Look no further, all those in search of an exclusive safari experience, seeping luxury from every crevice, fore Jabali Private House does not disappoint. Situated amid one of the most frequent game sighting locations in southern Tanzania, Ruaha National Park is host to a plethora of wildlife activity, with particularly abundant sightings of lion and wildebeest. A riveting variety of staple safari activities await you, from 4×4 game drives both day and night, modified photographic vehicle tours, foot excursions across bushland plains, birdwatching, stargazing, sundowners and even picnics. With the handy addition of your own private chef and butler combo, dining is a comprehensively sumptuous affair, with all whims catered to throughout your stay, all while staying in the lap of luxury. The wonders of the bush await you.
Jabali Ridge Private House, Ruaha Avenue, Tanzania
Jabali Private House is situated within the Ruaha Nation Park in Southern Tanzania, featuring the most sophisticated safari bolthole to be found anywhere within the concession. Set 200-metres from Jabali Ridge and built around three majestic baobabs, Jabali Private House is the ultimate base for a family or group of friends to experience Tanzania’s wildest national park. Here, game concentrations are among the most intense in the country, with consistent sightings of lion, wildebeest, giraffes, and many other safari staple creatures. JPH is accessible via Msembe Airstrip, followed by a 50-minute game drive to the property location. Open June through till March.
- Exclusive 5-star bush house set amid the backdrop of Ruaha National Park
- All-inclusive rates, including all standard food and beverages
- Fully furnished private house with master suites and en-suite facilities
- Pristine stargazing amid the unpolluted night sky
- Various safari activities led by experienced guides
- Private chef and butler combination
- Night-time game drives through a private concession
- Children of all ages welcome
Jabali Private House raises the luxury bush experience to new heights, featuring two spectacular master suites with king-sized beds with en-suite bathrooms with spacious indoor showers that look out onto the baobab forests. Louvred shutters can be opened completely, blurring the lines between indoors and out, or closed for optimum privacy. The third bedroom features twin beds and an en-suite bathroom, and is located to the back of the house, as not to stifle the pristine vistas offered by the master bedrooms. Interior is ornately furnished in the classic East-African Style, boasting an abundance of character and a wide assortment of luxury amenities meant to elevate the guest experience to new heights.
Amenities Include:
- En-suite bathroom
- Balcony / deck
- Veranda
- Lounge area
- Private pool / jacuzzi
- Complimentary WIFI
- Cooking facilities
- Electrical outlets
- Fan
- Fridge
- Mosquito nets
- Indoor & al fresco shower facilities
- Safe
- Dressing gowns
- Tea / coffee
- Complimentary laundry service
Dining at Jabali Private House is a culinary experience like no other. Your own private chef is on hand to prepare you a selection of delicious meals throughout the day, featuring three set meals per day, including a lavish three course evening dinner. Meals are produced from the freshest locally sourced ingredients, comprising a mix of local flavours and classic crowd pleasers. Feel free to inform your ensemble of catering staff your culinary preferences in advance so they may better accommodate you during your stay.
Bush dining is a cornerstone of any complete safari experience. Let your private chef prepare you the finest bush cuisine for al fresco consumption, satisfying your hunger amid the backdrop of pristine bushland vistas. With all-inclusive rates, you’re free to indulge in a locally sourced range of alcoholic and none-alcoholic beverages at your own discretion. All meals and complimentary bites are included in the initial fee, allowing you to focus on the action at hand without worrying about your next meal.
Ruaha National Park is one of Southern-Tanzania’s prime wildlife viewing locations, with game rich plains that offer the perfect arena for action packed safari game viewing. Seasoned Asilia guides will lead you safely through the bush in custom built 4×4 safari vehicles, allowing up-close-and-personal views of prowling lion prides, meandering elephant herds, wildebeest, hyena, zebra and giraffe. Night drives are permitted within this private concession, offering new dimensions to the safari excursion experience as nocturnal creatures rise in the night to hunt for prey and socialise with one-another.
Self-guided bush walks through the wilderness of Ruaha National Park allow you to connect with nature in a manner more intimate than conventional vehicle driven safaris. Here, you lead the adventure, with experienced guides to accompany you every step of the way, discussing with you the features of the land while pointing out local flora and fauna. Keep your eyes peeled for prowling predators, view a catalogue of exotic bird species, sit in stillness of the shade of an ancient tree, unravel the stories behind animal tracks or simply enjoy the vistas.
Guests have access to one of few specially modified photographic vehicles, allowing keen amateurs and professional photographers alike to shoot at eye level with wildlife. It is equipped with all the gear to ensure award-winning shots, from beanbags and camera rests to 360° swivel seats. Please enquire to ensure availability of the vehicle prior to booking. This vehicle seats three photographers, plus one additional guest in the front seat next to the driver.
Birdwatching in Ruaha National Park is spectacular year-round, featuring over 500 exotic species waiting for you to discover. Not only is this when European and North African migratory birds are present, but it is also nesting time for resident species. Keep your eyes peeled for the likes of the black-headed gonolek, Fischer’s lovebird and Verreaux’s eagle, and don’t forget to bring your binoculars.
Take in the atmosphere of the tantalising Ruaha night sky while gathered around a cosy campfire in the company of friends and family. Untarnished by light pollution, the remote areas of the southern Tanzanian bush provide the perfect arena for a picturesque star-gazing experience. Marvel at the infinite sky, which features the Big Dipper in the northern hemisphere and the Southern Cross and Pointers in the south.
Asilia’s Twende Porini programme welcomes children from local communities so they can get a taste of what a safari is all about and learn the importance of conserving natural environments and wildlife. Most of the children live near conservation areas but don’t fully understand why tourists travel from all over the world to see the animals that they see practically daily. Safari favourites such as lions, buffalo and elephants can be very serious threats to local villages. By taking children on safari, they get to see the animals in their natural state and can learn the importance of each animal in the ecosystem.
Each year, Asilia identifies students who have incredible potential but whose families would not be able to afford supporting them through higher education. This initiative seeks to harness the potential of bright youngsters by providing funding for scholarships and further education. Assistance is given for courses that fall under tourism and teacher-training, and job opportunities are provided on completion of study.
Asilia understands that nature and humans are inseparable partners. They endeavour to support local areas, projects and communities through revenue and awareness created through tourism. Every year Asilia releases a report on the Positive Impact projects to show how these efforts have come to fruition and made real changes. Over 2018 and 2019, Positive Impact made contributions to:
- Offsetting 1,505 tonnes of CO2
- A current total of 44 scholarships
- Chimpanzee Habitation protection
- Community and Conservation projects
- Training local staff
- Developing economies
The population of lions in Africa has decreased by around 50% in the last 25 years as a result of factors like human-lion conflict, bushmeat poaching, and habitat loss. The Lionscape Coalition was formed in 2019 by the Lion Recovery Fund (LRF) for the benefit of lion populations and local businesses. Through the initiative, Africa’s top tourism operators can take a more active role ‘to support on-the-ground conservation work and encourage clients to support the future of lions’. The goal of the Lionscape Coalition is not only to protect lion populations but to also raise awareness of the role lions play in ecosystems and the suffering they’ve experienced as a species.
In 2010, the Serengeti Lion Project (SLP) expanded from the south-eastern Serengeti to work on lion conservation in the parts of the Ngorongoro Conservation Area (NCA) inhabited by Maasai people. Coexistence has often been difficult as lions will disturb and attack Maasai herds, and the Maasai will retaliate by killing lions. Growth in human populations has also created a barrier for the lions in the area, meaning that they have become isolated and increasingly inbred. The NCA hopes to foster coexistence between lion and human populations and to help enable this they have launched a large water project. Competition over water sources is often what brings herds and wild animals into close contact and creates conflict. By removing this competition, therefore, human-wildlife conflict will be reduced.
Due to the loss of natural habitats and other factors, population of lions have been declining and remain under threat. The Tarangire Lion Project (TLP) has been working to monitor lion prides, mitigate human-wildlife conflict, and to educate and raise awareness about lion conservation among local communities. Asilia supports the TLP, helping to provide equipment for tracking and monitoring lions, staff operations and training. By keeping track of the lion prides the TLP can implement the most effective conservation strategies, especially in the long-term. They are also working with local communities to set up predator-proof bomas so that livestock herds are protected and there is much less retaliation against lion populations.
The grasslands of the Maasai Steppe’s Simanjiro Plains, on the outskirts of the Tarangire National Park, are crucial grazing areas for both wildlife and for the cattle herds belonging to the local Maasai. Factors such as hunting, farming and human population growth have infringed on the balance of grassland available for both pastoral herds and wildlife. In 2004, a group of tourist operators with concerns for the integrity of the ecosystem enlisted the help of the Ujamaa Community Resource Team (UCRT) to help them engage with Simanjiro villages. The easements resulted from several agreements to keep large parts of land unfarmed so that there are areas where wildlife can graze safely and undisturbed.
The Southern Tanzania Elephant Project (STEP) is an elephant conservation programme that aims to conserve elephant populations and habitats, and to enhance human-elephant coexistence. Their three main initiatives include:
- Monitoring and research – mapping elephant distributions and trends, expanding elephant databases and evaluating effects of poaching to inform management and policy decisions
- Protection – defending elephants against ivory poaching through aerial surveillance, ranger patrols and law enforcement
- Human-elephant coexistence – working with farmers/landowners to reduce damage done by elephants, helping to diversify livelihoods not dependent on farming, working with local authorities to show what drives human-elephant conflict and help resolve it, and helping facilitate safe elephant migration routes
Established over 30 years ago by the Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS), this project monitors changes in the birth and survival rates of cheetahs. With approximately 210 cheetahs in the ecosystem, the research conducted ‘provides invaluable insight into the challenges facing cheetah’ populations and makes huge contributions to planning out conservation strategies that will benefit them. Pictures of cheetahs taken by guests staying at one of Asilia’s camps can directly aid the project because it helps them keep track of cheetahs in the area.
The Honeyguide Foundation is committed to empowering local communities so they can shape their futures, running ‘community-based conservation initiatives across nearly 1.2 million acres of wilderness in Tanzania’. These initiatives have 5 key areas – enterprise development, management and governance, communications, human-wildlife conflict mitigation, and wildlife and habitat protection. Asilia supports 2 of their projects, the K9 Unit and the Chimpanzee Habituation Project.
Honeyguide established the K9 Unit in October 2011 to provide operational assistance to anti-poaching teams and in every area where dogs were used elephant poaching decreased dramatically. A K9 Unit was allocated to the Kilimanjaro region and within 2 years, all elephant poaching ceased. The Chimpanzee Habituation Project was first created by Professor Bernhard Grzimek of the Frankfurt Zoological Society, who released rescued chimpanzees onto Rubondo Island. The project hopes to introduce the chimpanzees to a human presence in a none-threatening way as they are fully habituated into the area.
Jabali Private House welcomes families with children of all ages. Due to the potentially hazardous and sometimes unpredictable nature of the environment, children must be supervised by an adult at all times.