Safari Honeymoon Recap and Itinerary
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Back in June, Logan and I packed our (shockingly small, soft-sided) bags and headed off on a multi-country African safari honeymoon adventure. We decided to wait on honeymooning until roughly 8 months post-nup for a few reasons, including: a.) we knew we would be exhausted post-wedding, b.) neither of us was able to take consecutive time off for the wedding and honeymoon, and c.) we thought it would be fun to have something epic to look forward to. And it was.
The honeymoon came and went sooner than either of us anticipated, and while we’ve been home for over six weeks at this point, not a day has gone by that I haven’t daydreamed about what was undeniably the trip of a lifetime. I spent two full weeks blurting, “Everything is magic!!!” at random intervals, and I couldn’t be more grateful to have had so many wild, beautiful, eye-opening experiences (cliché, but true) with my hairier half.
I know some of you followed snippets of the trip on Instagram, but I wanted to do a two-part honeymoon series here for anyone who may be planning a similar trip (now or in the future), is a voyeur, or simply enjoys amateur animal/sunset photography. I thought we’d kick things off with a recap, and then we’ll tackle safari FAQs and packing tips in a follow-up post. Cool? Cool.
Warning: This is a psychotically long-winded recap. I apologize. I got excited. Here is the cut and dry itinerary for those who don’t like details.
DAYS 1-3 Dulini Leadwood, Sabi Sands, South Africa
DAYS 4-5 Thorntree River Lodge, Victoria Falls
DAYS 6-8 Sandibe Okavango Safari Lodge, Okavango Delta, Botswana
DAY 9 The Residence, Johannesburg, South Africa
DAYS 10-15 Azura, Benguerra Island, Mozambique

After a very long flight from NYC to Johannesburg, a shorter flight to Nelspruit, and about an hour and a half drive to Sabi Sands, we arrived at Dulini Leadwood at lunchtime dirty, exhausted, and slap happy with anticipatory excitement. Said excitement only intensified when we were greeted with big smiles, warm towels, and a delightful ginger lemonade concoction, and shown to our “room,” which was not a room but a palace. It quite literally took my breath away.
The floor to ceiling windows that opened directly onto the reserve where kudu and impala were grazing no more than 10 feet away. The necessary yet very aesthetically pleasing mosquito netting over the bed. The soaking tub floating in the middle of a spacious stone bathroom. It was straight out of a Condé Nast dreamscape, people! My emotions may or may not have been heightened by the jetlag, but…I cried.
We quickly cleaned up and changed into safari gear—not gonna lie, this was a very good look for my roommate—and headed to lunch in the main lodge. After being fed a true feast that included a variety of fresh salads, saucy bbq ribs, and a bottle of champagne, we piled into an open-air safari vehicle and set out on our inaugural game drive.
Within minutes the vehicle was surrounded by a herd of elephants, and I was flooded with a euphoric giddiness I have only experienced a handful of times in my life (i.e. holding The Dude Diet for the first time, waking up in Vegas at my bachelorette, my wedding day, and doing yoga next to Joshua Jackson last week). It was surreal, and the hits just kept on coming. Giraffes, and rhino, and wild dogs, oh my!

The next three days at Dulini Leadwood were even more unbelievable than the first. We were woken each morning at 5:30 by a soft knock on the door and a tray with coffee and a small snack. Coffee was drunk in bed (luxury of luxuries!), before we donned our sexy safari outfits and made our way to the vehicle to meet our guide, tracker, and safari mates (two other honeymooning couples who we enjoyed very much) a little before 6. Then into to ze bush!

We’d return to the lodge around 9:30 am for a group breakfast, followed by a few hours of down time (during which we napped/read/discussed the fact that everything was magic), lunch, more downtime, tea (I have never been fed so much in my life), and an evening game drive that ran from roughly 4 to 7. There was a traditional barbecue group dinner one night complete with singing and dancing, and another night we had an impossibly romantic dinner in our room, which was a serious highlight.
Logan and I were lucky enough to see every animal on our wishlist while at Dulini, but my favorite sighting by far was a leopard and her cubs at dusk. The babies (SO FLUFFY, I’m gonna die!!) were playing together on a fallen tree, and much to the delight of our guide and companions…I cried. (Spoiler: I cried a truly hilarious amount on this trip. I’m a crier now.) Viewing the wildlife was amazing, but we also learned so much about everything from animal behavior to South African history from our endlessly knowledgeable (and wonderful! and hilarious!) guide and tracker. The two of them made each drive unforgettable, and I will be forever in their debt.

DAYS 4-5 THORNTREE RIVER LODGE, VICTORIA FALLS
After getting a final morning safari drive in at Dulini, we flew into Livingstone, Zambia and drove to Thorntree River Lodge in Mosi-Oa-Tunya National Park. First on the agenda (post afternoon cocktails and bathing, obviously) was an early evening cruise on the Zambezi River. On top of being surrounded by hippos and seeing a herd of elephants drinking at the water’s edge, we were treated to what was hands down the most outrageously beautiful sunset that I have seen/may ever see. Dear God, THE COLORS. #everythingismagic



After flying from Zambia to Botswana, we took a bush plane to Sandibe, arriving just in time for the afternoon game drive.
Our drives at Sandibe were similar to the drives at Dulini in terms of timing and coffee/cocktail stops, but the experience was stunningly different in so many ways. First of all, Sabi Sands is hilly with dense brush, and the terrain in the Delta is much flatter and sandier. (The sand makes for an extremely bumpy ride, which definitely took some getting used to.) We could see farther in all directions in the Delta, and the wildlife seemed denser than in Sabi Sands. The herds of animals were enormous—20 elephants drinking by the water’s edge, buffalo as far as the eye could see, countless giraffes with slews of babies, hippos on hippos on hippos. You get the picture.




I don’t have much to say about Johannesburg because it was a just a short stopover on our way to Mozambique, and we didn’t get to explore the city. With that said, our hotel was beautiful, super comfortable, and serving a British Colonial vibe that I was very into.
DAYS 10-15 AZURA, BENGUERRA ISLAND, MOZAMBIQUE
Oh man. I’m awkwardly teary thinking about this place. We arrived at Azura via helicopter from Vilanculos (on mainland Mozambique), and the view flying in was INSANE. The pictures don’t remotely do it justice, but the bright white sand dunes emerging from kaleidoscopic blue water was nothing short of otherworldly.







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