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12 Days 11 Nights | 1 Aug – 12 Aug 2026
There is a corner of East Africa that most East Africans will never see. A national park rated among the continent's finest, where lions roar a few metres from your tent and you watch them do it. A reserve where cheetahs are virtually guaranteed — one of only a handful of places on the entire continent where that sentence is true. A people whose ancestral language and customs have outlasted every attempt to erase them.
This is not a safari. This is an expedition.
Pearl of Africa II is Mara Nomads' flagship family expedition into Northeast Uganda — 12 days of overlanding through dramatic highland coffee country, ancient granite plains, living tribal cultures, and one of Africa's most uncrowded national parks. You will sleep under a sky with zero light pollution. You will watch a sunset turn an entire valley gold from a hilltop most tourists have never heard of. You will come home with footage and stories that nobody else in your circle has.
Because this park is not Maasai Mara. No convoys of safari vans. No crowds at the water hole. Some of our members will see more vehicles in the hours it takes to clear the border than in 3 full days inside the park.
Because the culture is alive, not staged. You won't watch a "cultural performance" built for tour buses. You'll climb a rock formation overlooking the largest traditional village in East Africa, then sit in a homestead and learn directly from the people who live there. The traditions on display here predate any tourism industry by centuries.
Because this is built for families. Pearl II runs during the August school holiday season and is deliberately paced — 3 full rest days built into 12, so nobody is exhausted, nobody is rushed, and every member of the convoy from age 3 to 70 gets to actually enjoy the places we travel to.
Because Mara Nomads does this differently. We are not a tour company selling seats on someone else's itinerary. We are an overlanding community that has been building expeditions across East Africa since 2017 — 2,000+ members, 60+ expeditions, 7 countries. When you join Pearl II, you join a convoy, not a coach tour.
(Full GPS routing, border crossing points, and campsite details are provided to confirmed participants in the official trip pack.)
Pearl II threads from Nairobi through Kenya's western highlands into Uganda via a quiet, low-traffic border post — avoiding the chaos of the main crossings entirely. From there the convoy climbs into coffee country for a true rest stop, climbs upto a major waterfall on Mt. Elgon, descends into the dramatic Karamoja plains for a wildlife reserve few travellers have ever heard of, pushes north through living pastoral communities and tribal territory at the edge of three countries, and arrives at the principal destination: one of Africa's most celebrated and least-visited national parks, for 3 full nights on a hilltop campsite inside the reserve itself.
The return route uses a second, equally quiet border crossing, avoiding any repeated roads.
Highlights along the way include:
12 Days / 11 Nights | 1 Aug – 12 Aug 2026
Note: Pearl II has swapped slots with our Jade Sea II Ethiopia expedition. Pearl runs August 2026 to take advantage of better road conditions, calmer wildlife-viewing weather, and a more relaxed planning runway after a demanding mid-year season. Jade Sea II, our more hardcore overland run into Southern Ethiopia, now runs later in the year in October.
KES 15,000 registration fee per person, and half for kids above 4 years.
Full package pricing (accommodation, excursions fees, AMREF air evacuation fees etc.), payment schedule, and what's included will be released with the booking form.
What we can tell you now: pricing covers convoy support, route navigation, park fees and ranger arrangements, pre-vetted camp and lodge bookings, a dedicated Convoy Lead and Safety Officer, and full participant support from departure to return. It does not cover fuel, personal travel insurance, vehicle running costs, or personal spending — this is an overlanding expedition, not an all-inclusive resort package, and we expect our members to bring their own rigs and a self-sufficient mindset.
A deposit secures your spot. Pearl II is capped at 20 vehicles maximum, with a minimum of 15 vehicles required to proceed. We cap convoy size deliberately — not for exclusivity theatre, but because a convoy this size is the largest we can run safely through this terrain while still giving every family genuine access at every stop. Pearl I sold out faster than any expedition we've run.
What's Included:
What's Not Included:
In this order — no step skipped, no exceptions:
Spaces are strictly limited to 20 vehicles. Once full, a waitlist opens.
Vehicle:
Documents:
Personal:
Family-friendly note: Pearl II is suitable for children, but parents should be realistic about long driving days, basic camp toilets in some locations, and early starts on game drive mornings.
Some things on this expedition are not negotiable, and we'd rather tell you now than at the border:
Is Pearl II for you? It's for you if the idea of 3 nights inside a remote national park, hours from the nearest town, genuinely excites rather than worries you. It's for you if you'd rather show your kids a real cattle auction than a curated cultural show. It's for you if you already own — or are willing to source — a properly capable 4WD, and you understand that "remote" is the whole point, not an inconvenience to be managed.
It's probably not for you if you're looking for guaranteed hotel-grade comfort every night, if you need constant connectivity, or if the words "basic camp toilet" or "ranger-escorted hike" sound like deal-breakers rather than part of the adventure.
Pearl II is not for everyone. It is for people who would rather sleep on a hilltop listening to lions than sleep in a hotel listening to traffic. It is for families who want their kids to remember something real. It is for the kind of traveller who reads "12 days, remote, limited phone signal, malaria zone, bring your own 4WD" and feels excitement, not hesitation.
20 vehicles. That's the entire convoy. Pearl I sold out before we'd finished announcing it.
This isn't a marketing line — it's a real constraint. We will not run more vehicles than this terrain and this experience can hold.
The only question left is whether you're in the 20.
[Register Your Interest →]
Ans: Because the places we're taking you cannot absorb an unlimited convoy and still be the places we're taking you to. A 20-vehicle formation is the largest we can move safely, communicate across, and recover within — while still leaving the campsite, the wildlife, and the communities we visit exactly as we found them. Beyond that number, you're not on an expedition anymore. You're at an outdoor event.
Ans: Our regular expeditions are weekend or long-weekend format — maximum adventure in a limited window. Pearl II is what happens when we remove that constraint entirely. 12 days, 2 countries, 3 genuine rest days, and the kind of cultural and wildlife depth that a weekend simply cannot hold. If you've done our regular runs and wanted more, Pearl II is the answer to that.
Ans: Yes. Pearl II is specifically designed as our most family-accessible expedition — built around the August/October school holiday calendar, with 3 dedicated rest days and a measured pace. That said, this is still overlanding in a genuinely remote region, so we ask that parents come prepared, not assume a resort-level safety net.
Ans: It varies by design. Transit legs at the start and end run up to 400 km on mostly tarmac — ground-eating drives that deliver us efficiently. Mid-route days average 100–200 km on mixed tarmac and murram. Arrival days into our principal destinations are short — often under 60 km — because we don't rush into places worth staying in. And 3 days involve no driving at all. Distance on paper is also not the whole story: 150 km on Northern Uganda murram takes more out of a vehicle than 350 km of tarmac. Full day-by-day driving times are in the confirmed participant trip pack.
Ans: Minimum: Good tires (AT minimum, MT preferred), functional 4WD system, adequate ground clearance (200mm+), loop tow points front and rear Strongly Recommended: auxiliary fuel capacity, roof rack for gear storage Not Required But Helpful: Awning, upgraded suspension, dual batteries The vehicle inspection will assess your specific setup. We've seen bone-stock Land Cruisers complete this route and heavily modified vehicles fail. Capability matters more than accessories.
Ans: Pearl II requires a genuine 4WD with appropriate ground clearance. If you don't have your own vehicle, message us — we sometimes have shared-vehicle options with other members, depending on group composition.
Ans: The group assists with recovery and basic repairs. But you need to carry: basic tools, spare belts/hoses, extra oil/fluids, tire repair kit, and knowledge of your vehicle. If it's catastrophic (broken axle, destroyed transmission), we'll get you to the nearest town, but extraction costs are on you. Any damage to vehicle recovering or towing you, will be on you also. This is why vehicle preparation isn't optional.
Ans: Because we're coordinating with local scouts, communities, and finalizing logistics based on confirmed numbers. After mid-August, cancellations cost us real money in non-recoverable commitments. Before August 15th, life happens—we get it. After that, your spot means we've turned others away and made financial commitments.
Ans: Route planning and reconnaissance, local scout coordination and fees, community access arrangements, emergency communication infrastructure, navigation and briefing materials, post-expedition debrief, and organizational overhead. It does NOT cover your personal costs: fuel, food, gear, vehicle prep, or personal equipment.
Ans: Because this isn't a commercial safari. You're not a client being serviced—you're a participant cost-sharing. No luxury lodges, no chef, no guide doing everything for you. This is peer-to-peer adventure with professional coordination. If you want to be pampered, spend KES 150,000+ on a luxury tour. If you want to earn your experience, spend KES 15,000 here.
Ans: Immediately if you're serious. Pearl II will fill faster than previous expeditions because of FOMO. First-come-first-served once you pass vetting. We expect to cap within 2-3 weeks of announcement.
Ans: Technical training (sand driving, recovery techniques, vehicle preparation), route details and daily expectations, safety protocols and emergency procedures, community interaction guidelines, gear checklist review, and team building. Non-attendance = non-participation. No exceptions.
Ans. 22nd August Saturday. Specific date/location TBA to confirmed participants. We check: tire condition, recovery points, fluid levels, spare tire, lights/electrical, suspension/steering, brakes, and overall mechanical soundness. Failures must be corrected before departure.
Ans: You fix it or you don't go. We're not being harsh—we're being responsible. A breakdown in the Milgis affects everyone. If your vehicle isn't ready, neither are you. Deposit refund policy applies based on timing.
Ans: Yes. We are travelling through and camping in malaria zones for multiple nights. Prophylaxis is mandatory, not optional, and full guidance is provided in the trip pack.
Ans: Nothing in wilderness is "safe" in the suburban definition. But it's managed risk. We work with experienced scouts. We have emergency protocols. We run capable groups. Statistically, you're more at risk during your highway drive to the starting point than during the expedition itself. But yes—this is real adventure with real stakes.
PLEASE NOTE: ✅ Our itineraries are to be used as a guide only. They may vary from day to day depending on road and weather conditions, political situations and The Mara Nomads’ decisions. ✅ All prices, charges, costs, and fees mentioned to participants may change, and The Mara Nomads has no control over them. ✅ Time shall be of the essence in this trip due to the remoteness of the destinations and safety, also to give us ample time to deal with any emergency and to be able to arrive on time at our stopovers. Any late person shall be left behind. ✅ The Mara Nomads terms and conditions [here: https://www.maranomads.com/terms-of-service] shall apply, as well as our privacy policy. ✅ Please ensure you’ve gone through all the information we have provided here and on the exclusive Pearl II WhatsApp group. ✅ 🚨Please note that our Terms and Conditions, and Cancellation and Refund Policy apply. See FAQ above, and https://www.maranomads.com/terms-of-service.
Ans: Email: travel@maranomads.com with subject line "Pearl II - [Your Name]" Include: vehicle details (make/model/year/modifications), off-road experience summary, why you want this specific expedition We respond within 48 hours with next steps If approved, deposit instructions follow Confirmation = you're in Or call/WhatsApp: +254 703 626 897 +254 794 897 226 Do it now. Not later. This will fill fast.
Ans: At minimum, each vehicle must carry: Hi-lift jack or similar (optional not mandatory) Shovel (important) Tow strap (rated - mandatory) Tire deflator and compressor (important) Basic tool kit (mandatory) Full size spare tire (in good condition, mandatory) The group shares winches, more specialized equipment, and expertise. But you need self-recovery basics.
Ans: We can't promise specific sightings — this is wild Africa, not a zoo — but the destinations on this route are exceptionally well known for the wildlife in question, and the vast majority of past visitors to this park and this reserve report strong sightings across the board.
Ans: Yes. Bring your own meals. Self-catering as part of the overlanding experience. The full breakdown is in the trip pack provided to confirmed participants.
Ans: With us visiting two national parks, yes of course there will be wildlife. Elephants. Also: lions, hyenas, leopards. But honestly, wildlife is less of a risk than vehicle incidents or dehydration. Basic safari wisdom applies: don't leave food accessible, don't approach wildlife, stay aware of surroundings. Hyenas are vocal at night but generally avoid humans.
Ans: The Karamojong and other Ateker communities in this region are herders who've survived here for centuries. They're incredibly hospitable, and we work with local scouts who facilitate respectful interaction. Theft is not a significant concern. What matters is respect: ask before photographing people, don't drive through livestock, greet elders properly. Our scouts will guide this.
Ans: Mix of functional campites and wild camping. There will be places with facilities, and places without facilities such as showers and water. But toilets are available. You pitch your tent on ground you clear of stones and thorns. You cook your own food. You manage your own waste (pack it out or bury it properly). If this sounds uncomfortable, this expedition isn't for you. Everyone camps. This is non-negotiable and part of what makes this expedition what it is.
Ans: We carry group medical kit and have emergency evacuation protocols via satellite communication. Nearest medical facilities are significant distance away. Serious emergencies might require helicopter evacuation (your insurance/cost). This is why pre-existing conditions need to be disclosed and why personal insurance is mandatory.
Ans: Active participation. No spectators. If someone's stuck, you help recover. If there's a camp task, you contribute. If someone shares knowledge, you pay attention.
Ans: Neither are most participants. What matters: willingness to learn, ability to follow instructions under pressure, physical capability to dig/push/recover when needed, and mental resilience when things get hard. We've had accountants, teachers, and office workers complete harder expeditions than some "expert" overlanders. Attitude trumps resume. And kids love adventure, and are more resilient than we give them credit for,
Ans: Both. During the day, when we're navigating challenging terrain, it's focused and serious. Safety and capability matter. Around the campfire at night, it's social, storytelling, and often hilarious. We work hard and celebrate hard. If you need constant entertainment or can't handle intensity, it's not your trip.
Ans: Registration fee is KES 15,000 per person. You're responsible for your own operational costs. Full payment schedule and breakdown (camping fees, park fees, excursion fees) shared upon registration confirmation.
Ans: MEETING POINT Nairobi — exact assembly point and time shared with confirmed participants closer to departure. All vehicles depart Nairobi together as a single convoy. Late joiners or vehicles meeting the convoy en route must coordinate directly with the Convoy Lead in advance — Pearl II does not support unplanned joiners at the border.
Ans: Patchy to non-existent for parts of the route, especially inside the national park. This is part of the appeal — and part of why we run dedicated convoy communication via radio and satellite communicator, not personal phone signal. Carry a Starlink if its absolutely necessary for you to have network.
Ans: A safari company puts you in their vehicle on their schedule visiting their chosen lodges. Pearl II is your vehicle, our route, a shared convoy of fellow overlanders, and a level of access — cultural and geographic — that a standard tour bus simply cannot reach. You are part of the expedition, not a passenger on it.
Ans: "Pearl of Africa" was Winston Churchill's description of Uganda — and after running Pearl I, we can confirm the name is earned. This is our second running of the expedition, refined with everything we learned the first time.
Ans: The total expedition distance is approximately 2,050 km round trip from Nairobi.