35-50 years of age | Experience level: 2-5 safaris
Attention! Lilac Adventures is untrustworthy and unreliable!
For an amount of nearly 6.000 USD, payed in advance for a safari in
Uganda supposed to start in March 2016, Lilac Adventures did not provide ANY of the services promised. Due to
negative reviews by former clients, we asked Lilac some time before the safari was
scheduled for details of the accommodation bookings and for copies of
the Gorilla Permits. The only thing they came up with were ever more
phantastic excuses why they allegedly could not provide us with any of
the documents requested. Therefore we contacted all the lodges ourselves and asked for bookings done by Lilac in our name - there were none. Being confronted with this, Lilac began to run out of
reasons and finally had to admit that 4 months after receiving
our money they had not prepared or booked anything. They also admitted that they would not be able to conduct the safari but did not give any valid reasons for that. At this point they
promised us a complete refund of our money - half a year on, we have not received anything.
So please do not make the same mistake we did, and especially do not
believe a word when they try to coax you into booking: they will go to
great lengths in trying to explain why they could not deliver the
services they were paid for by us and will give different reasons for this (delays in
the financial / banking system, political instability and / or unrest, etc. etc.), or perhaps they offer that you pay only a deposit (f.e. 20%) in advance. But please be aware that they are
completely untrustworthy and very likely they will just take your money without rendering anything for it.
35-50 years of age | Experience level: first safari
Don't use this agency!
I booked via internet a 3-day-safari with Amani Tours and Travel for me and my two daughters. One month before the trip starts I transfered 50% of the payment as deposit and the rest of the payment I payed cash when we arrived Tanzania.
On the evening before the trip should starts I got an email that the safari is cancelled... From this moment I couldn't reach Daniel/Donald??? and I'm still waiting for my money...
35-50 years of age | Experience level: over 5 safaris
Review about Ngorongoro Crater by Joost
The Ngorongoro crater was the biggest disappointment for me. I imagined a crater full of wildlife but it was mainly a crater full of tourists. To see lions it is a good place but again, like the other popular parks in Tanzania, you will always have to share it with 70 other cars. In addition, I found the practical aspect of the crater a real obstacle. If you are not staying on the edge of the crater, but like most people in Karatu, it will easily take you 2.5 hours one way to get to the crater from your lodge. The crater is very small, so you can explore the vast majority of it in 2 hours. If there is something to see somewhere, you can recognize it by the dust cloud moving in the direction of the sighting...
I would strongly advise skipping this destination. It's better to stay an extra day in the Serengeti...(which I didn't like that much as well)
50-65 years of age | Experience level: 2-5 safaris
Very Dissapointing!
This is a very small preserve with few animals. You see the whole property in a day. After that it is very repetitive. They also have a few of the big five on premises. Nothing like a real natural park. The food is very mediocre, buffet style with little daily change to the menu. They group you together in groups of 10 people. Of the 10, 6 left Zulu Nya early because of the above reasons even though they had paid for a set number of days. They have signs all over saying that if anything is stolen on the property they are not responsible. We had quite a bit of cash taken and the management did nothing about it. There are so many other wonderful reserves and parks to go to, there is no reason to go to Zulu Nyala!
50-65 years of age | Experience level: 2-5 safaris
Disrespectful persecution of the chimpanzee to get a picture
I was in the Park a few days ago and surprisingly, it was one of the worst experiences I have ever had. More than 50 people (usually there are about 80), chasing and harassing an animal to get a photo with it. The security policy, the respect and the privacy on the part of the Rangers was zero: no distances kept, no masks on, no speaking in a low tone, no control over the crowds and running of people after the animal. Very disappointing, nothing respectful of the animals and absolutely nothing professional at all. They talk about training more families to split over humans and thus expand the number of visitors and, consequently, their economic income. I don't understand why a wild animal has to be trained to the presence of humans @s, with the simple purpose of photographing it and increasing the visits and income of the Park. They should manage it in a more controlled way and reduce the number of visitors per day. I do not recommend it at all. I give it a star because the website does not allow me to put zero.
I hardly believe that the only goal from the Park is to get as much income as possible no matter the treatment of animals in it.
20-35 years of age | Experience level: first safari
Review about Tarangire National Park by Yao Cheng
my mum got bitten by a monkey ,no one responsible for that,nobody cared
Deceitful itinerary and negligent for luxury 2 week Kenya/Tanzania safari
Avoid this company so your safari experience is not destroyed.
We’ve traveled considerably. We’re fully aware of expectations, flexibility and the unexpected. As such, we were meticulous in detailing what we wanted and expected, from the type of camps, guides, transfers, and experience. We wanted to enjoy upscale tent camps, very good English speaking guides, private transfers, all services from one company, and No requirements to do any business during the trip or need to be online or on phone. We were upon a once-in-lifetime time period where we could disconnect and thus take an extended safari trip. We’ve wanted to do this trip for some time and the opportunity finally arrived. We discussed and stressed this factor with Peter numerous times as we wanted to make sure he took the planning of our trip very seriously. Thus what transpired was not any over-expectation . . . it was pure non-delivery of what was promised and paid for.
Like some other posts, yes, there were initially quick responses from Peter. After he secured our payment, it diminished drastically to non-existent. What we were given is what Peter documented to make the sale. After he received the funds, I sensed a difference in the communication but kept optimistic. During our trip he did not step in to address issues, leaving it only to the guides to make attempts, which in turn distracted them from being our guides!
For those of you time-pressed with planning your trip, following are some key points. Beyond are more details regarding them.
1. Itinerary pace and feasibility were wrong, throughout the entire trip.
2. Swift company (Peter) did not assist when issues arose.
3. Guides had to adjust and ourselves re-evaluate itinerary daily vs relax and enjoy.
4. Transported frantically, often at high speeds, vs itinerary’s quoted ‘leisurely’. Much body bracing en route, concern and anxiety.
5. Missed game drives as route was covered quickly vs itinerary’s ‘Drive slowly with game drive en route’.
6. 4x4 vehicle provided for Tanzania portion (50% of trip time) was unsafe, dirty, bad order, and uncomfortable.
7. Tanzania guide was consumed with addressing vehicle replacement issue and thus left us with a non-participative, un-focused guide.
8. We were kept captive for hours in a remote, hot, dusty parking lot. A vehicle swap arranged by our guide was mismanaged and guide syphoned out gas from primary vehicle, refusing to reload and continue. A day of our safari was taken away.
9. A guide who did not speak English that well, did not put the client first, and did personal or company business en route.
10. Panic and stress as Lost!! in the Serengeti! …and with a timeframe to catch a flight!
11. Illegally transversed country lines of Kenya & Tanzania
There are many aspects to what transpired but basically the unravelling started right before leaving. The night before leaving I happened to read travelers need a passport-size photo for visa at Tanzania border. We were not told this and I quickly tried to connect with Peter. After much back-and-forth, he couldn’t confirm photos were necessary or not. What?? How could he not know?? It’s his business/work. So we had to rush to a photo place on our way to the airport. Also, on the day we’re leaving, he realizes he didn’t have our flight information (uncommon for me to not have already given). How was the guide to know when to pick us up? In the process of this discussion, he then advises that the guides designated for us are not available. What?! We’re about to embark on 2-days of solid travel just to get to destination and my red-alert alarm is ringing in my head. But trying to stay optimistic, I look forward to the experience and getting that disconnect from business/work, as we had done all the upfront preparation. Wrong!
We arrive on time and get settled in the safari vehicle. Before leaving the airport, our guide advises that Peter needs our travel insurance information. Peter fully knew all business was to be done before the trip! It will have to wait until we reach camp, a 3hr transfer, per Peter’s itinerary . . . that took 5 hours! We barely made it for lunch, getting only the last remains of what was left. We then change quickly as our first game drive is about to start. On the game drive, Peter calls the guide to ask us for our travel insurance, as I’m trying to take photos and be on holiday! I stop and dig through my backpack, with hopes we can then fully start the holiday mindset.
However, while our Kenya guide Ezekiel is good, speaks English very well, and is commendably professional, Peter’s itinerary is incompatible. Time frames, like the 3hr that was really 5 hrs commute to first camp, are unrealistic. Commuting round-trip to where the animals are, even to get outside of camp gates or a reserve’s gate if camp is outside, can take 1/3 to almost ALL of designated time given for game drive. There was one camp in Tanzania that took +1hr just to get TO the reserve gate. That’s about 2 ½ hrs round-trip commute… and going fast! I thought I’d lose some teeth fillings as we jigged-jagged in/out/around all the potholes/terrain to get to it. An itinerary with camp breakfast - game drive – camp lunch - game drive was not logical, of which Ezekiel fully agreed. He suggested doing packed lunches. And to get a good start on an AM game drive, when animals were more active than in mid-day, many times it didn’t make sense to have breakfast at camp either. So there went another factor discussed with Peter . . . enjoyment of the camps. How can we enjoy them if not even there?? With a logical itinerary, we would not have invested that much money into those levels of accommodations. It was evident the itinerary Peter created was to visually give us what we wanted in order to make the sale. Now it had to be re-evaluated. All the time working with him on the itinerary was for naught, and now our once-in-lifetime holiday with business/work free-zone, another factor, is destroyed!
Transferring in Tanzania, guess what? You don’t need a photo for the visa! Unnecessary anxiety and waste of time getting photos pre-arrival. Our next guide was late, didn’t speak English that well and to our horror, the vehicle he brought was so sub-par that we had to call Peter on the spot. It was very small, had bad order, no handles for stability, no working radio…not type we discussed and confirmed with Peter, even by photos! he sent us. Ezekiel fully agreed that the situation had to be resolved and spoke with Peter as well. As there was no replacement car there, we had to continue to next stop. In process, we find that this is not Peter’s vehicle or guide but a sub-contractor (of which the boss is also Peter). We are to meet someone from sub-contractor in transit to camp to resolve. We believe Peter (of Swift) is resolving this issue with them while we’re in transit, so we try to be patient. Only to find out we need to go deep into a city and stop in a parking lot. Water was brought to the car, as it was not stocked as should have been, and the company is now doing paperwork amongst themselves and stopping by a bank for funds . . . while we spend our time in a hot parking lot! And then we’re told there is no swap of car and they can’t do so until after weekend!!
Worse, over the next few days no one is doing any resolving besides our guide who spends most of his time on his cell phone while driving, trying to get a different car, than being a guide. We get little insight or commentary on game drive. Sometimes we just sat in remote places because it’s where he could get cell phone connectivity! We are trying to get business out of head but his cell phone and discussions continuously make that impossible. Our camp owners see our itinerary and as well inform that time frames amongst destinations are unrealistic. Nothing is comfortable as we depart early or arrive late at camps, sometimes not even getting to freshen up as we’d miss the meal.
To get a vehicle swap, we’re told it will happen in transit to the next camp. 50% of our Tanzania trip is done, but the swap does need to still happen. Strangely, we go very slowly but at least our guide is now pointing out some things, albeit very small items (bird, plant) as if seeking to find something to show. We left at 11am for 2hr transfer to have, per itinerary, “ a leisurely lunch” at next camp. As its 12:30pm, I mentioned to guide we’re looking forward to this and he advises it’s another 2hrs! There is nothing leisurely NOR has camp enjoyment been in this situation! But it gets worse . . . allot worse.
When the guide pulls into a large dusty parking lot, at some junction point, he says the car, will be here in 20 minutes. Unbelievable. We anticipated it would be waiting for us. We go sit in a dirt floor open café/restaurant and our guide walks away. 30 minutes later we go looking for him and find he’s siphoning the gas out of the current car to transfer to the next one. We ask where’s the replacement car .. another ‘20 minutes’, we keep getting told repeatedly. Our guide leaves us several times, and there are many men hanging around in this area and we’re two foreigners (angry ones, at that) sticking out like sore thumbs. We call Peter via our phone (our $$$...and again business). He seems unaware of the situation! and is depending on us to relay status updates. We’re hungry, hot, dirty, no seating, concerned for our safety, feeling like hostages, with wind tunnels whipping sand on us . . and again in a parking lot! Peter does not resolve the issue nor make anything happen. I inform him to call camp, to have a cold lunch waiting for us . . he doesn’t even think of that! We try to get our guide to refuel car and do car swamp on his own time but he refuses. Many times we didn’t even know where the guide was, of which Peter informs us that it is illegal to leave us alone. Oh really?? Thanks for the update, concern, and assistance!
We arrive at camp near dark, basically a full day lost, with the cold lunch still waiting for us. We had a small bite as so hungry but now risk spoiling dinner. We talk with camp leader as we’re so doubtful of itinerary, using up our free/relax time having to do business. Again, camp leaders give confirmation that next timeframes are way off too. Our next “leisurely transfer with game drive en route” is at such a high speed that we cannot do a game drive. And at this next location, over 2 days our guide had some sort of business to do and we ended up waiting in Another parking lot two different times, backtracking areas we already traversed vs covering new territory. Our holiday, what we paid for, should not be wasted by another.
Well, let’s just say the atmosphere, all the hours in the car and spent with the guide, are far from stress-less. The guide even got a jovial/laughing phone call, delaying our departure from a site, and then tells us that it was the guy who delivered the swap car. Guess they think it was all a joke? Our time, money, holiday, safety?? We asked for a guide replacement but Peter made no effort to accommodate.
The commute back to Kenya was scary, unlawful, and of course, you guessed it, timeframe unrealistic. While the itinerary stated we’d leave after breakfast, we left so early, in the dark, we had a cold box take-away. Who spends so much money for high-end accommodations to have yogurt cup and a juice box?? The guide had never done this route he was going to take before, which he adjusted in order to try to meet Peter’s unrealistic timeframes, as we had a plane to catch. He did high-speed, crazy driving through the terrain (oh, so much for eating breakfast en route!), got lost, unknowingly crossed over the boarder recognizing this only as we sat there looking at junction signs (when we finally got back on a road) and, fortunately we had a map and phone GPS, trying to figure out where we were (ah yeah, forced to do business again if going to make flight), completely back-tracked, broke up a potential migration crossing (sure all the trackers across the river weren’t happy with our vehicle speeding through). And yes, by all the crazy driving the past 3 days there was a roof-top bar that broke making past game drives scary.
The border office process seemed uncertain to our guide and we had to take a man & child, somehow associated with the contracting of the vehicle, along the rest of the way to the plane’s landing strip.
We were grateful to see Ezekiel again when we arrived back in Kenya (I believe he works independently and wish him all the best!). He handled our last 2 ½ days well but again, having to adjust Peter’s itinerary and assist with further mishaps. Peter, who insisted we needed to decide prior to trip if we wanted to do a Sun Downer excursion at last camp, of which we did reserve, didn’t reserve with camp so we were unable to do it. Peter should make sure his guides can stay with clients all the way to end. When taken to airstrip for Nairobi return, we were left alone as Ezekiel needed to head back to Nairobi via car. Our plane was very late and there was no one to consult with to know if it would or would not be coming, and if the latter, what were our options.
Peter did not meet us in Nairobi, at the airport, nor hotel, nor pre departure. We addressed these issues, and more, upon our return. As a onetime bad situation can happen (and unfortunately to us) we came to an agreement for retribution. Less than we thought it should be, Peter over-simplifying the problems and their impact, but still some acknowledgement for the wrong done. Unfortunately, and again a break of trust, Peter was very difficult to connect with from then on. When making the itinerary and pre-payment, he was available daily or following day. He stated he did not go on safari but in office. Now it would be multi-days to week(s) before getting a requested reply. He promised a retribution date and we gave him all our information. When the time came, he made no payment and no communication. Neither did his ‘Directors’, if they even truly exist, whom were included in communications. We believe he thought we’d just forget about the wrong.
We take travel too seriously to feel someone has the right to waste it for another. Therefore, we do not want yours to be wasted. Please take heed. We have given him over ½ year to resolve, extending retribution date multiple times, and when we do get communication back, it’s always with another ‘reason’ and asking us to be patient . . . when he doesn’t even initially communicate! He really has no intention. As when the first agreement wasn’t honored without any communication or justification, it’s evident now that everything else is just avoidance tactics. Unbelievable, unprofessional and unacceptable. Don’t be fooled by the upfront delivery as there will be no back-end delivery nor support.
35-50 years of age | Experience level: 2-5 safaris
Excellent wildlife and environment, but shameful to one caregiver in the rhino sanctuary.
Excellent wildlife and environment. All staff members are very good and nice, except for one caregiver in the rhino sanctuary.
After being introduced to the rhino sanctuary and taking photos with the rhino (everything happened in 3 minutes), the so-called caregiver kept asking for tips. I gave him 5 US dollars, but he impolitely said it was not enough and demanded 10 US dollars. How disgusting!
Avoid them
This company (Clement in particular) are thieves in my opinion. They cancelled our holiday at the last minute at Xmas time and are still yet to refund me over $11,500 (AUS) They as previous writers have said can not be trusted at all.
My name is Steve. Follow the comments on Trip adviser for more terrible experiences with them.
20-35 years of age | Experience level: first safari
Rip off
Doing a safari was one of my biggest dreams. This operator defiantly ruined it. Everything went wrong, but I´ll try to keep it short. I had to pay a 50 % deposit by bank transfer so that a guy sometimes called Donald sometimes Daniel could make a reservation for a hotel. It cost me a fortune and as it turned out: nothing was reserved. I had to share not just a room, but also a bed with the other girl on the tour. Yes, two strangers in one bed! Daniel/Donald stayed in Daressalaam. The driver barely spoke english, but enough to tell us that his boss turned off his phone when we insisted on two rooms or on the pop up roof jeep we booked and payed for. We had to do the safari in a little Toyota. After the rain season the grass is so high that many times you can't see a thing. We never went too far away from the lodge since the car couldn't manage many of the bumpy roads without 4x4. Yes, sometimes we saw animals, but there was no real safari feeling. I am so disappointed. :(