About Love Serengeti
Who writes Love Serengeti, why it exists, and how an independent editorial field guide to the Serengeti and the Great Migration is put together.
- ✓Love Serengeti is an independent editorial field guide to the Serengeti ecosystem and the Great Migration — not a tour operator, not affiliated with any park authority or camp.
- ✓We follow the herds so you can plan around them: which month, which sector, which camp, which budget — clockwise from the Ndutu calving plains to the Mara crossings and back.
- ✓We earn no commission and run no affiliate links; every recommendation is editorial, and we never promise a sighting the wild can't guarantee.

An independent guide to a moving ecosystem
Love Serengeti is an editorial field guide to the Serengeti — the roughly 1.5 million wildebeest of the Great Migration, the resident lions and leopards of Seronera, the cheetahs of the open southern plains, and the river drama at Kogatende in the far north. The ecosystem is always in motion, and our whole job is to help you read that motion: to put the right traveller in the right sector in the right month, rather than selling a fixed itinerary that ignores where the herds actually are.
We are independent. We are not a safari operator, we are not affiliated with Tanzania National Parks, the Ngorongoro Conservation Area Authority, or any lodge, camp or airline we write about, and we take no commission on anything we recommend. When a fact can change — park fees, a crossing window, an airstrip schedule — we tell you to confirm it with the official source before you book.
Who writes it, and the conservation voice behind it
Guides are written and edited by Love Serengeti editorial team — A small editorial team writing evergreen, source-checked field guidance to the Serengeti and the Great Migration — no booking incentives, no guaranteed-sighting promises.
We write with a conservation conscience. The Serengeti–Mara is a fragile, world-heritage ecosystem under real pressure, so we favour camps and operators that tread lightly, we keep crossing etiquette and predator-distance advice front and centre, and we never frame wildlife as a guaranteed performance. If you know this country and we've got something wrong, we'd genuinely like to hear it.