Three-Generation Safaris Surge as Shared Learning Emerges as a New Family Travel Priority

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EASTERN CAPE, South Africa - March 2026

At Shamwari Private Game Reserve in South Africa’s Eastern Cape, three generations are increasingly sharing game drives. And in a growing number of cases, grandparents are travelling on safari with grandchildren, without the middle generation at all.

Over the past 18 months, Shamwari has recorded an average 20% increase in multigenerational bookings across its family-friendly lodges compared to the preceding 18-month period. The reserve now regularly welcomes guests ranging from toddlers as young as 18 months to grandparents in their eighties, with many trips bringing together three or even four generations.

“We’re seeing a clear evolution in how families approach safari travel,” says Suzanne Vine, Revenue Manager at Shamwari Private Game Reserve. “Multigenerational groups are no longer the exception. More families are choosing to travel together while everyone is able to fully engage with the experience.”

Particularly notable is the rise in skip-generation travel, where grandparents book safaris with grandchildren ranging from toddlers to teenagers, often travelling without parents. These trips tend to prioritise slower-paced exploration and conservation education, with grandparents using safari as a way to pass down values around wildlife protection while creating shared, meaningful memories.

The shift reflects broader luxury travel patterns. Hilton’s 2026 Trends Report found that nearly 30% of travellers who holiday with children are now embracing skip-generation trips, while Virtuoso’s 2026 Luxe Report identified multigenerational family travel as one of the most significant trends shaping the year ahead.

On safari, where journeys often require significant time and expense, the trend suggests families are placing a higher value on meaningful connection over milestone-driven trips alone.

Immersive Learning as the New Family Currency

What distinguishes today’s multigenerational safari from traditional family holidays is the emphasis on shared learning rather than shared entertainment.

Shamwari’s conservation facilities provide structured experiences that resonate across ages. At the Born Free Big Cat Sanctuary, families observe rescued lions and leopards from elevated viewing platforms designed to minimise human disturbance. The experience deliberately avoids spectacle; instead, it teaches patience and respect through what guides describe as “quiet presence.” When a leopard chooses distance or disappears into cover, that restraint becomes part of the lesson.

At the Wildlife Rehabilitation Centre, families witness how orphaned rhinos and injured birds are prepared for release, learning why silence, distance, and limited human contact are essential to successful rehabilitation. Rangers translate complex conservation protocols into accessible, intergenerational conversations.

Learning continues after dark at Shamwari, through dedicated astronomy drives. Guests explore the southern night sky while learning the science behind planets, stars, nebulae, and galaxies, alongside indigenous folklore that has long shaped local interpretations of the heavens.

“Depending on the season, guests may see constellations such as the Southern Cross and Orion, as well as planets like Jupiter and Saturn,” says Jean Taute, Assistant Safari Operations Manager.

Shamwari’s lodge portfolio supports this evolving travel style. Riverdene Lodge and Sarili Private Villa welcome children of all ages, while Long Lee Manor accommodates guests aged six and older. Private-use options and flexible daily rhythms allow different generations to engage at their own pace, from conservation-focused activities to slower afternoons at the lodge.

Access to the reserve is also streamlined via Shamwari Air, offering private charter flights directly to Shamwari. For multigenerational groups, this removes the friction of long road transfers and allows the safari experience to begin from the moment guests arrive.

Rather than retrofitting a traditional safari model to accommodate families, Shamwari’s scale, conservation-led programming, and diverse accommodation offering position it naturally for this new style of travel. As luxury journeys continue to shift toward intentional time away and shared purpose, safari is becoming a setting not only for personal milestones, but for shared family ones.

For reservation inquiries, please contact reservations via email at reservations@shamwari.com or by telephone on +27 (0)42 203 1111, or visit Shamwari.com.

This article was previously published on UAE Moments. To see the original article, click here