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COTTARS 1920s SAFARI CAMP.
Cottars Safari Service are proud to have earned the title of longest serving
name in the business, and believe that their 80 years of experience handed
down through the generations gives them an advantage in providing the
adventure, comfort, security and variety that clients expect from a quality
safari experience.
The Cottar Safari tradition began in 1919. Eighty years on, Cottars continue
to provide an unparalleled safari experience to discerning African Spice
Safari guests visiting Africa. Extending an era of luxury and quality,
Cottars Safari Service returns to the original spirit and essence of 'safari',
reminiscent of a golden era an era of romance, professional guiding, adventure
and elegance.
Cottars 1920s Safari Camp,
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Is situated in the Masai Mara, bordering the Serengeti and Loliondo Ecosystem,
in an untouched 200,000-acre exclusive concession providing the discerning
guests a guarantee of privacy and an abundance of wildlife.
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The camp accommodates up to twelve clients in authentic white canvas tents,
which are spacious and luxuriously furnished and incorporate original
safari antiques from the 1920's; private en suite dressing rooms and bathrooms
(with old-fashioned styled tubs, showers and flushing toilets), the main
bedroom and an outdoor veranda.
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Guest activities include game drives guided by Calvin Cottar or guides
of equal professional standard in state of the art modern four-wheel drive
cars, either in Cottars authentic and old wooden car or in oxen pulled
wagon.
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Alternative to a wildlife watching - a tented reading room with an extensive
array of Africana, modern books and magazines or Cottar's natural rock
swimming pool with surrounding hammocks are available.
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Because Cottars 1920 Mara Safari Camp is located outside the game parks,
guided walking and night drives are also highly permitted and recommended.
By walking, guests can get much closer to nature, and if an opportunity
to track wild game presents itself, Cottar's trained trackers will take
guests even closer.
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On a more self-indulgent note, Cottars masseuse is based full-time at
the camp for complimentary massages, manicures and pedicures. Butlers
who have been trained to provide guests with discreet, yet attentive service
will meet any other needs that guests may have.
• Calvin Cottar: Calvin, a fourth generation Kenyan grew up in
the bush, gaining experience with wildlife from Glen, his father and Bajila,
his father's tracker. From the age of 15, Calvin began guiding clients
on game drives and walks from the family camp in the Mara. Calvin went
on to Tanzania as a professional hunter, returning to Kenya after 5 years
to set up a wildlife management company that offered services to landowners.
In 1993, Calvin joined the Kenya Wildlife Service in the community development
department, and initiated five district wildlife associations to help
landowners acquire user rights of their wildlife. In July 1995, Calvin
rejoined the family company to initiate the 1920's project. Calvin has
been voted the best Guide in Kenya. Calvin has passed his silver-level
KPSGA exam and has been awarded a position as Honorary Warden for the
Kenya Wildlife Service. He lives at Cottars 1920s Camp with his wife Louise.
• John Sampeke: Born and raised in Masailand, John brings AfricanSpice
clients a wealth of knowledge of Masai culture and traditions from his
personal experience and perspective. John passed the Kenya professional
Safari Guides Association with the highest grades in his class. He has
fought lion and buffalo with his own hand, drank blood and walked hundreds
of kilometers exploring Masailand on foot. Highly educated, quietly entertaining
and undoubtedly the best Masai professional guide in the business, John
joins Cottar's with over 10 years of experience working with the best
safari companies in Kenya.
• Louise Cottar: Born in England, Louise first came to Kenya in
1989 whilst studying for a degree in International Business. After completing
both an undergraduate and Masters degree, and after working in Europe,
Louise returned in 1994 to Africa to work as the coordinator of a UN program
in Somalia. Thrown in at the Africa deep end, Louise spent close to four
years in one of the most dangerous countries to live and work and earned
a reputation of excelling whilst taking venturesome and calculated risks.
Calvin and Louise are co-owners of the company.
• Phil West: Phil is a young and upcoming guide who was born in
Kenya and spent much of his youth in the Tsavo bush. Phil was educated
in the UK and trained as a guide and tracker in Southern Africa. He is
a member of the Field Guides Association of South Africa and the Kenya
Professional Safari Guides Association. Phil was head guide at Lewa Downs
for three years and is now a freelance guide, particularly specialized
in walking safaris. He is a collector of arthropods for the Nairobi Museum
and particularly interested in tracking, bush craft and ethno-botany.
• In the Architectural Digest (March 2003)- Author Tim Beddow wrote:
Evoking the Golden Age of the East African Adventure. It is no east task
these days to experience an authentic African safari-one with the privacy,
splendor and elegance of former times. Too often, lodges are soulless
places where the safari consists of game drives in overcrowded minibuses.
One very special place, however, aims to give its visitors a unique encounter
with Africa. Cottars 1920s Safari Camp, located on a 200,000-acre private
concession at the edge of Kenya's Masai Mara Reserve, harmoniously fuses
the elements that make for a stylish, comfortable, one-of-a-kind safari
adventure.
• In Travel and Leisure (August 2001) Author David Herndon wrote:
Calvin Cottar is chosen as one of the top five of a new generation of
safari guides in Africa. The Cottar clan is referred to in the book (White
Hunters) as The First Family of the safari business. If you want to track
bloodline, you go to Cottar's. Today, Cottars camp is situated on the
lower slopes of a heavily forested hillside, overlooking the green-blond
Masai Mara plains and Tanzania's Serengeti beyond. It is such a classic
vista that you expect the title of Out of Africa to roll across it.
• In The London Financial Times Author Lucia Van Der Post wrote:
For those who find themselves hooked on Africa, there comes a time when
they want something different, something lonelier and wilder...Not every
guide can take you there. Some do not have the taste for it and some do
not have the expertise, but Calvin Cottar and his 1920's safaris come
with the kind of pedigree and promise and promise that is hard to resist.
• In The Tatler Cunard Travel Guide Author Alexander de Cadenet
wrote: Nobody knows the bush better or can guide you more safely. Not
only were we able to see places of astonishing beauty to which more regular
safari outfits never go, but Calvin was able to educate us by sharing
his unprecedented knowledge of animal behavior.
• In the Conde Nast Traveler - Best of the World - Top 100 (November
2002) Lisa Limer wrote: Calvin Cottar and John Stevens know something
about elephant behavior. They have lived in the bush most of their lives
and have developed such a profound understanding of the wild animals and
their habits that if academic accolades were awarded for bush craft, they
would have doctorates bestowed on them. If you ask Africa hands to name
the best guides, Cottar and Stevens appear at the top of every list.
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