Picture this: the sun dips low over the plains of Laikipia, Kenya, casting a golden haze across the Ewaso Nyiro River. Across the wilderness a distant call of a hyena, and your only companions are a string of patient camels, a few Samburu warriors in vibrant shawls, and the vast, untamed African bush. No Wi-Fi, no crowds, just you, the stars, and the raw pulse of wilderness. This is fly camping at its most intoxicating.

If you’ve ever dreamed of trading the roar of city life for the whisper of the wind through fever trees, a fly camping safari in Laikipia is your ticket to freedom. But what exactly is it, and why should you drop everything to chase this adventure? 

What Is a Fly Camping Safari?

At its core, fly camping is the ultimate lightweight safari escape – a mobile, minimalist camping experience designed for explorers who crave the road less traveled. Unlike traditional lodges with their plush amenities, fly camping strips things back to essentials: a simple tent (under the stars), a campfire dinner, and the thrill of waking up wherever the bush takes you. You move camp daily, often on foot, horse, or—in Laikipia’s Samburu-inspired style—with camels carrying your gear so you can focus on the journey.

In Laikipia, this manifests as multi-day treks through private conservancies teeming with the “Northern Five,” namely, Grevy’s zebras with their punk-rock stripes, elegant, reticulated giraffes, Beisa oryx, gerenuks on tiptoe, and Somali ostriches strutting like runway models—plus elusive black leopards and packs of endangered wild dogs. It’s not just camping; it’s a nomadic immersion where the landscape unfolds like a living storybook, far from the jeep-choked tracks of more touristy reserves.

At Sidai Camp, nestled on the banks of the Ewaso Nyiro in a 2,000-acre private enclave, fly camping pairs seamlessly with camel treks. These aren’t your desert-dune rides; they’re purposeful wanders led by local Samburu guides, blending cultural wisdom with wildlife tracking across riverine forests and open grasslands.

Why Should You Do It? 

Let’s be real: in a world of endless notifications and curated feeds, why rough it in the bush? Because fly camping isn’t about discomfort, it’s about reconnection. Forget watching game from a vehicle. On foot (or swaying atop a camel), you feel the earth underfoot, hear the rustle of impala in the thicket, and catch scents of wild sage on the breeze. Enjoy sightings that feel earned, not staged. Spot a wild dog pack mid-hunt at dusk? That’s the kind of electric moment that lodges can’t replicate.

Camels aren’t just pack animals here, they’re symbols of resilience, introduced by Samburu nomads centuries ago. Trekking with them means sharing stories around the fire with warriors who’ve herded these “ships of the desert” for generations. At Sidai, encounters extend to Maasai healers sharing indigenous plant lore or beading workshops that fund community conservation. It’s safari with purpose, turning your adventure into a force for good.

Fly camping forces a digital detox like no resort can. For the mildly intrepid, it’s thrilling but accessible. Camels handle the heavy lifting (tents, food, even your G&T kit), leaving you energy for bush walks, big-cat tracking via radio collars, or survival skills like reading animal prints. And in Laikipia, with its low tourist density, you reclaim the safari as yourstory—not a conveyor-belt checklist.

In short, fly camping isn’t for the faint-hearted—it’s for the heart-full, those ready to trade certainty for wonder.

Ready to Roam? Your Laikipia Calling Awaits

Fly camping with camels at Sidai Camp isn’t for everyone—it’s for those bold enough to let the wild rewrite their story. In a post-pandemic world craving authenticity, this is the antidote: unfiltered Africa, one trek at a time. Whether you’re a solo seeker, a couple chasing sunsets, or a family, group of friends, Laikipia’s trails beckon.

 Trust us: once you’ve explored the bush on foot, slept under skies vast as your dreams, you’ll never settle for ordinary again – here’s to the untethered life! Reach out about experiencing this yourself!