<a href="http://www.africancenter.eu/AfricaMagazine/conservancies-magnet-to-tycoons-but-who-benefits/ "><b>Celebrities & tycoons travel, but who benefits?</b></a> <a href="http://www.africancenter.eu/AfricaMagazine/africa-begins-to-rise-above-foreign-aid/ "><b>Africa Begins to Rise above foreign aid.</b></a> <a href="http://www.africancenter.eu/AfricaMagazine/fdsfbb/ "><b>Economic Lessons –  Africa is looking East…</b></a> <a href="http://www.africancenter.eu/AfricaMagazine/move-over-big-five-parks-get-new-branding/ "><b>Move over ‘Big Five’, parks get new branding</b></a> <a href="http://www.africancenter.eu/AfricaMagazine/the-downside-of-foreign-land-acquisitions/ "><b>The downside of foreign land acquisitions</b></a>
 

The 2012 African Europe Summer Festival: Events, ideas, activities, and more…


The 2012 African Europe Summer Festivals embraces rich  African traditions and  features an extensive spectacular performances by local / nationally acclaimed artists on several stages , cultural exhibits, contests, education , children’s activities, arts, shopping and food. The 2-3 day festivals attracts thousands of visitors from cities and countries in Europe.

The African Europe Summer Festivals are incredible venues to buy and sell products. In addition to an extensive schedule of entertainment and activities, there will are a great variety of unique and interesting cultural foods, crafts and services presented throughout the festivals.

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Hot Air Balloon Safaris in Kenya

27 November, 2011 Tours & Safaris 1 comment


You will be woken up early in the morning,tranfered by our guide to the beginning point of this exciting ride. The balloons lift off just before sunrise when the breeze on the plains is still cold. Once airborne, the balloons are blown by the prevailing winds across the broad landscape. Apart from the hiss of the burners, the flight above the Masai Mara plains is magically silent. The pilot controls the height of the craft by regulating the flow of hot air into the balloon. Sometimes the balloon will descend over the plains for a close up view of the wildlife; on other occasions, it rises to clear a tree canopy and rise over the reverine forest.

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SERENGETI – Most popular park

27 November, 2011 Tours & Safaris 1 comment


Tanzania’s oldest and most popular national park, also a world heritage site and recently proclaimed a 7th world wide wonder, the Serengeti is famed for its annual migration, when some six million hooves pound the open plains, as more than 200,000 zebra and 300,000 Thomson’s gazelle join the wildebeest’s trek for fresh grazing. Yet even when the migration is quiet, the Serengeti offers arguably the most scintillating game-viewing in Africa: great herds of buffalo, smaller groups of elephant and giraffe, and thousands upon thousands of eland, topi, kongoni, impala and Grant’s gazelle.

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THE INSIDER – there is no such person as an Africa specialist – trust us)!

27 November, 2011 Commentary 3 comments

Membership in Tour Operator Associations has critics and there are no guarantees that your outfitter or guides will be better than others but you can at least contact the Association if you are unhappy with your safari! If your outfitter is not a member then there is nowhere to go. As expected, the outfitters who are not members (their reasons vary) are the ones who lobby the hardest against these Associations! The top few local outfitters have international contacts – simplifying communications and payment especially if they accept credit cards.Be aware that a few licensed outfitters and lodges/camps in East Africa don’t sell directly to the public. When you contact them they will send you a list of agents in your home country.</>

3. Tour Operators, travel agents, safari consultants, safari representatives, safari consolidators, safari planners, safari experts, etc.

It does not matter how fancy the title; these operations share two common facts – they don’t operate their own safaris and they have only limited knowledge of the many destinations in Africa. ! They don’t own safari vehicles, they don’t own camps or lodges, they don’t own safari equipment and they don’t employ safari guides! Instead, they invest in elaborate web sites, trade shows, brochures and sales people. In other words, MARKETING is what they do best! They don’t specialize in one region; they carry brochures with safaris to all of Africa. Because of their large coverage and limited experience they add little or no value to your safari. When you book with these individuals or companies, your safari will be outsourced to a licensed local outfitter and in most cases you will pay more than going direct with no added benefits.If the company you are dealing with is NOT based in East Africa, then consider the following:

Insider TIP #1: Always ask the following question – do you operate your own safaris in East Africa, or do you outsource to a ground operator? There is nothing wrong with outsourcing – unfortunately not all local outfitters offer the same quality safaris so you should research a particular local outfitter on the internet before booking a safari with its overseas agent.

Insider TIP #2: Beware of paying too much! When using an agent or consultant, ask yourself how much value are they adding to your safari? Many agents add no value (except inflated prices) and you can do the exact safari for much less if you contact the ground operator directly! Instead of paying high fees to consultants, use the internet to research your safari.

Insider TIP #3: Beware of group tours! Safaris offered by agents are often group departures. Unless you have specific reasons for joining a group tour, DON’T! A group on safari in the bush is different from a group on a tour of Italy! The roads are bad, the vehicles are small with no bathrooms (a real drag if someone has stomach problems so common in Africa), it is hot with biting insects and each individual wants to see different animals. If one person is an avid photographer, then matters can quickly escalate to a really unhappy experience.

Insider TIP #4: Beware of generalists! Tanzania, Kenya, Rwanda and Uganda are diverse countries with so much to offer that few agents can keep up with new developments. If your agent also sells South Africa, Mozambique, Botswana, Zambia, Namibia and Zimbabwe then he or she cannot possibly know all the latest camps, attractions, wildlife movements, restaurants and hotels in each country! Nowadays it crucial to book with country specialists, not Africa specialists (there is no such person as an Africa specialist – trust us)!

Insider TIP #5: Who are you dealing with? A true destination specialist or someone who travels to Africa once a year on a short fam trip? Or someone who has not been to Africa in years?

Top 5 East Africa attractions


Kilimanjaro -5895m is Africa’s highest mountain, a perfect volcanic dome whose snow capped pick often emerges from a cloudy shroud at dusk. The tallest free standing volcano in the world, kilimanjaro ( known as the roof of Africa ), is climbed by thousands of tourists annually. You need to be reasonably fit to reach the top, but not extraordinarily so-past conquerors of its icy summit have spannend the ages of 11 to 74. You should however perpare to set aside the best part of a week in order to complete the climb safely. Kilimanjaro is not the only large mountain in Tanzania. Overlooking the safari capital of Arusha, Mount Meru us the fifth highest in Africa, an extinct 4566m volcano whose craggy summit offers stunning views to kilimanjaro, only 50km to the East. Other high-altitude highlights include the lush slopes around Ngorongoro Crater, the stande alone Mount Hanang south of Arusha, and the East Arc Mountains and Southern Highlands – a scattering of forest -swathed ‘mountane islands’ whose dazzling biodiversity has let to them being dubbed the Galapagos of Africa – Kenya Airways.

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