhinos brought in by translocation from another region – though numbers are still small and every calf born is a victory. Finding them is often difficult, but a good guide will know the current most likely location.

The Maasai Mara’s other heavyweights are about in abundance. The Mara River heaves with hippos, while big families of elephants traipse along the forested river and stream margins and spread out across the plains when there’s plenty of vegetation to browse.

The experience of the Great Migration

If you’re in the reserve during the annual wildebeest migration season, you will know all about it, as wildebeest and migratory zebra surround you as far as the eye can see. Often billed as one of the seven natural wonders of the world, the migration has become an iconic image of the region. With a lemming-like instinct, the migratory megaherd (uncountable, but estimated at anywhere from 500,000 to 1.2 million animals), moves north on multiple fronts from the Serengeti in Tanzania, streaming over the Sand River and into the Sekenani side of the Maasai Mara National Reserve, and crossing the Mara River into the Mara Triangle further west.

The Mara River is the biggest obstacle they cross (the Sand River, Talek River and other smaller streams rise much more locally and rarely pose much of a barrier). When heavy rains fall up on the Mau Range where the Mara River rises, the surging brown torrent that results can claim many animals as they try to cross in either direction.

At this time of year, many game drive vehicles converge at key crossing points in their dozens, sometimes even causing the herds to change their behaviour. We hope that most if not all the driver-guides at our camps and lodges would behave well, and never join such a throng. But, as ever, on any game drive, do feel free to request a change of plan if you feel you’ve had enough of what can become something of a circus.

What causes the river crossings – carrot or stick? – is unclear, and it may well be a combination of factors: breakaway herds, ranging from a few dozen to many thousands, appear to be both actively drawn by the scent, or the idea, of greener grass on the other side of the river, or by being spooked or simply crowded forwards by other animals behind. Whatever the case, the brainless masses swarm to the banks, either at shallow and easy ‘traditional’ crossing points, or sometimes at much more dangerous locations where the crumbling banks are high above the river. When the animals eventually start to plunge in – or fall – from these locations, many are injured by underwater rocks and uprooted trees, not to mention flailing legs and horns. And the Mara River’s huge population of large Nile crocodiles accounts for many a straggler.

During some crossings, bodies bob to the surface to float downstream after every surge. During most migration seasons, there are places where heaps of bloated carcasses line the banks and injured and dying animals struggle in the mud. The migration’s full, cacophonous impact can be gut-wrenchingly melodramatic: these are not scenes for the faint-hearted. However it’s all part of a natural drama that keeps the predator populations (and the rest of the food chain) healthy, and incidentally makes human visitors – even when there are more of us than we would like – feel very insignificant. Experiencing the great migration is like being parachuted into the middle of a natural disaster or conflict, but one over which you have no responsibility or control. There’s nothing to be saved or solved: all you have to do is watch in awe.

Age restrictions Restrictions vary depending on your camp or lodge.

Availability: If you're staying in the reserve, then all your game drives will take place there. If you're staying at any conservancy camp, you can book a reserve visit in advance on a specific date, at the time you book your safari with Expert Africa. Or you can wait until you're there, planning a visit for the next day or later in your stay when discussing your plans with your camp or lodge manager, which is what most visitors do. Don't forget, if you're on a shared game drives basis, and don't have your own private vehicle and driver-guide, you may have to consider the plans of other guests in camp. Like bush walks or other activities, reserve visits will always be available at some point during your stay.

Please note: Expert Africa only books excursions as a part of a full, Expert Africa itinerary.
Start location
Any of Expert Africa's camps in the Mara conservancies
End location
Back at your safari camp
Meals included
Picnic breakfast and or lunch. Sundowner bitings. Drinks.
Duration
All day from sunrise to sunset

Photo gallery

What to look forward to.


1 of 10
River crossings during the migration can be pedestrian…
2 of 10
…or dramatic.
3 of 10
And the onlookers terrifying…
4 of 10
…or a bit absurd. Don't hesitate to ask your driver-guide to move on if nothing is happening.
5 of 10
There are always new sights to find on your own, like these hyenas…
6 of 10
…this large pod of hippos…
7 of 10
… or these cheetah brothers on the hunt.
8 of 10
Typical safari vehicles…
9 of 10
…are able to go almost anywhere…
10 of 10
…though the Mara River itself (this is one of the wildebeest crossing points) only has two bridges.

River crossings during the migration can be pedestrian…

…or dramatic.

And the onlookers terrifying…

…or a bit absurd. Don't hesitate to ask your driver-guide to move on if nothing is happening.

There are always new sights to find on your own, like these hyenas…

…this large pod of hippos…

… or these cheetah brothers on the hunt.

Typical safari vehicles…

…are able to go almost anywhere…

…though the Mara River itself (this is one of the wildebeest crossing points) only has two bridges.

Safari in Maasai Mara National Reserve reviews

51 independent first-hand comments from our travellers.


87%
20 reviews since August 2007
Excellent
11
Good
7
Average
1
Poor
0
Terrible
1

Overall rating: Excellent

Mrs. K fromMinnesota

15 Aug 2021

"Safari in Maasai Mara National Reserve review"

"the National Reserve was a lot of fun since we got to see a crossing. …" Read Mrs. K ’s full holiday review

Overall rating: Excellent

Overall rating: Excellent

Dr G & Dr EfromUK

19 Sep 2022

"Safari in Maasai Mara National Reserve review"

"Nice to see the open plains...a lion day, we had seven sightings altogether. …" Read Dr G & Dr E’s full holiday review

Overall rating: Good

JaycefromNJ, USA

6 Oct 2021

"Safari in Maasai Mara National Reserve review"

"Our guides really went out of their way to make sure that we had a great Safari. …" Read Jayce’s full holiday review

Overall rating: Excellent

Overall rating: Excellent

Dr R.fromColombo 5

7 Oct 2019

"Safari in Maasai Mara National Reserve review"

"I cannot recall any day on which we had better wild life sightings than this. …" Read Dr R.’s full holiday review

Overall rating: Excellent

Mr & Mrs BfromHampton

6 Oct 2019

"Excellent guiding and viewings"

"We had a new vehicle which was comfortable and easy to look out from. …" Read Mr & Mrs B’s full holiday review

Overall rating: Excellent

Mr S & Ms BfromUK

10 Sep 2019

"Safari in Maasai Mara National Reserve review"

"We had some very good lion sightings and lots of hippos and crocodiles. …" Read Mr S & Ms B’s full holiday review

Overall rating: Good

Overall rating: Terrible

See all Safari in Maasai Mara National Reserve reviews

Ideas for holidays which can include Safari in Maasai Mara National Reserve

Add this experience to these trip ideas or contact us to start planning your own tailor-made safari to Kenya.


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Black Kite Fly-in Safari

10 days • 4 locations
NAIROBI AIRPORT TO NAIROBI AIRPORT

Explore Kenya in-depth with visits to Nairobi and Meru national parks, the Mara Conservancies and Amboseli. Nestled in remoter regions, four camps provide fantastic access to rich game, a range of activities and beautifully diverse landscapes.

US$10,140 - US$12,240 per person

Itinerary image

Tawny Eagle Fly-in Safari

7 days • 2 locations
NAIROBI AIRPORT TO NAIROBI AIRPORT

Explore Laikipia and the Maasai Mara ecosystem with stays in the Ol Pejeta and Naboisho conservancies. Two smart yet authentically rustic bush camps provide a traditional safari experience, offering a high standard of guiding and excellent level of care.

US$5,820 - US$8,780 per person

Itinerary image

Gabar Goshawk Fly-in Safari

10 days • 4 locations
NAIROBI AIRPORT TO NAIROBI AIRPORT

Experience Amboseli, the Maasai Mara ecosystem and Laikipia during this economically priced safari. Two simple camps offer adventure before a stopover in Nairobi and a final stay in the charming, wildlife-rich Il Ngwesi Eco-Lodge.

US$5,800 - US$6,090 per person

Itinerary image

African Hawk-Eagle Fly-in Safari

7 days • 2 locations
NAIROBI AIRPORT TO NAIROBI AIRPORT

Two luxurious camps provide relatively quiet game-viewing within Laikipia and the Mara ecosystem. Situated on private conservancies, both Lewa Wilderness and Naboisho offer the chance to sight all of the "Big 5" and to enjoy a range of safari activities.

US$7,780 - US$12,800 per person

Itinerary image

De Brazza Monkey Fly-in Safari

9 days • 3 locations
NAIROBI AIRPORT TO NAIROBI AIRPORT

Enjoy a range of activities in the remote wilderness of northern Kenya before exploring the wildlife-rich plains of the Mara ecosystem. Private vehicles and guides heighten the personalisation of this highly immersive safari.

US$12,310 - US$16,320 per person

Itinerary image

Lanner Falcon Fly-In Safari

8 days • 3 locations
NAIROBI AIRPORT TO NAIROBI AIRPORT

Three sister camps offer access to wonderfully remote regions across northern Kenya and the Maasai Mara ecosystem. Enjoy an exclusive safari experience focused on great wildlife, superb guiding and considerable comfort, with a range of activities.

US$6,620 - US$8,400 per person

Itinerary image

Wahlberg's Eagle Fly-in Safari

6 days • 2 locations
NAIROBI AIRPORT TO NAIROBI AIRPORT

A great value safari in Laikipia and the Maasai Mara that provides an immersive, authentic bush camp experience with activities for families of all ages.

US$5,000 - US$5,970 per person

Itinerary image

Peregrine Falcon Fly-In Safari

6 days • 2 locations
NAIROBI AIRPORT TO NAIROBI AIRPORT

Discover two of Kenya’s quieter wildlife havens with visits to Meru National Park and Mara North Conservancy. Top-quality sister camps provide considerable comfort and a range of activities by which to explore the game-rich surroundings.

US$6,910 - US$8,320 per person

Itinerary image

African Finfoot Fly-in Safari

7 days • 3 locations
NAIROBI AIRPORT TO NAIROBI AIRPORT

After a unique start in Nairobi National Park, classic, luxurious camps combine for a high-end and exclusive safari in fantastic wildlife destinations.

US$9,900 - US$16,050 per person

Itinerary image

Hamerkop Fly-In Safari

8 days • 2 locations
NAIROBI AIRPORT TO NAIROBI AIRPORT

Different wildlife, contrasting camps and a whole host of activities, this is a safari for those wanting to get out and about and not just sit in a vehicle.

US$6,350 - US$10,960 per person

Itinerary image

Purple Grenadier Fly-In Safari

6 days • 2 locations
NAIROBI AIRPORT TO NAIROBI AIRPORT

Fantastic guiding from intimate, well-run mid-range tented camps, in superb conservancy locations: this safari is all about making the most of the incredible wildlife in Laikipia and the Maasai Mara.

US$5,010 - US$6,600 per person

Itinerary image

Golden Weaver Fly-In Safari

6 days • 2 locations
NAIROBI AIRPORT TO NAIROBI AIRPORT

A rustic, adventurous week on safari with great community involvement that offers incredible value for money in two very different locations – the Amboseli and Maasai Mara ecosystems.

US$3,280 - US$3,440 per person

Itinerary image

Striped Hyena Safari

5 days • 3 locations
NAIROBI AIRPORT TO NAIROBI AIRPORT

Just one example of a possible itinerary for keen walkers, this safari enables you to experience the sounds and sights of the bush, and its wildlife, in an unusually direct way.

US$5,020 - US$6,470 per person

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Inspiration and great ideas for other experiences in Kenya to include in your safari.


Nairobi Elephant Orphanage visit

Nairobi Elephant Orphanage visit

One hour, by pre-booking only

Visit the Sheldrick Wildlife Trust Elephant Orphanage for a close-up encounter with elephant orphans – and sometimes rhino orphans. You can visit during daily between 11:00 and 12:00, or make special arrangements for a private visit in the afternoon.

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Nairobi Giraffe Centre visit

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Balloon flight over the Mara

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Reteti Elephant Orphanage visit

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Safari in Nairobi National Park

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Northern White Rhinos visit

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Visit the Endangered Species Enclosure at Ol Pejeta Conservancy for a close encounter with the last two remaining northern white rhinos. You can visit either by game drive vehicle or visit on horseback if you're an experienced rider. Other rare species include Jackson's hartebeests and Grevy's zebras.

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Lake Bogoria National Reserve

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Lake Nakuru Safari

Lake Nakuru Safari

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Drive into one of Kenya's best-known national parks to explore the lakeshore, woodlands, cliffs and plains around this iconic lake. While the flamingos may no longer be here, Nakuru has some key mammals, including both black and southern white rhinos, lions, leopards and Rothschild giraffes.

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Scenic Biplane Flight on Lewa Conservancy

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Kenya fact file

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