Your Sabi Sand Safari

On game drive
and on foot

On game drive
and on foot

Your Sabi Sand Safari

On game drive
and on foot

On game drive
and on foot

Eight hours a day in the wild, in the company of people who know it best

For most guests, a safari is a bucket list experience – planned for, saved for, and anticipated for a very long time. It is something we do not take lightly.

Approximately eight hours of every day are spent out in the Greater Kruger wilderness – two drives, morning and afternoon, each a completely different experience. What you encounter, how close you get, how much you understand of what you are seeing, and how deeply it stays with you depend on a number of factors: where you are, who you are with, the vehicle you are in, and how many properties share the space with you.

This has all been factored into an Arathusa safari.

The Game Drive

The Game Drive

Two drives go out every day – one as the bush wakes up, one as it cools into evening. Each lasts approximately three hours, and no two are ever the same.

Morning drives depart before sunrise, into a landscape still stirring. The light is extraordinary, the air cool, and the animals at their most active. Afternoon drives head out as the heat of the day begins to lift, building toward the drama of dusk – and the return journey after dark, spotlit, into a bush that belongs to a different set of animals entirely.

Guides drive off-road, following animals wherever they lead. There are no fixed routes, no predetermined stops. The drive goes where the wildlife takes it, and stays for as long as a sighting deserves.

The Bush Walk

The Bush Walk

To walk in the African bush is to experience it from an entirely different perspective – slower, closer, and more quietly alive to detail than any vehicle can offer.

Guided walks at Arathusa are led by an armed field guide, moving through the landscape on foot at the pace the bush sets. The focus shifts – from the large and dramatic to the intricate and often overlooked. Tracks in the sand, insects on bark, the relationship between a tree and the soil beneath it. The bush reveals itself differently at ground level.

Walks are typically arranged in the early morning, when temperatures are comfortable and the reserve is at its most alive.

Your Guide & Tracker

Your Guide & Tracker

Of all the factors that shape a safari, none matters more than the people who lead it.

Game drives depart with a field guide and a dedicated tracker, working in complete unison. The tracker reads the ground: fresh prints, disturbed grass, the direction of a scent. The guide reads the broader landscape, the animal behaviour, and the story that connects one sighting to the next.

The guide also reads the vehicle – attuned to the interests, questions, and comfort of his guests.
A great guide knows when to speak and when to let silence do the work.

Getting to know them is one of the true pleasures of a stay at Arathusa.

Safari Stops

Safari Stops

A game drive is not three uninterrupted hours of movement, but rather rhythmic moments.

Morning drives pause for piping hot coffee in the field as the bush wakes up around you. Afternoon drives build toward sundowners – a drink on an open plain as the sun sets in spectacular fashion. The return to the lodge after dark, spotlight sweeping the treeline, is a drive within the drive.

These stops are not interruptions, but part of what makes the experience complete. Moments to pause, breathe, and feel the ground beneath your feet – fully present in one of the most extraordinary wildernesses on earth.

Your safety

Your safety

The African wilderness is wild. That is, after all, exactly why you are here.

At Arathusa, your safety and comfort are in capable, experienced hands. Every guide operates to stringent standards and knows this landscape intimately. On arrival, a full briefing ensures you feel confident and prepared before heading out.

Beyond protocols, our guides are attuned to the people in their vehicle. Comfort levels vary, and they are always respected.

You are safe in our hands.

Your vehicle

Your vehicle

Game drives at Arathusa take place in open Land Cruisers, purpose-built for the terrain and the experience. Every seat is a bucket seat, and every guest has a window seat – an unobstructed view of whatever the bush presents.

Vehicles are equipped to go off-road, following animals wherever they lead. A maximum of eight guests per vehicle ensures the experience remains personal and the sightings unhurried.

Binoculars are available on the vehicle. If you prefer your own pair for uninterrupted viewing, we recommend bringing them along.

Guest Testimonial

Guest Testimonial

Frequently Asked Questions

Frequently Asked Questions

Game drives are approximately three hours long and take place twice a day, in the early morning and late afternoon. Exact times shift with the season:

  • Summer (October to April). Morning drives depart between 05h00 and 05h30, returning around 08h00 to 08h30. Afternoon drives depart between 16h00 and 16h30, returning around 19h00 to 19h30.
  • Winter (May to September). Morning drives depart around 06h00, returning around 09h00. Afternoon drives depart around 15h30, returning after dark.

Drives always include a refreshment stop, either a coffee break in the morning or sundowners at a scenic spot in the afternoon.

Arathusa operates three safari vehicles, each a Land Cruiser with comfortable bucket seating and a guaranteed window seat for every guest. We make every effort to keep guest numbers per vehicle as low as possible, but at full lodge occupancy, up to eight guests may share a vehicle.

Keeping our fleet deliberately small is a conscious choice, aligned with Sabi Sand’s responsible safari practices and our own commitment to minimising environmental impact.

Guided bush walks are available on request and are led by qualified, rifle-carrying guides. They offer a chance to slow down, notice smaller details of the landscape, and learn about tracks, plants, insects, and ecology at a different pace to a drive.

To be honest about it, bush walks are not Arathusa’s strongest offering. The terrain is relatively flat, and the area around the lodge is better suited to drives than walking safaris. We are happy to arrange a walk if you would like one, but the wildlife viewing will always be richer from a vehicle.

You are allocated a dedicated guide and tracker on arrival, and they stay with you for the duration of your stay. This continuity allows them to get to know your interests, pace, and preferences, and to build on each drive as the days unfold.

Our guiding team is experienced, qualified through the Field Guides Association of Southern Africa (FGASA), and has long-standing knowledge of the resident wildlife, particularly the leopards whose territories they have followed for years.

A few essentials make drives more comfortable:

  • Warm layers for morning and evening drives. A jacket, scarf, beanie, and gloves are worth having in winter, when early starts are cold. The lodge provides blankets and ponchos in the vehicle.
  • Sun protection. Hat, sunglasses, and sunscreen.
  • A camera. With plenty of memory.
  • Personal binoculars. Each vehicle carries one shared pair, but a personal pair is highly recommended for uninterrupted viewing.
  • Neutral-coloured clothing. Khaki, olive, or earth tones blend well with the environment.

Water, refreshments, and snacks are provided on every drive.

Yes. Afternoon drives continue after sunset and return to the lodge after dark, which effectively includes a short night drive on every afternoon outing. This is when nocturnal species such as hyena, civet, genet, and occasionally leopard on the hunt become active.

Our trackers use a red-filtered spotlight to locate animals without disturbing their natural behaviour.