Wilderness Trail in Kruger National Park
Spend three nights at a dedicated trails camp and walk each day in the most pristine areas of Kruger National Park that can only be accessed on foot.
The Natural Way To Explore Wilderness
2m hectares of wilderness, Kruger National Park is a world famous safari destination. From backpacking to Trails Camps and luxury lodges, it has a greater range of walking safari options than any other park in Africa.
Adjacent to the national park to the west is the Greater Kruger area, which also offer wonderful walks in private and community owned reserves.
Spend three nights at a dedicated trails camp and walk each day in the most pristine areas of Kruger National Park that can only be accessed on foot.
The Makuleke concession in the far north of Kruger National Park is one of the finest walking safari destinations in Africa. Its rich subtropical biodiversity, dramatic sandstone gorges and forests of fever trees are a unique combination.
You don’t need to see an animal to gather information about it. If you know how to read animal tracks and other bush information, you can gain valuable insight into what, when, maybe even how and why an event took place in the wild. The EcoTraining 7 or 14-day EcoTracker course will turn you into a budding bush detective.
Hike and sleep-out in the most biodiverse hot-spot in the Kruger National Park on a week-long training adventure with EcoTraining.
Get a deeper immersion in African wilderness – and a taste of Nature Guide training – on a 7 or 14-day training adventure with EcoTraining. Training takes place at a dedicated camp near the Limpopo river in the most biodiverse sector of Kruger National Park.
Enjoy three days of guided walks from Kruger National Park’s only year-round private trails camp.
The remote northern section of Kruger National Park is one of the finest walking safari destinations in Africa. Pafuri Walking is the only dedicated seasonal trails camp in the park.
Hike for four days in one of Africa’s great wilderness areas, sleeping in leave-no-trace camps and sourcing water from nature.