
Wild at heart: Finch Hattons offers unforgettable luxury safari adventures in Kenya
Keep your camera at the ready.
At Finch Hattons Safari Camp in Kenya, a tower of preening giraffes might strike a pose next to your Land Cruiser.
Or a parched elephant could set a thirst trap by drinking in a private plunge pool.
14 The gorgeously decorated luxury Family Suites have elevated viewing decks overlooking the hippo pools.
Virgin Limited Edition
A stay at the property, part of Sir Richard Branson's Virgin Limited Edition portfolio, promises countless photo ops, from rhinos and crocodiles wallowing in natural springs to an Oxpecker catching a ride on a zebra's back. It's an out-of-this world experience.
Set in Tsavo West National Park about 150 miles west of Nairobi, the camp is named after British aristocrat, aviator and hunter-turned-anti-poacher Denys George Finch-Hatton, best known as the lover of Karen Blixen in her memoir, 'Out of Africa.' The handsome adventurer, who died tragically in a 1931 plane crash, was played by Robert Redford in the Oscar-winning movie of the same name.
The famed property, established more than 30 years ago, is every bit as swoon-worthy as its namesake hero. There are 14 luxury tented suites, each beautifully appointed with a private deck, antique rugs, an Old-World writing desk, bronze soaker bathtub, king-sized bed and complimentary maxi bar. And to be clear, apart from their mosquito-proof netted walls, these sumptuous villas bear no resemblance to camping tents.
Two spacious two-bedroom suites accommodate families while the deluxe Finch Hattons Suite comes with a heated plunge pool as well as a dedicated butler, game-drive vehicle and guide. It's the perfect romantic hideaway for honeymooners and VIPs.
14 The Finch Hattons Suite has a private heated plunge pool as well as a dedicated butler, game-drive vehicle and guide.
Virgin Limited Edition
14 All 17 tented suites have roofs made of sustainably harvested makuti palm leaves.
Virgin Limited Edition
Days start early, as animals are most active before first light and the temperature is cooler before first light. After coffee, tea and freshly squeezed fruit juice at the pavilion, vehicles depart promptly at 6 a.m. on morning game drives. A chef-cooked breakfast is served al fresco on the savannah or back at the camp.
Finch's team of incredibly knowledgeable Maasai guides are expert at spotting wildlife, from the mythic Big Five – lion, leopard, elephant, African buffalo and rhinoceros – to hundreds of bird species. Also roving are the Ugly Five: the spotted hyena, wildebeest, vulture, marabou stork and the hideous warthog.
While there is no guarantee of a big cat sighting on any safari, rangers do their utmost to locate apex predators. Guests are assured of seeing Tsavo's famous soil-stained 'red elephants,' buffalo, giraffes and zebra, which parade on the plains. One thing visitors will likely not encounter: another 4×4. There are fewer lodges and tourists in Tsavo than, say, the Maasai Mara, so you will likely have the bush to yourself.
14 Tsavo's famous 'red elephants,' named for the ruddy soil that stains their hide, entertain visitors on game drives.
Virgin Limited Edition
14 Giraffes are often seen ambling the bush and pruning the trees.
Virgin Limited Edition
14 Finch Hattons partners with the Kenya Wildlife Service, Amara Conservation and the Tsavo Trust, among other organizations, to conserve Kenya's wildlife and its habitats.
Virgin Limited Edition
Our ranger, Matthew, taught us about animal behaviors, identified tracks and bird calls (like the ring-necked dove's trill, which sounds like a cell phone) and also shared information about Maasai traditions and his village. He was very funny, quipping for instance that a strutting male baboon was 'acting like a branch manager,' so his passengers were always laughing.
It's worth getting up the middle of the night for the 4:30 a.m. drive and hike up the Chyulu Hills, with breakfast on the crest. As the day dawns, the sky is streaked fiery orange and pink, and Mt. Kilimanjaro stands majestic in the distance. A nature walk in the cloud forest with its sacred Mugumo tree swings, formed naturally by the aerial roots, concludes the unforgettable outing.
14 As the sun rises atop Chyulu Hills, the panoramic views are spectacular.
Virgin Limited Edition
14 After an afternoon expedition, 'sundowner' cocktails and canapés are served.
Virgin Limited Edition
Afternoon game drives might also include a trip to the Shetani lava flow, a dark and jagged landscape that stretches five miles, followed by sundowners and the Maasai Olympics on the savannah. The staff taught guests to spear-throw, play 'bush basketball' with a rungu club and shoot arrows at a target. It was a magical evening.
Another highlight was a visit to a nearby Maasai village where guests were invited to enter a traditional manyatta house made of wood, mud, cow dung and ash. A brief torrential rainstorm made the visit even more memorable, as everyone sheltered together under umbrellas and tarps. While it's not necessary to bring money, guests might wish to make a donation to the village or buy the traditional handmade beaded and metal crafts.
When not on game drives or lounging at the acacia-fringed pool, guests can book body and face treatments and massages at Chyulu Spa, the largest holistic wellness center in the East African bush. The soothing space features two treatment rooms, a hammam and a gym, while yoga classes are offered on an outdoor deck overlooking the facility's infinity pool.
14 Guests can relax at the infinity pool between game drives and hikes.
Virgin Limited Edition
14 Chyulu Spa has an infinity pool, two treatment rooms, a yoga deck, hammam, gym and relaxation area.
Virgin Limited Edition
14 An elegant outdoor pavilion with a thatched roof is where most meals are served.
Virgin Limited Edition
The superb farm-to-fork restaurant is better than many New York hotspots. Executive chef Sudi Baha helms the kitchen, which makes everything on site, from the bread to the ice cream. Lunch and dinner start with a delicious soup, often prepared with vegetables and herbs from the organic garden, followed by a choice of entrées and desserts. Guests looked forward to every meal.
In the evening, patrons might sip a gin and tonic (mixed with Nairobi's award-winning Procero Blue Dot gin and a pinch of its flavor-enhancing botanical salts) in the Karen Blixen Lounge. Or they could watch 'Out of Africa' on a movie screen under the stars.
14 Step back in time at the Karen Blixen Lounge, decorated with antiques and artifacts.
Virgin Limited Edition
14 Guests can sip cocktails or watch 'Out of Africa' on an outdoor movie screen in the boma area.
Virgin Limited Edition
When it's time to call it a night, a flashlight-toting guard or two will escort guests to their rooms, listening and watching carefully for wildlife.
After all, animals roam free, just as nature intended.
Rooms from $990 per person per night during low season and $1,450 per person per night during high season. Rates include all meals and a selection of drinks, return Finch Hattons airstrip transfers, park fees and scheduled activities including game drives and local excursions. To get to the property, guests fly to Nairobi, then take a charter or scheduled plane to the property's airstrip.
14 Daybreak at the Finch Hattons Suite viewing deck.
Virgin Limited Edition
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
7 hours ago
- Yahoo
‘A giant parenting group': how online comedians are making a living by laughing about the chaos of kids
Many Instagram-frequenting parents of small children will have seen George Lewis's sketch about two toddlers discussing their feelings of abandonment and relief wrapped in a game of peekaboo. 'It was a normal day, I was just playing with Dad. And then he put his hands in front of his face and he was just gone,' the British comedian and father says in the widely shared video. 'He was behaving so erratically.' Life through a two-year-old's lens – especially in relation to their sleep-deprived parents – is fertile ground for a growing group of online parent comedians whose content is clocking up millions of views. At the heart of the material lies age-old truths: toddlers are sometimes barmy and parenting is often mad. There is a special solidarity among the carers of young children whose days revolve around coaxing vegetables into mouths and bottoms on to potties. In Canada, Farideh Olsen's take on the absurdities of motherhood has one eye firmly on the patriarchy. A sexy husband, her songs suggest, is one who does housework, has therapy and respects women. The 42-year-old singer says it has been a surprise to see how much mothers love watching other mothers 'joking about children and partners and marriage and their love for their children'. 'And, I think that's because a lot of mothering is extremely lonely,' she says. 'You're at home with your kids by yourself, maybe you meet up at a park, but then you don't have the depth of a relationship to joke about your kids.' In the odd three minutes or so that mothers have to check their phones, 'they see something that kind of reflects their life – they find the levity in it,' she says. UK comedian Michael McIntyre was a forerunner when it came to mining laughs from parenting struggles. He told packed theatres well before Covid: 'You never love your children more than when they are unconscious, but still breathing.' Today's troupe of parenting commentators home in on micro moments – a request to cut a toastie exactly in half, the unhinged cackle that follows being asked how the toddler slept, that game of peekaboo – that capture the same sentiment. Farideh thought her music career had been both serious and over before she began writing songs about motherhood. She never considered herself a comedian, nor was she interested in material about parenting, until she had children. While many parenting influencers are female, comedy – including the short-and-sharp social media variety – 'is still very male-dominated', she says. Sydney-based stay-at-home father Sean Szeps' video about the ABCs of parenting – 'A is for 'Absolutely not', B is for 'Brush your teeth'…' delivered with more than a little loopy energy – has almost 40m views on his social media platforms. Last year, all of the 37-year-old's video posts, inspired by his twin seven-year-olds, had a combined 228m views, according to Szeps. Zach Mander, 35, based in Brisbane, has 265,000 TikTok followers and his most popular post has more than 10m views. He has followers all over the world but, as with Szeps, most are in English-speaking countries. They both credit their successes to the pandemic when creative communities on social media took the edge off lockdowns with children. Like their overseas counterparts, they've earned sizeable niche audiences that wouldn't have been accessible to real-world comedians playing clubs with disparate audience members. And they're doing it with disarming honesty. 'Up until that point, my style was incredibly positive, and then the pandemic hit, and I couldn't hold back any more,' says Szeps, who's married to TV presenter and podcaster Josh Szeps. 'Technology,' he says, exploded 'at the same time as we evolved to realising that it would be much better if we were honest about parenthood'. The result was that a 'shit-ton of mums and dads now make an entire career and a living on just sharing what women mostly, but parents overall, have been feeling for decades, which is: it's hilariously hard. It is undeniably difficult. If we can't laugh about it, we're going to sob uncontrollably'. Mander's spoof investigative examinations of Bluey characters, and a video about his children inexplicably losing a slice of pizza in the car (it emerged weeks later 'almost mummified'), are among his biggest hits. 'I've always made content on things that I was experiencing, and it doesn't come much bigger than parenting,' he says. 'I'm amazed we don't talk about it more.' For some, it's really paying off. Szeps, who has a background in social media advertising, has been living off his Instagram account's sponsored content for four years and growth is up 50% year on year. It helps, too, that there will always be new parents. Mander, whose children are two and four, says that because the early years parenting cohort resets about every five years, so does a 'whole lot of people experiencing this for the first time – and those are my cohort'. Viewers are mostly women, both Szeps and Mander say. Szeps, who moved to Australia from America in 2017, has a theory as to why some of the dozen or so male 'power hitters' in the parenting humour space are men talking exclusively to women – and it's down to old-fashioned gender roles. 'We don't want women necessarily to be brutally honest about how hard parenting can be, because that makes us worried for the kids. When a man does it, it's much more accepted,' he says. Parenting jokes sometimes break into the wider satirical space, of course. The Betoota Advocate recently ran a headline: 'Toddler who refuses toast cut the wrong way allegedly ate four servings of vegetable dahl at daycare.' For Szeps, Instagram has become a 'massive, giant parenting group'. 'You still have to navigate the complications. You still have to navigate the perfect parents. You still have to navigate comparison. 'Parenting is so hard, but I don't feel alone in it any more, the way that I felt prior to sharing my experiences online.'

Engadget
8 hours ago
- Engadget
What to read this weekend: Vampires and more vampires
These are some recently released titles we think are worth adding to your reading list . This week, we read Hungerstone , a retelling of Sheridan Le Fanu's Carmilla, and EC Comics' first serialized miniseries, Blood Type. I was pretty late in getting to this one, as it's been on my list for a good while now, but I really can't think of a better time to have finally picked up this retelling of the original sapphic vampire story, Carmilla , than during Pride Month. And what a treat it is. Hungerstone is a gothic novel that follows Lenore, a woman who has been uprooted from London and moved to the British moorlands by her husband, Henry, to fulfill his career ambitions. Henry is… not the best, and Lenore could definitely do with some companionship. Then, in walks Carmilla. Cue the yearning and craving. Carmilla is actually brought in after a carriage accident to recover and overstays her welcome, making everyone in the house uncomfortable with her strange behaviors (wandering at night, forgoing food at mealtimes, etc). From the moment she arrives, Lenore can't stop thinking about her. Lenore is also having strange dreams, and girls in a nearby village soon begin catching a strange illness. This is all pretty familiar. There are some big differences between Hungerstone and the novella it's based on, though. Hungerstone further explores industrialization and the expectations and treatment of women in this time period. It delivers feminine rage and some really satisfying moments. $21 at Amazon Blood Type , by Corinna Bechko and Andrea Sorrentino, is the first serialized miniseries from EC Comics, an imprint known for its anthologies that made its comeback to publishing last summer after a decades-long hiatus. We first met the series' bloodthirsty vampiress Ada in the third issue of EC's Epitaphs of the Abyss, but she now has her own dedicated spinoff. Blood Type #1 is kind of the perfect start-of-summer horror read: a vampire who has been at sea feasting on sailors makes a stop on a vacation island and finds some other evil has already taken root there. It's bloody, the tone strikes the right balance of dark and humorous and it's overall a pretty good time. Well, not for everyone in the story (except Ada), but I'm certainly having fun. $5 at Amazon
Yahoo
8 hours ago
- Yahoo
Romeo Beckham is 'so, so proud' of his dad David for receiving a knighthood
Romeo Beckham is "so, so proud" of his dad David for receiving a knighthood. The 50-year-old sports legend - who has been married to Spice Girl Victoria Beckham since 1999 and also has Brooklyn, 26, Cruz, 20, as well as 13-year-old Harper Seven with her - will now be known as Sir David Beckham after being named in the King's Birthday Honours list and Romeo, 22, was quick to praise his father over the news. Alongside a snap of himself and his dad, Romeo wrote on Instagram: "So so proud of you", and emblazoned his words with a string of white heart emojis. Shortly after that, musician Cruz also took to social media to congratulate his dad. He wrote: "I'm so proud dad I love you. "Sir David Beckham Has a nice ring to it." At the time of writing, David and Victoria's eldest child Brooklyn is yet to make any public statement on the news. But Victoria did acknowledge the "passion" has husband has that has led him to this point as she admitted she "couldn't be prouder" of him. She wrote on Instagram: "You've always been my knight in shining armour, but now it's official. Sir @davidbeckham!!! What an honour, I couldn't be prouder of you. Your dedication to the things that matter most — your country, your work, your passion, and most of all, your family — has never wavered. The way you've touched so many lives over the years with kindness and humility speaks volumes about the man you are and continues to inspire us everyday. But above all else, I'm so, so proud to call you mine. I love you so much xxxx" Along with the former Manchester United star's new title of Sir David Beckham, the fashion designer will become formally known as Lady Victoria. Upon receiving the honour, the sports star admitted that he found it all to be a "truly humbling" experience. He said: "Growing up in East London with parents and grandparents who were so patriotic and proud to be British, I never could have imagined I would receive such a truly humbling honour. "To have played for and captained my country was the greatest privilege of my career, and literally a boyhood dream come true." I've been so lucky to be able to do the work that I do and I'm grateful to be recognised for work that gives me so much fulfilment. "It will take a little while for the news to sink in but I'm immensely proud and it's such an emotional moment for me to share with my family." In 2003, he was given an OBE by the late Queen Elizabeth for services to football. The former England captain has a long history of carrying out charitable work, which Honours Committee officials will have considered before deciding to bestow him with the honour.