A journey through wildlife, makers and the African spirit — aboard Rovos Rail with ARNE & CARLOS
15–28 January 2027
Cape Town · Hluhluwe-iMfolozi · Umhlanga · Rovos Rail · Johannesburg
Maximum 21 guests
There is a moment on safari that nobody warns you about.
The vehicle stops. The guide cuts the engine. And in the silence that follows — a silence that breathes, layered with insect sound, birdsong, the soft movement of grass — something shifts in your understanding of where you are. You are not at the top of the food chain here. You are simply present, in a landscape that has been going about its business for a very long time without you.
Then the elephant steps out of the tree line. And you stop breathing.
That feeling does not leave you.
We have been to South Africa many times. We keep going back. Not because we are searching for something, but because the country keeps giving us things we did not know we needed. The adrenaline of a lion sighting at dawn, amber eyes watching the vehicle with complete indifference. The stillness as a leopard moves through the long grass. The absurd, delightful spectacle of a giraffe moving through the trees with that slow, impossible grace. These are not images from a screen. They are real, and they change something in you permanently.
But South Africa is not only the bush. It is also its people — and they are the greatest discovery of all. This country has carried one of the most complex and painful histories of any nation on earth, and it lives with that history openly, honestly, and with a dignity that is humbling to witness. And yet what you encounter everywhere, from the very first moment, is welcome. A welcome that is not performed or rehearsed, but simply given — freely, warmly, with open arms. Smiles that reach the eyes. Optimism that has been truly earned.
And then the music — because music runs through this country in the deepest sense. Not as entertainment, but as air, as daily life, as the natural expression of a people who have decided, against considerable odds, to be joyful. A choir that stops you in your tracks at the waterfront. A voice that starts singing in a market, and before you know it, everyone has joined in. The joy here is not in spite of everything. It runs alongside it, inseparable and real, and it will get into you whether you are prepared for it or not.
This is a country of exceptional artisans. At Cowgirl Blues in Cape Town, hand-dyed mohair hangs in long skeins — colour drawn from the Cape itself, its light, its fynbos, its particular quality of late afternoon. At Ardmore, rooted in Zulu artistic tradition, artists produce ceramics that have earned international recognition and yet remain entirely local in spirit. In the markets of Durban, bolts of Shweshwe cloth rise floor to ceiling — that remarkable indigo-printed cotton, brought here from elsewhere and so thoroughly claimed, transformed, and made South African that it is now inseparable from the country’s visual identity.
None of this is accidental. South Africa is a country that makes things because it has always had to — finding beauty and meaning and identity in the act of making itself. That impulse runs through everything here, from the finest ceramics to the simplest basket, from the dyed yarn to the bolt of indigo cloth. It is the same impulse that produces the music, the choirs, the dancers, the drums echoing across an open space. The joy that seems to come from somewhere deeper than the surface of things.
Each time we have left wanting more. That, we have come to understand, is simply what South Africa does. It opens its arms. And you find, almost without noticing, that you have walked into them.
This journey is our invitation to come and find out.
Highlights:
- Four nights at Rhino Ridge Safari Lodge, the only private lodge within Hluhluwe-iMfolozi — Africa’s oldest proclaimed nature reserve. Game drives at dawn and dusk, optional guided bush walks, and visits to a traditional Zulu community — all within one of Africa’s most extraordinary landscapes.
- Two nights aboard Rovos Rail, one of the world’s truly great train journeys. Wood-panelled carriages, white tablecloth dining, and the African landscape moving slowly past the window — for our group, needles in hand throughout. The train stops for a game drive in the Nambiti Private Game Reserve.
- A private guided visit to Zeitz MOCAA in Cape Town — one of the most important contemporary art museums on the African continent, housed in a breathtaking conversion of a historic grain silo.
- The Cape Peninsula and Table Mountain — Cape Point, Boulders Beach and its colony of African penguins, the dramatic coastal road, and a clear Cape Town morning from the top of the mountain with the city and ocean stretching out below.
- The making traditions of South Africa, encountered across the journey — hand-dyed mohair at Cowgirl Blues, basket weaving with Zulu artisans, Shweshwe cloth in the markets, and the extraordinary ceramics of Ardmore, rooted in Zulu artistic tradition and recognised across the world.
- Two nights at the Oyster Box in Umhlanga, one of the great hotels of Africa, where the Indian Ocean rolls in below the lighthouse and the food is as memorable as the view.
- Travelling and knitting in the warm company of ARNE & CARLOS, with all the shared inspiration, conversation, and quiet pleasure that comes with it.




























