Luxury Travel

Safari Guides Become Unlikely Stars as Conservation Turns to Instagram

It’s a critical lifeline for the African wildlife they protect. 

Virtual Safaris Surge During Virus Bans

More than half the world may be on lockdown, but more people than ever are going on safari. Jarryd Du Preez, a guide at andBeyond Phinda Private Game Reserve in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa, recently fielded questions from safari goers in India, Chile, Bahrain, Germany, Canada, the U.S., the U.K., Saint Lucia, and Russia as he pointed out two white rhino calves hidden behind an adult female. Can you tell the sex of the calves? (They were males.) Are poachers a danger? (Always.)

Africa’s golden light cast its magical glow as a soft breeze rustled through patches of shrubbery called stinking grass. “What does stinking grass smell like?” someone asked.