Laba Migration Camp

Like the herds, the Laba Migration Camp is itinerant. It accompanies the highlights of this Great Migration, three major stages per year to offer you a front row seat to this incredible spectacle. Prime locations enhanced by the very structure of our Camp, which is entirely open to nature. Your safety is constantly ensured by the Maasai, for whom this natural environment and the behavior of wildlife hold no secrets.

The décor, based on a cabinet of curiosities theme, is dedicated to nature. You’ll be in the shoes of a collector, both geologist and naturalist, exploring new territories to build up a collection of singular and fascinating objects such as rare stones, meteorites and other fossils.

The Laba Migration Camp is a place of wonder in the image of its natural surroundings. Far from being a temporary camping ground, it offers exceptional comfort. You’ll be immersed in the atmosphere of the first safaris at the end of the 19th century. When it comes to pleasing the palate, Laba’s signature style is the order of the day. Good, healthy cooking is our watchword. Most of our dishes are made with organic ingredients. Pleasure and health are one and the same.

For aficionados of daily physical training, the Camp boasts a tented gym, decorated in a cabinet-of-curiosities theme, dedicated to nature. You’ll be in the shoes of a collector, both geologist and naturalist, exploring new territories to build up a collection of singular and fascinating objects such as rare stones, meteorites and other fossils.

The Laba Migration Camp is a place of wonder in the image of its natural surroundings. Far from being a temporary camping ground, it offers exceptional comfort.

Far from being a temporary anchor point with the appearance of a campsite, our camp offers exceptional comfort.

10 tents: 8 doubles and 2 family tents which can be connected by a corridor. The Camp Double Tents and Family Tents can be converted into twin tents.

All tents are equipped with:

Organic cotton sateen bed linen

Linen bathrobes

Organic shower gel, shampoo and conditioner

hair dryer

Safe

Walkie Talkies to communicate with lodge staff

USB charging sockets available

Fresh filtered water available



In addition to the wildebeest, which dominates in numbers, the Big Five (the name given to this group of species by hunters on African safaris during the 20th century) are also represented: the lion, the leopard, the elephant, the rhinoceros (in small numbers) and the African buffalo (Syncerus caffer). The park is also home to hyenas, cheetahs, zebras, giraffes, birds of prey, and many other species. This abundance of animals has generated a local economy revolving around what is sometimes called ecotourism, and Tanzania is now very careful to rationally exploit this local wealth through both protection policies and specific taxation of tourist activities.

Laba Migration Camp offers a diverse range of activities to allow its guests to fully enjoy the richness of the African wilderness on their doorstep.

The Laba Migration Camp is dismantled in six days, three times a year, to land in the main migration areas where the concentration of animals is located:

From late November to late March, in the southern Serengeti, not far from the Ngorongoro Crater, in the Ndutu region. This is where the herds are concentrated and where, in January, around 300,000 wildebeest calves are born.

From April to July, the LABA Migration Camp is based in Msabi, in the western Serengeti. This is the peak of the rutting season, and the males are very active.

From August to the end of November, in the northern Serengeti, you will encounter immense migrating herds, which can sometimes reach up to 30 km in length.