Africa, Southern Africa | South Africa | All Inclusive, Eco Friendly, Family, Group, Honeymoon, Safari, Sustainable, Tailor Made | Safari Lodge | National Park | Luxury
Nestled in vivid green woodland lies Singita Sweni Lodge. Contemporary, colourful, and classy, the suites here will make guests feel at once in a chic apartment and also immersed in the heart of the bush. With colours inspired by the animals which inhabit Kruger National Park, the suites are bright, spacious, and open plan, allowing for ease of movement throughout the suite. Spend your days exploring the wild surrounding area on an immersive guided walk or an exciting game drive before returning to the lodge for a browse of the boutique or wine cellar. Finish your day with a gourmet meal and a glass of smooth wine around the crackling boma.
Sweni River, Kruger National Park, Mpumalanga, Kruger Park, 1350, South Africa
Kruger National Park is one of Africa’s oldest national parks – founded in 1926 – and at just under 20,000 kilometres² in size, it is one of Africa’s largest too. The protected status of the park for the last 95 years means that the wildlife has thrived here, creating an astonishingly biodiverse population of animal and plant life. The land here is ancient, with evidence of humans wandering the plains from 500,000 years ago.
The park is made up of sparkling watering holes, areas of thick indigenous woodland, stretches of rolling grasslands, rocky outcrops, and glistening rivers – such as the Sweni River. This land is renowned for the Big Five – elephants, rhinos, buffalos, leopards, and lions – and is also home to giraffes, zebras, hippos, wild dogs, lizards, antelopes, and hyenas.
Guests can access Singita Sweni Lodge by a chartered or scheduled flight, arranged by Singita. Landing at Satara airstrip, guests will be collected by Singita staff and driven 45 minutes to the lodge. Guests can also request directions to self-drive from Johannesburg, which will take approximately 8 hours.
- Located in the biodiverse Kruger National Park
- Area renowned for the Big Five
- Contemporary and colourful suites
- All suites come with a decking area
- Pool suite includes a private swimming pool
- Game drives and guided walks
- Wine cellar and gift boutique
- Spa and fitness facilities
- Swimming pool in the main area
South Africa is a year-round safari destination, meaning you can choose which time to travel to best suit your safari wishes. May to September see dry conditions, with daytime temperatures in the mid to high 20°Cs. This is an exceptional time of year for game viewing as there is little rain which creates dry conditions where animals gather around permanent sources of water such as watering holes and rivers. During the mornings and evenings, temperatures can dip dramatically, becoming very cold – so warm clothing for these times is strongly advised.
The rains begin in October and usually last until April. During this time December to February sees the most rain, which tends to occur in torrential downpours which clear up after a few hours and sets the sky for some dramatic and moody sunsets. This time of year can see very warm temperatures and humid sticky air, however, there are always ways to keep cool. Keen birders may find this time of year the best as the park becomes full of migratory birds, and also animals give birth to their young in this season, creating a bush which is full of new life, both flora and fauna.
The luxury suites at Singita Sweni Lodge are spacious and bright, filled with bright, natural light filling the space through floor to ceiling windows which allow guests to feel immersed in their vivid surroundings. The suites are open plan and contemporary, recalling the surrounding nature through polished wooden floors and beams, but adding a modern and unique twist with colourful art, cushions, and rugs which fill the space with bright colours and geometric patterns.
A cosy double bed sits at one end of the room, covered in plush bedding and fluffy pillows guests can enjoy the colourful view of the thick surrounding woodland without having to leave the comfort of their bed. A modern l-shaped sofa offers an alternative place to unwind and gaze at the views, located in the centre of the suit.
All suites come complete with an en-suite bathroom which includes a stone bathtub, an indoor shower, a flush toilet and a hand basin. There is also an outside shower where guests can enjoy a wash – screened by wooden privacy screens – al-fresco.
The decking sits in front of the tent and offers guests the perfect spot to truly immerse themselves in nature, just an arm’s length away from the indigenous woodland. Here guests will find a unique daybed, which is swathed in mosquito netting if guests wish to sleep underneath the stars.
The pool suite at Singita Sweni Lodge is made up of two connected Sweni suites making it perfect for a couples trip or small family. Connected by a comfortable seating area and expansive decking, the pool suite is immersed in vivid woodland, and the pool suite is decorated in the same style, with floor to ceiling windows flooding the room with natural and bright light.
Both bedrooms have their own en-suite bathroom and private decking area with a cosy daybed. A large sparkling swimming pool sits on a spacious decking area, where guests can enjoy a refreshing dip in the cooling waters while feeling immersed in the heart of the wild bushveld.
Guests can make their way to the show kitchen for their meals. Watch your food being prepared before your own eyes, before you sit down either outside or inside to feast on your food surrounded by the wilds of the woodland. The food is prepared in an artisan style, with an emphasis on traditional flavours. Enjoy a refreshing cocktail or fruit juice from the communal bar, or enjoy your dinner paired with some of the finest wine in South Africa.
Head to the bar after dinner for another smooth glass of wine or a tea or coffee before making your way to the campfire to snuggle around the crackling logs underneath the wide starry sky.
Guests have the chance to go on a daily game drive through the untouched wilds of the Kruger National Park. Accompanied by a professional ranger and tracker, you will travel through the park, being taken to some of the best viewing spots to see lions, elephants, zebras, and many more wild animals largely undisturbed and in their natural habitats.
This is the perfect activity to immerse yourself in the heart of nature. While less ground may be covered than on a game drive, the experience guests will receive on a guided walk will leave them with memories to last a lifetime. With a friendly and knowledgeable tracker, follow animal footprints or learn how to identify the different types of flora in the park. Exploring the park on your own two feet gives a sense of connection to nature which you won’t receive on a game drive.
Gaze up at the unpolluted night sky and marvel at the ethereal beauty of it. There is no experience like looking up at the sky and seeing it blanketed with stars and far away planets. See if you can spot the centre of the milky way, which is visible in the Southern hemisphere, or the southern pointers.
There are many ways to indulge in some self-care and stay fit at Singita Sweni Lodge. Guests can begin their day with a quick workout in the fully equipped gym, before cooling down with a refreshing dip in the sparkling swimming pool. Massages are available, where guests can enjoy a stress-relieving massage while surrounded by fresh air and vivid indigenous woodland.
Whatever your heart desires can most likely be found in the boutique and gallery at Singita Sweni Lodge. Authentic man made furniture, artefacts from all over Africa, branded safari wear and jewellery handmade by local craftsmen are some of the things you will find here. With world-wide shipping you don’t even have to worry about space in your suitcase as it can be delivered straight to your home.
The dark and humid cellars at Singita hold some of the best vintage wines that South Africa has to offer. There are limited release wines in the wine cellar that are the only kind in the world, and guests can purchase these wines, either to be taken home or to be delivered to their suite.
The local community culinary school has recently had a state-of-the-art open-plan kitchen built. Guests can pre-book a cooking class here, to learn how to cook traditional South African dishes, under the supervision of a professional chef.
The Singita Lowveld Trust works in South Africa to support a whole range of conservation projects with all sorts of aims. They support wildlife research, help with land management, towards community development projects, as well as work with anti-poaching initiates and early childhood development.
One of their partners is the NGO Panthera which works to protect and reduce the poaching of leopards for their fur. To protect the few 5000 leopards which are left, they initiated the ‘Furs for Life’ project which created the alternative high-quality faux fur. Working with local Shembe leaders, these furs are gaining acceptance as alternatives to real leopard furs.
Singita is also partnered with the Grumeti Fund in Tanzania and the Malilangwe Trust in Zimbabwe which helps to support conservation and community efforts using funds from Singita guests in the Serengeti ecosystem in Tanzania, and for community development projects and conservation in Zimbabwe.
In partnership with other leading ecotourism operators, Singita has helped to launch The Lionscape Coalition. Now officially classified as vulnerable, lions are another species which need major protection as numbers have dropped dramatically in recent years. The decline can be contributed to things such as illegal wildlife trade, habitat loss, poaching and human-wildlife conflict. Their existence is key to the whole ecosystem, making ‘their conservation an ecological imperative.’
Helping to protect their habitat is just the first step in a much wider programme, however, if they have sufficient numbers of prey and a safe habitat they will thrive. Local communities are educated on their importance and the need to live peacefully side by side with these magnificent creatures.
Singita is involved in many projects and initiatives to help protect the wonderful biodiversity that surrounds their lodges. Working with the Grumeti Fund, Singita is helping to re-establish a population of eastern black rhino to be returned to the western Serengeti which will, in turn, re-establish the greater Serengeti-Mara’s rhino population. This project is going from strength to strength and has already resulted in the birth of numerous black rhino calves.
Rhino reintroduction has also been a major aim of The Malilangwe Trust, with them having purchased 28 black rhinos and 15 white rhinos and relocating them to South Africa. highly successful, this project is now leading to the relocation of some of its rhinos to other reserves in Africa, to work the same magic on local rhino populations.
To help restore previously forested land, Singita works with local communities to provide viable alternatives to farming on cleared land. The Akarabo Nursery has so far had 60,000 saplings grown and propagated, with a team regularly monitoring the health of the saplings. Guests can even plant their own indigenous tree which will, in time, be planted on the cleared land in an effort to re-establish the natural buffer zone which lies between agricultural lands and the rainforests.
In an effort to re-establish delicate native orchids to this area, an Orchid Project has been created. These orchids are vital to the biodiversity and habitat of the Singita Volcanoes National Park, and there are numerous species of orchids only found in this region. Singita helps this project by actively supporting the reforestation efforts around their properties.
To further protect the biodiversity of the areas in which Singita operate they support various anti-poaching initiatives. Illegal poaching and hunting is still a real threat to species such as rhino and elephant who are persecuted for their horns and tusks. The Grumeti Fund have their own anti-poaching unit which is bolstered by some innovative technology such as drones and night vision equipment. Grumeti also funds its own canine unit to help with the anti-poaching efforts. There is also a canine unit which patrols the area around Singita’s first property in Sabi Sands, to help track and find any illegal hunters.
Partnered with the Grumeti Fund, the Singita Lowveld Trust and the Malilangwe Trust means that Singita is involved in a range of community upliftment projects throughout South Africa, Tanzania and Zimbabwe. One such project is the Singita Community Culinary School which helps offer young people who are interested in becoming chefs the education to gain the skillset which will be needed from them. These schools are in South Africa, Rwanda and Tanzania and offer the internationally recognised ‘Worldchefs certificate’ for those students who complete their studies – giving them strong employment prospects for when they finish.
During the Covid-19 pandemic, the economy of South Africa dwindled, and the issues that arose from this situation unfairly fell to the rural populations living in South Africa. Singita and their partners helped set up an emergency covid food relief initiative, which helped rural families who were living below the food poverty line by delivering 2863 food parcels to children and families in need.
Singita is involved in initiatives that are based in schools to help educate local school children in many areas. In Zimbabwe, the Malilangwe Trust has worked on a nutrition programme that gives young children a cup of mahewu every day. This is a nourishing porridge based drink that helps to give children the energy and nutrition to be able to make the most of their day at school.
In a rapidly modernising world Singita help to make sure that rural communities in South Africa don’t fall behind others due to the lack of technology information. The Singita Lowveld Trust partnered with the European Space Agency and the Mpumalanga Department of Education which together equipped all 19 local primary schools with satellites and laptops. Singita is also partnered with the Good Work Foundation who has the primary aim of creating digital learning campuses.
Singita has been supporting Early Childhood Development projects since 2009, these help to support the development of local children in the physical, psychological, social and cognitive areas of their life. In Tanzania, Singita supports English immersion camps, which help teach children English language skills, and scholarships are also offered in Tanzania to children who show promise in their dedicated fields of study.
The Malilangwe Trust has a cadets programme which works to empower young men between the ages of 16-18 to enter the job market as trained rangers.
To create a deeper understanding of the importance of preserving the local reserves, Singita has helped to fund the Environmental Education Centre to help educate the younger population on the role ‘each individual plays in minimising their impact on the earth’s resources.’ There is also a Conservation Education Centre which is run in a similar way to the environmental centre, by teaching children the importance of conservation and to help create passions for conservation in young people.
To promote the conservation of the Serengeti there is a ‘Serengeti Girls Run’ which takes place in the western corridor and helps to raise awareness for the Grumeti Fund’s important work, and also helps to get local women and international female runners active.
Located just outside Malilangwe Reserve is a ‘living museum’ which showcases the unique Shangaan culture. Local cultures are important to preserve and protect just as much as the local wildlife, and guests who stay near this project will have the chance to immerse themselves and engage in the local culture, to understand its importance in today’s society.
Singita is partnered with Bioregional as their sustainability partner, and have their sustainable practices reviewed and checked by this charity. The framework which Bioregional follows for sustainable practices include ten principles which were developed in tandem with the WWF, and are supported by science and experience. Adopting these guiding principles first in 2012, by 2016 all Singita properties became committed to the principles.
The principles are just a guide to help properties save water, improve their waste management, reduce their carbon footprint, conserve natural resources, and recycle. By following these principles Singita is well on its way to becoming a carbon-neutral operation.
To help mitigate the impact of CO₂ emissions Singita accommodations pay a carbon offset levy for each guest which are used to buy ‘carbon credits’. These carbon credits provide funds for various local projects which help to mitigate carbon emissions, ‘effectively providing guests with a carbon-neutral stay.’ Most materials used in the construction of Singita properties, as well as the furniture and art you will find inside is sourced locally, created using sustainable products, renewable or waste resources. In Singita Boulders Lodge, 100% of the original stones were used in its refurbishment.
To help them reduce their waste, Singita sends much of their recycling to small local businesses that use recycling to generate income for their community. Plastic bottles have been eliminated from Singita’s operations, when guests arrive at a Singita lodge they are given a stainless steel or glass bottle, which can be refilled at water stations. Singita is currently working on reducing other single-use plastics from their operations.
Stepping away from fossil fuels, Singita has installed more efficient energy equipment as well as running energy awareness programmes for all staff. Most of the power is made up of electricity and generator power, however, Singita is now creating a move to renewable forms of energy, such as installing solar panels. Efficient air conditioners, LED light-bulbs and other efficient appliances have been installed to reduce their carbon emissions.
To help support the local communities and reduce food miles Singita sources their food locally and supports projects which help to increase their local sourcing. A farm-to-table approach is taken by all Singita lodges and this allows them to use fresh and seasonal products in their menus. Local farmers are supported by Singita with a long-term relationship between the two. Specific guidelines for seafood are followed to make sure that any seafood they do order is procured in the most sustainable manner.
Singita constantly monitors their water usage as well as the monitoring of the surrounding boreholes which supply the lodge. All the water they do use is used efficiently and returned to the natural systems clean and unpolluted. With all their game drive vehicles, Singita tracks and monitors them to ensure efficient driving behaviours.
Children of all ages are welcomed at Singita Sweni Lodge