Safari Reviews

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Guilherme   –  
Brazil BR
Visited: December 2017 Reviewed: Mar 20, 2019

20-35 years of age  |  Experience level: first safari

Was one of the tourists scammed...
1/5

My wife and I booked a 5 day safari in Tanzania and 7 day in Zanzibar, with Arend Safaris, for our honeymoon on the end of 2017.

We paid over 11k dollars in advance. When we arrived in Arusha, they picked us up at the airport, and took us to a different (worse) hotel that we booked. On the next day, after waiting for almost 2 hours for Arend Safaris to pick us up, they took us to their office in Arusha and told us that they had spent all our money in another reservation, and had nothing (no hotels, tours, plane tickets) booked.

They promised us they would have the money back in a few days, and in the mean time, we could book everything directly with a hotel in Zanzibar, and when they got the money back, they would repay us.

Now, over a year has passed and Arend has not payed us back. We had to spend a whole lot more of money to book our honeymoon on the same day.
Arend is very inconsistent with their communication. Sometimes, after a long period of no communication, they write to us telling they will refund us in a few weeks. And then disappear.

Apparently they are a legit agency, for some of the reviews out there are real. But there are cases, like ours, in which they just do not comply. So be extra careful when booking with them, ask for all kinds of receipts and booking numbers/references, and contact the hotels/lodges directly to make sure they have a reservation under your name.

Archibald Haddock   –  
United Kingdom UK
Visited: February 2019 Reviewed: Mar 21, 2019

50-65 years of age  |  Experience level: 2-5 safaris

Don't even think about it
1/5

Short story: cheats, crooks and unprofessional. Avoid this outfit like the plague. They offered us a price of 2150$/pp and three days before the trip they increased it in 650$/pp. Finally we were forced to pay 200$ extra and downgraded us from lodges to mobile tented camps.

Long story… It’s a long review, but I wanted to give all the details. If you are thinking of dealing with this people, I strongly advice you read on.

In December 2018 we got a quote from Orongai for a 7-day safari in northern Tanzania: Ngorongoro, Ndutu and Serengueti, for 8 people, all lodges. From February 16th to 22nd 2019. The price was 2,150 $ per person, total 17,200 $. I will send the quotation to anybody interested. Park fees, All accommodations, all transportation, and all Taxes/VAT were explicitly included. All lodges were mid/upper level: Lake Duluti Lodge, Ngorongoro Serena Safari Lodge, Ndutu Safari Lodge and Serengeti Serena Safari Lodge.

The price was lower than others we had (first clue) and included a flight back from Serengeti’s airstrip to Arusha the last day, which was the clincher: “Around midmorning join a scheduled flight from Seronera airstrip to Arusha airport.” (sic). So, we agreed to this quotation: 2,150 $ pp.

In January 2018 we all paid a 30% (645 $ pp) by bank transfer. The remainder was to be paid on arrival in cash. The remainder was: 2,150 - 645= 1,505 $ per person, or 12,040 $ total. Two of us decided (stupidly, it turned out) to pay also our part of the remainder beforehand by transfer: 3,010 $ for two people. After this payment the remainder was: 12,040 – 3,010 = 9,030 $, for the other 6 people (who decided to pay their remainder on arrival).

On February 12th I received the following message from Martha, the person in charge of our trip: “just wanted to inform you that there is additional 650$ per person this is due to additional concetion fees at NDUTU area and Ngorongoro area that we’re not there before. We apologize for the inconveniences coursed” (sic).

Cursed indeed! This left us all worried, to put it mildly. It followed a frenzied interchange of emails with the said Martha, trying to understand the extra 650 $ pp, a 30% increase! We checked with TANAPA and other authorities and there had been no increase of any park fees for more than a year. Finally, after many, many messages back and forth Martha wrote to me: “Yes, I received the transfers and the cost is 2150$ per person plus the hotel payments fees 650$ per person. The total is 2,800$ per person” (sic)

We considered not going, but we really wanted to do the safari, we had already paid 645$ each (or 2,150 $ some of us) plus the flights, a dear price for us, and we decided to go (another mistake). We contacted the lodges where we were supposed to stay to confirm the reservation. They confirmed it, but at least one of them called Orongai to tell them we were asking.

On arrival we had a very long and very unpleasant discussion with Martha, a guide called Asseri and another guide Freddy (who, unbeknownst to us, spoke a bit of Spanish, but much less than he thinks). We tried to convince them to honor their original offer, but reasoning with them was impossible. They denied evidence and the most basic logic stone-faced. It was like talking to a wall. They said for instance that the word “Total” next to the 17,200 $ didn’t mean “all the money”. They insisted that the remainder was 12,030 $, and not 9,030 $ as we said, because of the additional charges of 650 $ per person. Which doesn’t even add up! If we had to pay an extra 650$ the remainder would be 14,230$. They further informed us that the flight back from Serengeti to Arusha was not included in the price, even if “All transportation” was explicitly included, because a flight is not “transportation”!

We called the Spanish embassy for advice. They put us in contact with a person in Arusha, who sometimes helped other Spaniards informally. He has more than 20 years of experience in the safari business himself. He was extremely, awfully kind. He tried to convince Orongai’s people for maybe another hour. He couldn’t.

Finally, we decided to take it to the “Tourist Police”, an institution created to deal with cases like this. We went there, a concrete bungalow in the outskirts of Arusha, bare of any official look or sign that I could see, and met with an official, a guy just dressed in jeans and a polo. We spent there another 2 hours, repeating everything to him (Orongai’s people speaking mostly in Swahili even if we repeatedly asked them not to). He initially seemed to lean to our side, but finally, probably tired of the whole thing, told all of us that this was not a criminal dispute and that we had to resolve the thing among ourselves. And left. So much for the Tourist Police. During this, we offered to pay 200 $/person over the agreed 2,150 $. Orongai rejected this.

We went back to the hotel at around 11 pm. We were leaning to cancel the whole thing and leave. Mind you, in the middle of the night, without a car and without a hotel, because the lodge we were in, Lake Duluti Lodge, told us that we would have to pay our rooms ourselves (~ 300 $/room) because Orongai wouldn’t pay if we canceled the safari. At this, Martha threatened us with legally/judicially demanding whole payment (her amount not ours), even if the safari didn’t go ahead, because “it would be our decision to cancel”.

After even more discussion, somebody suggested (I don’t remember who) that if we paid the 9,030 $ we still owed, PLUS the 200 $/person we offered before AND they downgraded us to mobile tented camps, instead of lodges, we could go ahead. Tired of the whole thing, and worried of what a judicial process in Tanzania would entail, we agreed to this. They, then, made us sign a paper saying that these changes were our responsibility because we had not understood the original quotation correctly. Without this condition, they threatened again, the deal was off and they would sue us for full payment. Some of us signed, under duress obviously. So that you understand this downgrade, a mobile tented camp is a far cry from a permanent camp, let alone a lodge. Some permanent tented camps are really luxurious. The mobile tented camps are most definitely NOT luxurious. In some, the showers didn’t even work, and didn’t have enough power even to recharge the batteries/phones if we all tried at the same time.

A very suggestive thing happened at the Tourist Police. Martha, to convince us that 2,150 $/pp was an impossible price, listed in a piece of paper, from memory, the actual cost of each item: car rental, several park fees, lodge fees, food, water, everything. The total came exactly to 17,000 $. This shows that they know the cost of everything by heart, and that the quotation they gave us WAS NOT just a mistake they made, as we thought at some point. This clearly shows that this was a deliberate and, more importantly, practiced scheme to cheat clients. Mine is not the only story like this. Check the comments on Orongai in the web, many of the negative ones are from people with relatively “high level” safaris. The ones that may be amenable to pay extra when confronted with problems. Another suggestive detail is something our friend said. That, at least the Ndutu lodge (there is only the one) was almost certainly full by September already! That by December, when Orongai supposedly made the reservation, it would be utterly im-po-ssi-ble to get four double rooms there for mid-February. Possibly the others too. This makes me suspect that some reservations didn’t exist. Instead, tented camps are easier to get at short notice. I sincerely believe that if we had paid the 650 $ extra, we would have still ended up either in lower-category lodges or in tented camps. Something that has happened to some clients of Orongai.

About the safari itself, one of the guides was nice (Freddy), the other (Asseri) wasn’t at all. He never made any effort to place the car in a good position for the photos and barely spoke at all. Both were a bit risky drivers. Especially Asseri who frequently texted on his phone while driving, took photos or even video putting his full arm outside the window. Some of the seat belts were either broken or "repaired" with a knot. The lunch food was quite poor and always the same, including a piece of chicken so deeply fried as to be mummified. Almost inedible.

All said, what most vexed me, far beyond the extra cost and the downgrade, was that it half-ruined the whole trip. The preparations, the pre-travel excitement (one of the best things), were all erased in a flurry of worry and anger. A lot of the time while we were there talking about it… it all embittered an experience that should have been exhilarating and special. They robed us of that.

Before the travel we contacted TATO (of which Orongai is supposed to be a member); Tanzania Tourism (government office) and TANAPA, asking about our problem. Only TANAPA answered. TATO and Tanz. Tourism didn’t deign. The American Society of Travel Advisors confirmed that Orongai is not a member, contrary to what it says in safaribookings.com

sergio   –  
Spain ES
Visited: October 2018 Reviewed: Mar 26, 2019

35-50 years of age  |  Experience level: over 5 safaris

This tourperator is the same that Deoadventure
1/5

This is a Fraud!! My friends and me paid for a 12 days safari visiting Serengeti, Masai Mara & Ngorongoro with this touroperator. Is the same people that Deoadventure (a infamous company with a lot of frauds to spanish people in the past). We paid more than 2300$ pp and when we arrive to Masai Mara the manager didn,t pay the lodge in Masai Mara. We try to call him to ask whats happened and the manager (Deo) never answered to us. Danger

Kim   –  
Canada CA
Visited: August 2017 Reviewed: Mar 26, 2019

50-65 years of age  |  Experience level: 2-5 safaris

It is hard to believe this company is still in operation!!
1/5

This company stole thousands of dollars from my family. We prepaid for our safari vacation. Just before arriving we were tiled they were bankrupt. No one picked us up at the airport. Hotels were reserved but unpaid. And they were untraceable at their office in Arusha or by email. There is no way they should be allowed to operate. They are a criminal organization. Stay far away.

Doug   –  
Spain ES
Visited: March 2019 Reviewed: Mar 27, 2019

50-65 years of age  |  Experience level: over 5 safaris

About: 4x4 Uganda
Very Poor Service/Non existent
1/5


A confirmed booking was made with Paul, the owner of 4X4 Uganda directly, for an airport pickup, some weeks ago for a lady arriving alone, this morning at Entebbe airport. No one was there to meet her and calls to his telephone numbers rang initially and were then turned off. Alternatives arrangements had to be made to get her to her hotel safely.
This company failed to deliver a basic service and caused reputational damage to our company and seemed unconcerned a lone female was left at the airport. My advice steer well clear of 4X4 Uganda

Mark   –  
Czech Republic CZ
Visited: February 2019 Reviewed: Mar 28, 2019

50-65 years of age  |  Experience level: first safari

Terrible woman, very rude, non professional, stole our money, left us stranded
1/5

Dear reader, as you read this, please scroll to the review under this one. March 4th, a 5 star review of a ten-day safari with one picture of like 2 buffaloes, March 2nd, two days earlier, a one star review, might not seem odd. February 24th, one star review, followed two days by well what do you know, a five star review. From August 2018 to February 24th, zero reviews.And after two one star reviews, 2 days later a 5 star review shows up? The reason I’m pointing this is out is what I have to say about Lians Travel Africa. We met Lilian, the owner of Lians Travel in our estate, who had just arrived with the driver. They were slightly later than expected but nevertheless we were happy that they had come, we left and had to go to the bank to pay the driver presumably. This was on 11th February, long drive, thought we were stopping for lunch in a town called Narok but apparently after clients pay for all inclusive, they also pay for their own lunch. (I have the text message provided to me from Lilian’s confirmed number, check even on Lians Travel Africa at the bottom and see the Mobile phone number ending in 710 111. One passenger was sick but poor her, she didn’t even get lunch, priority was to get her to camp to relax. We saw the Maasai performance which was nice, safari on 12th was very nice too, it was a pleasant day and I can’t complain.
13th February was went it all went bad. We had no safari in the morning and I saw the itinerary and noticed a few issues that the driver had pointed out. I will mention these later. The driver was looking nervous and was talking to my daughter and her husband. We were just standing on the side of the road, not knowing what’s going on. A few phone calls in the car, messages exchanged, my daughter and her husband were getting concerned and from what they told me, the driver didn’t wanna go on the journey, it seems that driver was not paid his full money. We didn’t really know that but I just wanted to continue with the journey.

My daughter called this woman, her husband did too, the driver and at some point it was just shouting and shouting even when they told her to calm down. The woman called Lilian. From what I have been told, she accused my daughter’s husband of being on the same side as the driver who were apparently running the safari. I have the message to prove it. It’s funny because my son in law also paid for this safari so I didn’t understand why she accused him. Later he explained that Lilian sent a text message saying that “You are from Kikuyu tribe so I know you also stole something from the safari.” Kikuyu tribe is one of the biggest tribes in Kenya and apparently the stereotype is that Kikuyus love money and Lilian was by a long shot, trying to say that my daughter’s husband was stealing from us too. I think she thought that he was some travel agent who booked the holiday for us, in Europe we are not saying this to people, I just don’t understand why she said it. What kind of person is this or what kind of country is it where someone judges another by tribal basis? I really didn’t understand this. I will attach this message here and you will see with your own eyes. It’s unbelievable that after ditching us in Narok, she was trying to secretly find out if we paid the park fees for ourselves, hello? She had just ditched us a few hours earlier! Anyway,I’ve got a video of her telling us to “sort ourselves out”, it’s a shame I cannot post it here, but IF YOU ARE READING THIS,JUST GOOGLE LIANS TRAVEL and you will see even on YouTube.There is just something terrible about seeing your loved ones and family members looking despondent, it really gets you. it was very bad day, everyone frustrated, poor safari and we had to pay for transport and entrance for Nakuru. A police report was made but I understand that Lilian just hid from the authorities, no justice in Africa. It was a terrible experience for my family and my first time in Africa. You have seen the suspicious reviews here, and on no other platform will you find Lians Travel Africa, just on safari bookings, that should be your first red flag. Check the top of my post and see the reviews from August 2018 to now, see if they make any sense, 2 days after this, another 5 star review might show up. Since 4th March, no review yet, strange indeed. I shall attach the text messages here as proof.

I will give some advice too, there are many good travel companies, with good reviews all over the internet, much more trustworthy, do you wanna risk it with this company? I’m sure you don’t. I don’t recommend this company at all!

Andrea   –  
United States US
Visited: February 2019 Reviewed: Mar 29, 2019

50-65 years of age  |  Experience level: first safari

Nightmare - Do not use this safari company
1/5

There are many bad reviews of this company. 14% are 1-star on TripAdvisor as of this writing. Please listen to them to save yourself the money, hassle, and discomfort my daughter and I endured, as well as a threat of bank account fraud.

We were picked up at the airport as scheduled, but in an old, broken safari vehicle with broken seat belts and an overall dirty, filthy condition.

We were immediately told we needed to pay an additional $200 per person on top of the $1,750 per person we had already paid. She said the additional $400 would be to stay at a tent camp, not the upscale Serena Hotel we were promised and paid for. THIS IS A DECEPTIVE SCAM. It apparently happened to the last two reviewers as well.

We went to this tent camp, which we were promised was as upscale as the hotel, but it was far from. These accommodations were subpar to what we paid for and what we were promised. This was a true bait-and-switch. We demanded to be taken to the hotel we prepaid for, and the driver refused to take us. Martha didn't answer the phone. The driver said he didn't have the money or reservation for our hotel we were promised and we were again stuck in this very basic tent camp. We felt as though we were being held against our will in the middle of nowhere.

The safari vehicle itself was broken down and in poor condition. Some issues included broken off seatbelts, a broken hood latch so the hood kept bouncing up in our view, the radio didn't work, and the car was unkempt and dirty. It was not comfortable, particularly when we paid for a premium experience.

The only good thing was that we saw a lot of animals. The driver was unprofessional and smelled (poor personal hygiene).

At the end of the trip, we were supposed to go to the airport to depart. We thought we were on the way to the airport, and the driver took us to a gas station. At that point, Martha (from the beginning of the trip) got into our vehicle. The driver took us so slowly to the airport, we felt we were behind held against our will, as Martha accosted us about an email complaint. She threatened to have us arrested.

We eventually made it to the airport and they refused to let us out of the car. They threatened us and yelled at us. Finally, 45 minutes before our international flight time, we were able to get out of the car and rush to our flight.

After returning home, we wrote a negative review here on TripAdvisor. The tour company contacted us and agreed to a $900 refund if we removed this review. They never sent any partial refund. They told us they would only send any partial refund if we gave our bank account routing and account number, which is the last thing anyone should ever do with their bank account. They would not refund to our original payment method or send via Western Union.

This company is fraudulent and made me and my daughter feel unsafe and uncomfortable. Do not go with your family. Do not go with your friends. Do not use this tour operator under any circumstances. Take your money and your business elsewhere. You will have a much better trip for it.

Andrew   –  
United States US
Visited: January 2019 Reviewed: Apr 1, 2019

35-50 years of age  |  Experience level: first safari

Worst experience ever
1/5

We had the most horrible and scary 2 days of our lives with this company. First day was the car accident and it went into a full on death-spiral from there. I don’t even want to rehash the 24 hour period in between the car accident the first day and being broken down on the side of the road on the return trip, so for the sake of brevity I’ll start at the vehicle breakdown on January 28th, 2019. We were on the side of the road for 8 hours, in the region where CANNIBALS are known to abduct, kill and eat stranded people. WE HEARD THEM IN THE WOODS BEHIND THE TREE LINE JUST FEET AWAY FROM US! We were in SO MUCH DANGER. 6 tourists had be taken and eaten just a few months prior, we learned the next day. We had to call one of our own people to come get us from Kampala (2.5 hour drive each way for him), if we would have waited for a representative from Love Uganda to arrive, it would have been after 2am! The biggest issue we have at this point is that Love Uganda agreed to refund us 40% of the Safari cost, and we wrote up a contract and both parties signed that by March 1st the funds would be transferred into our account. We gave them 4 WEEKS to get us the refund. 4 weeks came and went, and I emailed them that their deadline had passed. I was told that the owner was out of the country until the end of the month (weeks from then) and that nothing could be done. Here it is April 1st and there has STILL been no contact from them and no refund. I had not intended to write this review because even though our trip was HORRIFIC AND TRAUMATIC, we just wanted the partial refund and to return to our lives. But after everything that happened, and NOW after them not honoring their agreement and ignoring the contract that they signed AND not communicating, I feel it is my duty to warn others. They talk a professional game, but they do not honor their financial agreements, and that is NOT PROFESSIONAL.

Mark   –  
United States US
Visited: February 2019 Reviewed: Apr 10, 2019

20-35 years of age  |  Experience level: first safari

DO NOT GO ON PETIIT MAASAI or INNO SAFARIS, YOU WILL REGRET IT
1/5

I’ll start with this. I hate that I have to post this crappy review. I hate reviewing in general as I don’t have time for it. This should tell you how messed up my experience was and how angry and cheated I feel over the whole experience as were all the individuals who were taken on this safari with us in the third week of February 2019. The guides name was Kantona but he goes by “Eric”. Below is my description of the trip, it's chaotic because I am beyond angry, frustrated, and the trip was chaotic as well.

By writing this review I genuinely hope it spares you the experience I had. If someone had written this deserving review before I had booked this safari, I could have avoided this misery so at least I want to prevent it to happening to as few people as possible.

The bad (and it was 99% bad, really bad): I really hope this helps you make an informed decision and I would really urge you to steer clear of Petit Maasai and Inno safaris unless you want to have a miserable experience and feel cheated, lied to, and have a throbbing headache by the end of your “vacation”. If they want to lie to you more and tell you that my review is written by a competitor, please message me and I’ll be happy to email you a scan of my receipt and pictures of my safari.

The trip was memorable despite of the tour company and guide. That speaks to how beautiful the Serengeti is.

This “guide” wasn’t a guide. He was a bus driver. You don’t tip bus drivers do you? The audacity for them to even ask for a tip is already beyond comprehension let alone the fact that they asked for a "big tip" before the trip even started and in fact before he even told us what his name was as he never introduced himself and just said to put our bags in the car.

So firstly, I booked this safari tour through Petit Maasai Safaris. I spent a few days researching the tour operator before I booked and gave them a deposit. Like most people I did some research and would expect to be taken on the safari with that company. Oh was I mistaken to assume that I was going with the tour operator that I booked with!

The actual tour: I am put up in the hotel the night before the tour. The next morning a few guys dressed in jeans show up about 45min late and start yelling at me, are you going on safari? I said yes as did the couple in the hotel lobby also waiting for a tour. So these guys have no idea who I am or that I was supposed to be on the safari with them. After another half hour of them calling some guys they say ok put your backpack in the car. I carry it myself to car which isn’t customary on guided safaris but whatever, not a big deal. I get to the car and it has a completely different logo on it. It says Inno Safaris. I ask them whether I am still going with Petit Maasai and they just say no. No explanation, nothing. When I ask why not they look at me as if I’m crazy for even asking. To them, they’re taking me and that’s that. Almost as if they’re doing me a favor. This is all right after the first word out of their mouths were: "give Eric a BIG tip" before anyone introduced themselves.

I went on this trip because I wanted to see the great migration which the company office promised me I would see. They said unequivocally that it was part of the tour. One hour in to the actual tour after I’ve arrived all eager to see it, the guide says oh no the great migration is in Maswaa Reserve and we won’t see it. I was speechless. I felt very cheated considering they were more than eager to make promises and take hundreds of dollars from me.

The guide, Eric: he ONLY smiles when joking with other tour guides or screaming into the radio that when he wasn’t screaming into it, was full volume screeching for THE ENTIRE 3 day safari. I mean I wish I was exaggerating. Every time you’d say something to him like “could you tell me what species of bird this is?” the smile would instantly fade. At first this was concerning and eventually became comical in the context of this entire messed up “safari tour”. To this question he would reply with one word: the species name. No information on it such as sex, age, mating behaviors etc. (you know, the stuff that we go on these safaris to learn which makes it more enjoyable and memorable when it is more interactive). Boy, were my expectations flawed!

We were always the last ones to arrive to the park on game drives and the first to go back to the campground. No exceptions. I wish this was a figure of speech.

The entire three day trip the guide said maybe ten sentences to us. For every one word he said to us he spent one hour on the radio chatting with his friends on radio and cell phone. Asking him for anything was like pulling teeth. If you think I didn’t ask him to turn off the radio or god forbid lower the volume you are mistaken. Would just completely ignore any requests made by me or the other tour members. Just didn’t give a sh*t. I hope this review at least makes him care or at the least the owner of this company care because this isn’t acceptable and can’t continue. This is one of the most expensive events of my life and one of the worst service experiences I have ever experienced or could have imagined.

First thing you hear from them is give this guy a good tip. Not even a hello my name is... Never introduced himself. I thought this tip comment was in poor taste to begin with but I didn’t quite understand the audacity of this request considering the poor guide and service I was about to receive which I couldn’t have ever imagined. Not for something you pay for. Homeless people waiting in line at a soup kitchen are treated with more respect and dignity than we were on this tour.

Zero information about animals other than this is lion. Any other information was painfully solicited.

Would smile and laugh when talking on the radio but then the moment you ask a question his smile goes away. Acts like doing you a favor and you’re just interrupting him socializing with his friends. This "guide" needs to understand that he is there for you not the other way around. People fly from across the world for this experience and he couldn’t care less. Zero social awareness.

We were literally the only group that didn’t go to meet the Maasai people out of hundreds of other Safari expeditions.

Safari guide is one of the better paying jobs in this region of Tanzania and it’s a travesty that someone with this little apparent care for other people and in particular paying customers, with zero interest in or respect for nature who idles his engine in the Serengeti while all the animals breathe the toxic air, has this job when I’m sure so many would be willing to take his place. This guide would leave the radio screeching on for the entire freaking drive and Safari. While you’re trying to watch the animals and relax he leaves the engine on and all he says is can we go after a few moments. Zero information about the animals unless painfully solicited. So you’re listening to screeching radio for the entire day and listening to him scream into radio with his buddies while you try to relax and ignore it so you can actually watch the animals.

Oh and the cherry on top was him playing a prank joke of pretending to have forgotten me and then stopping a few hundred meters away down the highway. I thought at least this poor joke that I’ve paid hundreds of dollars a day to experience was over and he’d come back but to my shock he just idled the engine and waited for me to catch up to the car. This piece of sh*t not only doesn’t have the social awareness to not play pranks on paying customers and laugh at their expense but didn’t even have the decency to freaking put the car in reverse and come back. Just incredible. Simply speechless as were the other people of the group. If you don't believe this happened, I have it on video and will gladly send to you.

I understand that there are limits to expectations and customer service but this is one of those situations where competition needs to teach not just this guy a lesson but the company for lying to me and also for putting such an individual to “guide” us for three days. And furthermore we were promised a private tent but were put into a tent with another guy. Fine, wasn’t the end of the world even though that was another lie. But when we heard how loud he snores the nightmare was just continuing. So after listening to the guide yell into the screeching full volume radio, we got to retreat to a tent with the worlds loudest snorer.

On the ride home I was relieved to be leaving and at least be able to get away from the rude behavior and get some peace and quiet. To my further dismay, the guide picked up another tour guide and they jabbered in Swahili the ENTIRE 4 HOUR JOURNEY HOME. I mean at this point I was almost manic, trying to see the humor in how terrible this experience just kept getting, and alternating that with anger and thinking about how I will ever explain this on Trip Advisor. Because honestly words don’t do this experience justice.

I wouldn’t do this tour if I WAS PAID I feel like we should have been paid to go on this nightmare.

In summary: If you want to listen to three days of screeching radio, listen to a guide yell Swahili at other guides and into the radio all while being ignored and feeling genuinely disrespected, oh and feel like you’ve been lied to because they do lie to attract customers, and I almost forgot the cherry on top, be pranked that the car is driving away while you feel stranded in a third world country without your backpack or wallet, if this is what you want then Inno Safaris and Petit Maasai are the tour for you!

The good:
Food was good. I will give the chef that. He did a very good job in the mix of all this. And the Serengeti and Ngorongoro are incredible. The setting is one of the most beautiful I have ever been to in my years of travelling. You just can find so many alternative safari guide companies that will actually complement the scenery by providing information and just being nice rather than forcing you to have to tune out the noise and yelling and just the general feeling that you are there for them and they are doing you a favor. If you don’t like this job then quit. This isn’t for you and I can’t EVER imagine this individual providing any level of service that would leave someone happy. The guide just needs to be replaced.

Next time I will just rent a car and pay the park fees and do this safari myself because I will receive the same amount of information about my surroundings as with this guide (none). And at least that way there isn’t a radio and you can enjoy the peace and quiet.

I will lastly say that I heard that Innocent, the owner of the company who takes some of the groups, is actually quite good and is passionate and knowledgeable. But I wouldn’t take the risk of getting the guy that we got. Not when there are so many good other tour operators. And even if you’re promised to go with Innocent, I was promised to go with Petit Maasai and that’s who I gave a deposit to and we know how that ended. I also was promised to see the great migration and I also have yet to see it. Moral of the story, don’t trust what they say, their promises mean NOTHING and be very prudent when picking a tour operator and guide so you don’t experience what I did.

Ann   –  
Australia AU
Visited: March 2019 Reviewed: Apr 12, 2019

65+ years of age  |  Experience level: 2-5 safaris

Took our money but only booked and paid for our 1st 2 nights. Very embarrassing and stressful.hopele
1/5

Dreadfull.Except for the 1st 2 nights nothing was prebooked or paid for
Pathetic excuses.Guide left his employment after this experience

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