Kichwa Tembo Tented Camp
Highlights
- Set in a private concession with low tourist densities
- Masai Mara is one of the richest and most diverse wildlife areas in the world
- In the path of the Great Migration of two million herbivores
- Game drives, walking, and cultural activities with the Maasai people
Location
- Oloololo Group Ranch
- Greater Masai Mara
- Southwest Kenya
Kichwa Tembo is a contemporary tented safari camp situated in a private conservancy bordering the well-known Masai Mara Reserve and offering a front-row seat to the annual Great Migration.
The camp is located in a private conservancy on the far northwest border of the Masai Mara National Reserve below the scenic Oloololo Escarpment. The conservancy has just two safari camps (the other being Bateleur Camp) and guests have exclusive access to the area as well as to the Mara Triangle portion of the reserve (read more below), which has a much lower tourist density than the main section of the reserve.
Activities offered at Kichwa Tembo include morning and afternoon safari drives in the Masai Mara, walking safaris with a trained guide, hot-air balloon trips for eagle's-eye views, and cultural interaction with the local Maasai people, for which the reserve is named.

Main area bar and lounge at Kichwa Tembo Camp.
The camp's location on the edge of the uncrowded Mara Triangle means that guests to Kichwa Tembo will enjoy all of the Masai Mara wildlife without the crowds often found in the main section of the park to the east of the Mara River. The camp also offers quick access to the Mara River, which gives an excellent vantage point for seeing river crossings during the Great Migration.
Kichwa Tembo Camp offers 40 tented guest suites comprising three different tent options. There are 12 classic safari tents located in the lush forest along a small waterway. There are also 20 slightly larger superior tents also located in the trees, some with partial views of the plains and the rest with forest or escarpment views.
Finally, there are 8 superior "view" tents located at the edge of the forest and facing the open plains and offering panoramic views of the Masai Mara. Six of the superior tents (in the forest) are connected in pairs, allowing for three superior double/family tents.

Superior-view tent at Kichwa Tembo Camp.
The main guest area comprises two adobe and wood structures, one of them a double-level lounge and bar and the other a single-level dining area. Both of the buildings have a thatched roof and look onto a manicured lawn and the Masai Mara just beyond. A rim-flow pool and sundeck is located nearby. The traditional outdoor 'boma' is used for al fresco dinner nights. Guests can enjoy the interactive kitchen and/or relax with Healing Earth treatments in the Massage Tent.
AndBeyond are one of Africa's leading safari operators and they strive to minimize energy consumption at all their camps. Kichwa Tembo Camp is connected to the national grid with a backup generator available. Strict eco-friendly environmental standards are maintained so that no harmful chemicals or waste is allowed to enter the pristine ecosystem of the Masai Mara.

Main area pool at Kichwa Tembo Camp.
About the Masai Mara
The Greater Masai Mara includes the Masai Mara National Reserve as well as numerous private conservancies that border the reserve. The national reserve and bordering conservancies are often collectively referred to simply as "the Mara".
The Greater Masai Mara is part of a much larger ecosystem that includes vast protected areas directly to the south in Tanzania, including Serengeti National Park, the Ngorongoro Conservation Area, and other reserves that together make up the Greater Serengeti. The combined Greater Serengeti-Mara ecosystem, which combines the areas described above, covers roughly 15 000 square miles (39 000 sq kms).
The Serengeti-Mara is home to a very large number and diversity of wild animals and is also the location of the well-known "Great Migration" of over 2 million herbivores (read more below). This is arguably Africa's greatest overall wildlife destination.
Wildlife densities in the Greater Masai Mara are some of the highest in Africa, with commonly seen herbivores including blue wildebeest, plains zebra, Thomson's gazelle, topi, Grant's gazelle, hartebeest, giraffe, elephant, buffalo, impala, waterbuck, bush bug, warthog, and many others. Predators seen often include lion, leopard, spotted hyena, cheetah, serval, and jackal. Hippo and crocodile are found in large numbers in the Mara River.

Maasai warrior dance.
Masai Mara National Reserve
The national reserve forms the core protected area of the Greater Masai Mara, covering 583 square miles (1 510 sq kms) and officially protected since 1974. The reserve is functionally the same as a national park, with restrictions on off-road driving and open to the public, which includes self-drivers coming for the day, as well as guests staying at one of the accommodations within the reserve (of which there are many).
The Mara Triangle
The Mara River flows southward through the national reserve on its way into Tanzania and eventually into Lake Victoria to the southwest. The river also separates the national reserve into two separately-managed sections: the area to the west of the Mara River is known as the "Mara Triangle", while the area to the east of the river is simply the Mara National Reserve.
The Mara Triangle covers 197 square miles (510 sq kms), which is roughly one-third of the reserve and there are relatively few safari camps in this section, so the number of vehicles and tourists, especially during the peak months when the migration is in present, is much lower in the Triangle section than in the section east of the Mara River.

Hot-air balloon view of the Mara River as it snakes through the Masai Mara National Reserve.
The Great Migration
One of nature's greatest living spectacles is the Great Migration, a term given to describe the year-long, circular, clockwise march of over two million herbivores across the Masai Mara and Serengeti grasslands. The migration animals are made up entirely of two species: the blue wildebeest and the plains zebra (the majority of which are wildebeests).
The migrating herds follow their instincts to seek out fresh grazing and so the migration is ongoing, with the herds ever moving and taking a full year to complete a cycle across the Masai Mara and Serengeti. The animals move not as one herd, but as tens of thousands of animals in multiple herds of various sizes and spread out for many miles as they move.
The wildebeests and zebras take advantage of strongly seasonal conditions, spending the wet season (November through May) on the plains of Tanzania's Serengeti and the dry season in Kenya's Masai Mara. The wildebeests give birth between January and March on the short grass plains in Tanzania.
The timing of the migration is rarely ever the same year-to-year, as local conditions influence grass growth and as such, the location of the bulk of there animals cannot be known precisely. Rains and other unknown conditions seem to direct the timing of the migration, but generally, it is known within several weeks when the animals will be in a general location.

Wildebeests and zebras at the Mara River during the Great Migration.
The migration typically crosses north into Kenya and the Masai Mara beginning sometime in mid- or late-July and they spend around three months in the Greater Masai Mara. The herds head back south into Tanzania sometime in October.
Although many visitors time their visit to the Masai Mara to coincide with the Migration, the Greater Mara has superb wildlife viewing outside of the migration period. This is because it is only the wildebeests and zebras that migrate, the rest of the animals, including the major predators like lion, leopard, spotted hyena, and cheetah, as well as all the other herbivores, including springbok, gazelles, elephant, topi, hartebeest, and many others, do not migrate.
A popular aspect of experiencing the Great Migration is observing a herd as it crosses the Mara River, which requires animals swimming through waters inhabited by large Nile crocodiles that wait for a chance to get their first substantial meal in many months.
The dramatic river crossings (which take place along the Mara River in both Kenya and Tanzania) are certainly a spectacle and not for the faint of heart, with many of the wildebeest and zebras taken by crocs or succumbing to drowning or trampling in the chaos. The best chances for seeing a Kenya Mara River crossing are during July and August, when the crocodiles are still very hungry.

The Great Migration is certainly a spectacle to experience in person.
Mara Conservancies
Over the past two decades, nearly all of the land situated surrounding the Masai Mara National Reserve has been organized into protected and self-managed reserves by various tribes of the Maasai people that own the land. The result has been a great expansion of wildlife tourism and the construction of safari tourism camps and lodges.
Note that some of the conservancies use the name 'group ranch' instead of conservancy.
Many of these conservancies, particularly those that directly border the national reserve, offer wildlife viewing that is even just as good, and arguably even better than inside the reserve, primarily because the conservancies are only available to tourists staying at a camp within the conservancy and unlike the national reserve itself, are not accessible to self-drive day visitors.
The exclusivity of the conservancies means that there are fewer game drive vehicles and a far lower density of tourists. Further, the number of vehicles allowed at any specific animal sighting (such as a lion kill or a leopard in a tree) is managed to prevent the oft-seen situation where an animal, such as a cheetah, is surrounded by 20 or more cars in the national reserve.
Staying in one of the Mara Conservancies offers guests the opportunity to have an exclusive game-viewing experience (due to the reduced tourist numbers compared to inside the national reserve), while still allowing day visits into the reserve proper (entrance fee required). A day visit into the reserve might allow seeing a major wildebeest/zebra river crossing during the migration months. Guided safari walks (during the day) and game drives past sunset are another option inside the conservancies that is not permitted inside the national reserve.
ROOMS INCLUDES & EXCLUDES CHILDREN FACILITIES ACTIVITIES
Accommodation
40 guest accommodations in total comprising:
- 12 classic twin-bedded, wood and canvas tents, each with two three-quarter beds (separate mattresses with shared base). Mattress converters are available that transform twin beds into king-size beds (to be arranged prior to arrival).
- 20 superior twin-bedded, wood and canvas tents (6 of which are convertible into 3 double/family tents), each with two three-quarter beds (separate mattresses with shared base). Mattress converters are available that transform twin beds into king-size beds (to be arranged prior to arrival).
- The 3 superior double/family tents are connected via an indoor corridor (this can be closed off if the tents are used by separate parties). The family tents can accommodate two adults and two children (can accommodate 3 children 16 years and younger on request).
- 8 superior-view twin-bedded, wood and canvas tents, each with two three-quarter beds (separate mattresses with shared base). Mattress converters are available that transform twin beds into king-size beds (to be arranged prior to arrival). These tents offer direct views onto the plains.
All of the tented accommodations are constructed on elevated wooden decks and include en-suite facilities with a double-basin vanity, indoor shower, and separate toilet. The tents are accessed via footpaths on the ground leading to the main camp area.

Superior forest tent at Kichwa Tembo Camp.
The classic tents are located in a the lush forest near the Saparingo River. The bed frames are constructed with thick wooden beams and the interiors are decorated with a classic-safari style. Each tent has a wooden deck at the front for relaxing and listening to the sounds and sights of the forest. The classic tents are 529 square feet (49 sq meters) in size.
The superior tents are slightly larger than the classic tens. Oversized beds are perfectly positioned to make the most of the views and the décor is comprised of stained cypress wood furniture with tribal decorative elements. Some of these tents feature partial views and glimpses of the grassy Mara plains through the forest canopy, others are situated deep in the forest and offer exceptional views of the birdlife, and the rest look out on the nearby escarpment.. There is an outdoor deck with a daybed and a private dining table. The superior tents cover 560 square feet (52 sq meters) in area.
The superior-view tents are the same in layout and size as the superior tents, but they are situated at the edge of the forest and offer panoramic views over the open plains of the Masai Mara.
Other items and features in the tents include:
- Private daybed on the outdoor deck.
- Healing Earth treatments offered only in the Massage Tent.
- Complimentary pair of Swarovski binoculars (one per tent).
- In-room Wi-Fi (also available in main guest areas).
- Floor fan.
- Telephone.
- Hairdryer.
- In-room safe.
Kichwa Tembo Tented Camp can accommodate a maximum of 83 guests in total: 2 persons in each of the 40 tents and 3 allowable triples.
Includes & Excludes
Includes:
- All meals and local beverages including soft drinks, house wines, local brand spirits and beers, teas, and coffees.
- Safari experiences (twice-daily game drives, one-hour nature walks, birding, Maasai dances, Maasai talks, and cultural visits to a Maasai village), all accompanied by an experienced guide.
- Laundry services are provided on a daily basis (weather permitting, items will be returned on the same day). Laundry is dried by the sun and on most days any laundry placed out in the morning will be returned by the evening.
- A complimentary pair of Swarovski Optik CL Companion 8×30 binoculars per suite for use during your stay.
- Emergency medical evacuation insurance.
- Wi-Fi access.
- Tourism Levy & VAT.
Excludes:
- Champagne, cognacs, fine wines, premium brand spirits, and cigars.
- Hot-air balloon adventures.
- Purchases from the Safari Shop.
- Spa / wellness treatments.
- Any applicable wildlife fee, park fee, reserve fee, concession fee, other land-use fee.
Single Supplement
A single supplement may apply for any room booked by a single traveler; please ask us for pricing.
Children
Travel to Kenya is recommended for children eight years or older. Children five years and younger cannot participate in regular game drives; children aged six to 11 can participate in regular game drives at the lodge manager’s discretion.
Families can rest assured that your children will always be safe and well cared for (both during activities and at the camp) by the lodge staff.
Children of any age are accommodated at Kichwa Tembo Camp:
- Three triple rooms are available.
- Children under the age of 6 years are not permitted on game drives.
- Children aged 6-11 years are permitted on game drives at the discretion of the ranger (private vehicle required).
- Children aged 6-15 years are not permitted on nature walks outside of the camp grounds.
- Children aged 12-15 years are permitted on game drives (private vehicle required).
- Private vehicle not required for children aged 16 years and older.
- Children aged 16 and above are permitted on specialist walking safaris.
- Children that share a vehicle with other guests not in their party may be subject to activities only at the lodge manager’s discretion.
- Please note: Even though the camp is fenced off, children are required to have an adult accompanying them at all times.
AndBeyond’s WILDchild program, designed especially for children aged 3-12 years, is filled with fun, interactive activities that offer opportunities to learn and discover new experiences and cultures. Deeply rooted in the love for the African bush, it not only creates a series of unforgettable moments for the whole family, but forges strong bonds between young guests, our planet, and its people.
- Activities include nature walks, Maasai spear-throwing, fire-making the Maasai way, soccer with the camp’s team, visit to a nearby Maasai village, prepare a ranger’s omelette breakfast on a game drive, create colorful beadwork, and more.
- While the camp does not have trained child minders, it can offer the services of certain staff members who are wonderful with children. This will be at an additional cost (best to pre-book this with us).
Facilities
The main guest area is comprised of a double-level lounge and bar area, as well as a second single-level dining area nearby. Each structure has an outdoor verandah, with immaculate lawn space (warthogs are regularly seen brazing on the grass). Both structures face the plains of the Masai Mara.
The main guest areas are constructed atop a slightly raised wooden decks with a high-pitched thatch roof and large wooden beams and adobe earth walls.
Other features of the main areas include:
- Refreshing rim-flow swimming pool and sundeck.
- Massage Tent offering Healing Earth treatments and massages.
- Safari Shop.
- Traditional boma for al fresco dinners.
- Interactive kitchen
- Complimentary Wi-Fi..
- Guest toilets in the main areas at both camps.
Activities
Activities included in the rate:
- Twice-daily game drives (staying out past sunset is allowable) in open 4x4 Land Cruisers (6 guests per vehicle).
- A complimentary pair of Swarovski Optik CL Companion 8×30 binoculars per guest cottage for use during your stay.
- Guided bush walks.
- Birding.
- Maasai performances.
- Maasai talks.
Optional activities at additional cost:
- Private activities are on offer (subject to vehicle availability which needs to be booked in advance).
- Hot-air ballooning.
- Community visit to a Maasai boma.
- Wellness treatments (offered in Massage Sala or in-suite).
Example of a typical day:
- Early morning wake-up call. Morning wake-up and activity times vary according to the seasons, activities on offer, and wildlife sightings.
- Light breakfast before departing on the morning activity.
- Return to the lodge for a meal and rest period.
- Meet for afternoon tea and snacks (savory and sweet choices) before departing on the activity.
- Return to camp - freshen up or meet for drinks, followed by dinner.
- Enjoy a nightcap and/or discussion at the bar or around the campfire before retiring.
Great Good Fair Poor
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- Oct
- Nov
- Dec
General Tips
The best to to visit the Masai Mara is during the dry season, between June and October, which also happens to coincide with the arrival of the Great Migration into Kenya (read more about this below).
Besides the Great Migration, the other big factor that impacts a stay in the Mara is rains. The region experiences most of its rain between November and May, but there are two somewhat distinct rain seasons, the 'short' rains and the 'long' rains.
Kichwa Tembo Tented Camp is open year-round.
Rain Season
Short Rains
The short rains occur for about one month sometime during November and December (the exact time varied somewhat year to year). This period is called the 'short' rains because the duration of an individual rain event is short and it is rare to have an all-day rain event. Most rain falls as an afternoon shower, while mornings are typically overcast or clear.
Long Rains
The long rains occur between March and May, with April being the wettest month of the year. During this tome, rain should be expected almost every day and the showers can last for hours at a time, although all-day rain is not typical. The roads in the Masai Mara become muddy and very difficult in places, which can hamper game drives. Cloudy skies are typical and temperatures can be chilly at times.
The period between the short and long rains (January and February) also receives rain, but many days are clear and the amount and duration of the rain events is unpredictable, with some afternoon showers and the odd long and heavy rainfall event.
Temperatures
The temperatures in the Greater Masai Mara do not have great variation throughout the year, as the region lies approximately 1 degree south of the equator. In general, daytime temperatures are comfortably warm and overnights and early mornings are chilly. Bring a fleece and rain jacket regardless of the timing of your visit.
Dry Season
The dry season (June to October) is sunny and warm most days and rarely hot. Rare rain showers can occur but are unlikely. From June thru August, the afternoon temperature averages 76-78°F (24-25°C), but some days can be warmer. Evenings and early mornings temperatures are often chilly, averaging 53-55°F (12-13°C).
September and October days are very pleasant, with temperatures averaging 80-83°F (28-30°C), with cool mornings persisting, averaging 53-56°F (11-13°C).
Rainy Season
The rain season is November through May (read more above) and the temperatures are fairly static throughout the season. Daytime temperatures average 79-83°F (26-28°C) and nighttime and early morning temperatures are chilly, but slightly warmer than the dry season, averaging 54-57°F (12-14°C).
The Great Migration
The annual movement of wildebeest and zebras across the Serengeti-Mara ecosystem is one of the greatest spectacles in the natural world. Many people visiting Kenya's Masai Mara (or the Serengeti in Tanzania) will time their visit to be able to experience the Great Migration of over two million animals (all of them blue wildebeests and plains zebras).
The migration moves across both the Greater Masai Mara (in Kenya) and the Greater Serengeti (in Tanzania) in a fairly consistent pattern and timeframe. The animals move to take advantage of fresh grasses on which to graze.
The large herds are well spread out, but follow a roughly clockwise and somewhat circular track across southern Kenya and northern Tanzania, taking a full year to complete. The migrating herds are in Kenya's Greater Masai Mara from around late July until sometime in October (note that the timing is never precise and varies somewhat year to year).
The wildebeests and zebras are taking advantage of the strongly seasonal conditions, spending the wet season on the northeastern plains of Tanzania and the dry season on the plains of southwestern Kenya. The wildebeest give birth between January and March on the short grass plains in Tanzania.
The migration is rarely ever the same in terms of precise timing and direction, as local conditions influence grass growth. The wildebeest may, therefore, move off the open plains earlier in some years and remain in the northern woodlands for longer in others.