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Singita Travel
Votre Agence de Voyages
Votre Spécialiste sur l'Afrique Australe
Afrique du Sud - Botswana - Île Maurice - Mozambique - Namibie - Réunion - Swaziland - Zambie - Zimbabwe

Afrique du Sud - Private Game Reserve
    Tanda Tula Safari Camp
    Timbavati Nature Reserve - 65 000 ha
    Tentes Safari de Luxe en Suite
    Save the Elephants

    As one of South Africa's most luxurious East African-styled tented bushcamps, we offer our guests an unforgettable experience in game viewing, warm hospitality and award-winning cuisine.
    Set on the banks of the Nlharalumi riverbed, Tanda Tula is shaded by majestic trees and overlooks a watering hole that attracts wildlife from dawn till dusk. Each of the 12 tents is completely private, surrounded by lush riverine bush with a deck overlooking the riverbed.
    Each tent has its own private deck with loungers or deck chairs. The interiors are furnished in great elegance and comfort. All the tents have beautiful en suite bathrooms with traditional Victorian bathtubs and romantic outdoor showers overlooking the bush and riverbed.




    Les Points Forts
    Walking Safaris
    Tanda Tula is proud to be the first in the Timbavati to offer a remarkable once-in-a-lifetime experience: the overnight walking safari.
    The Overnight Walking Safari provides an opportunity for nature lovers and adventure seekers to experience the beautiful African wildlife on foot and up close and to sleep under the stars, exactly as the early explorers did.

    Save the Elephants
    Save the Elephants is a non-profit organisation started by one of the world's foremost authorities on African elephants, Dr Iain Douglas Hamilton.
    Today, Save the Elephants has grown into a long-term monitoring programme on social and spatial behaviour of elephants. The project started in Kenya and has extended to three other regions in Africa, Mali, Gabon, and Southern Africa. The researchers monitor elephant movements with GPS tracking devices across the private reserves and the Greater Kruger National Park into Mozambique and Zimbabwe. In order to foster peaceful elephant/human interactions while human populations are expanding and elephants are being compressed within their range, the requirement for reliable distribution and habitat interaction data is needed.