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Tours and Tailor Made Holidays to

Thornybush Reserve

SOUTH AFRICA
  • CURRENCY South African Rand
  • LANGUAGE English and Afrikaans
  • WEATHER
  • FLYING TIME 13 hrs 5 mins
  • TIME ZONE GMT + 2

The Reserve has allowed human activity in an active hub of wildlife without damaging the wild sanctuary

Tailor Made Holidays to Thornybush Reserve

At Travel Concierge, we pride ourselves on tailoring holidays to Thornybush Reserve that are designed around your needs and expectations and not ours. We have a range of Thornybush Reserve holiday offers that we have negotiated special or exclusive deals on. We can also arrange multi centre Thornybush Reserve holiday itineraries as well as tours and excursions in Thornybush Reserve. For more information on our Thornybush Reserve holidays, call an Travel Concierge tailor-made expert on 0161 729 0099 and speak to one of our reservation experts who will be able to help you plan the perfect holiday in Thornybush Reserve.

Destination Overview

The Thornybush reserve is a piece of land set in the heart of the rolling Lowveld savannah measuring 13,816 hectares. It was fenced out from the rest of the Limpopo wilderness in 1955. The reserve is home to a variety of mammals, reptiles, birds and trees. The reserve is home to the Big Five and a variety of other African wildlife species and has a near perfect year round climate. Daily scheduled flights operate to Eastgate Airport as well as a private charter flights directly into one of the two airfields on the reserve. Flights take about an hour from Johannesburg. The journey time by road from Johannesburg is  between 5 - 7 hours depending on which Thornybush entry gate you are using.

The Kruger National Park is Africa's colossus in terms of game viewing. If it were stretched and moulded, its borders could fit precisely over the whole of Israel. Its massive territories divide the reserve into five ecosystems. Hotels in the Kruger National Park are positioned along every tier of luxury, from laid back camping grounds to five star resort hotels. On international terms, it is the wildest and most unpredictable way to confront the big five. Those with trained eyes may come face to face with species that are spectacular for their beauty as much as their rarity. Albino kudu, sable and crocodiles are some of the scarcest species spotted. Dwindling numbers, pure genetic anomalies and efficient camouflage make these creatures some of the most exciting finds on holidays to The Kruger Park. Other intermittent scenes cause a flurry of excitement among safari goers: Sightings of a lion kill, a leopard wound around a baobab branch and a close encounter with the deadly boomslang all signal the fact that lady luck is on your side.

During a holiday to the Kruger National Park, dining experiences should be tightly woven around the wildness of the terrain and its beasts. If the reserve were a country, its national dish would be a trio of ostrich, springbok and warthog ribs grilled on the braai and served with a fine Cape merlot. South Africa's most popular cooking method is barbecuing and every chef, whether amateur or studded with Michelin stars, has his own secret basting recipe. In fact, the most traditional way for visitors to enjoy a meal is around a Weber braai on their own hotel porch. For your viewing pleasure, find restaurants that seat you at a table overlooking a watering hole. Here, your dining experience will be accompanied by visions of ambling creatures gathering for their evening thirst quencher.

Every level of luxury exists in hotels in The Kruger National Park. Skukuza rest camp is a favourite amongst local holiday makers because of the diversity of its accommodation choices and attractions. Here, Kruger National Park holidays can be enjoyed close to the bush from a safari tent, or in casual riverside bungalows. Locals in the know choose their camps in accordance with the type of game that resides in their surrounding regions. Skukuza's nearby ecosystems are frequently graced by leonine visitors. The camp acts as the ideal base from which to spot all of the Big Five. For avid golfers, the rest camp offers a nine hole course, and escorted safaris provide foreigners with the professional skills of guides who not only track animals but educate visitors about them too.  Those in the hunt for a certain distance from the wilderness and its erratic tendencies can seek out more a more luxurious hotel in the Kruger National Park. Private reserves that fall on both sides of the park's borders offer premium accommodation with tailored safaris complete with champagne breakfasts, packaged itineraries and first world amenities.

The pure, unspoiled enormity of the reserve supports five diverse ecosystems, each with its own brand of magnificence. Lush jungle habitats are rare in the park, but the Mphongolo River's watery surroundings support one of the lushest vegetations in the reserve. Knobthorns and apple leaf trees gather in clusters around the riverbed. The looped trail that runs between Punda Maria and Shingwedzi is populated by lion, elephant, buffalo and leopard. The Central region is the home of half of the reserve's lion population. It is also one of the rare ecosystems habituated by cheetah. Its abundance of tasty browsing treats makes it popular territory for zebra and giraffe. The Far North Region is the black sheep of the park's ecosystem because its tropical forests and eerie sandstone formations are unheard of in other regions. Riverine forests and river banks are ideal territory for avid birders. The Northern region is renowned for its unusual flora, which includes Coral, chestnut and fever berry trees. Leopards are the most numerous predators in this zone, which is home to the park's more timid dassies and klipspringer. The sparse white rhino population is most commonly spotted near Sabie and the Mbyamiti River.

When to visit Thornybush Reserve

Thornybush Reserve

Do you need inspiration for when to go on holiday to Thornybush Reserve? Give the team of experts at Travel Concierge a call and we will help you plan your Thornybush Reserve holiday at the best time of year for your requirements. Although our Thornybush Reserve holiday search tool will allow you to search for Thornybush Reserve holiday prices upto 11 months in advance, we can also price holidays to Thornybush Reserve for 2025 and 2026. We can advise on the best time to travel on your Thornybush Reserve holiday based on Thornybush Reserve weather, special events in Thornybush Reserve or even when the crowds in Thornybush Reserve are at their lowest.

Thornybush Reserve

There are no undesirable seasons for holidays in The Kruger National Park; there are only variable highlights. The air is relatively arid throughout the year, with the chilly seasons pushing humidity down to an all time low.

Summer is often sweltering but occasional showers make the soaring temperatures more tolerable. Spring brings a lavish leafiness to the region, so those who are curious about the flora rather than fauna take their holiday in The Kruger National Park between October and March. Winter strips the trees of their leaves, which opens up vistas for easier wildlife viewing. Autumn and spring cool down the weather, making driving safaris pleasantly refreshing.

Between April and September, the Kruger National Park offers its own fast food version of wildlife viewing: Predators and herbivores alike gather at watering holes throughout the day. Lazy safari goers needn't spend hours tracking spoor with a guide. A simple trip to the nearest body of water will deliver a visual wildlife viewing extravagance: the water hole is wildlife's version of the local pub, where several species put aside their differences long enough to rehydrate or take a soothing mud bath. 

The Kruger Park hotel grounds are set alight by the vivid palettes of the bush's growth period. Hot winds electrify the atmosphere and the first rains begin to resurrect dry flora. September greenery remains sparse enough for unconcealed wildlife viewing. Those staying at a hotel in The Kruger National Park during October will be treated to the most spectacular backdrops and floral fragrances Mother Nature has to offer. The heat can be escaped by relegating your travels to the cooler southern landscapes. Spring is birding season. The first migratory species begin to arrive to the tunes and dances of feathered courtship rituals.

November and December are the reserve's annual celebrative months. The park becomes animated with new life. The verdant greenery acts as a lush backdrop for the clumsy, gangly youths that have just been born. Cheetah cubs practice their viciousness by play-pouncing and attempting the occasional growl. Lumbering baby impalas attempt their first shaky steps and infant hippos spar with infinitely patient parents. Summer is the most desirable and dangerous season for walking safaris, since they can potentially offer front row seats from which to observe the cutest of creatures. Protective mothers present a significant risk to unwieldy hikers, so all walks are guided and fronted by armed guards. Between January and April, summer temperatures skyrocket, but avid birders are willing to tolerate the heat in exchange for the vivid display of migratory birds that flock to the reserve during this period.

During April The Kruger National Park hotels are surrounded by sparse bushveld that transforms into a golden palette of Autumnal flora. The daylight hours are cosy but cool, whilst morning and evening temperatures plummet. Shallower water holes vanish, causing a higher concentration of species in areas where evaporation has not taken its toll. This makes wildlife easier to spot for those who know where to go. Those in The Kruger National Park hotels take advantage of the keen sighting skills of professionally guided hikes and drives, since the bush is thick enough to obscure the view of less experienced observers.