Zanzibar, when the tide writes the day
After safari dust, the spice island asks for a different kind of attention — soft mornings, Swahili stone towns, and beaches that change character twice a day.
Zanzibar is often treated as a soft landing after safari — and it can be that. But the island rewards travellers who give it a few proper days, not a single beach checkout. Stone Town still holds spice, history and evening light worth lingering for. The east coast beaches change character with every tide.
We place Zanzibar at the end of a Tanzania journey when you want salt water and slow mornings, or as a standalone island chapter when you need the Indian Ocean without rushing.
Let the tide write the day.
How we shape an island stay
A night or two in Stone Town first — alleys, rooftops, a dhow harbour at dusk — then a quieter beach lodge away from the day-trip crowds. We avoid the stretches that feel like a resort strip, and favour places where the call to prayer still carries over the water.
- Stone Town for atmosphere before you soften into the coast
- East-coast beaches timed for tide and wind
- Spice tours that feel like a walk with a neighbour, not a coach stop
- Optional dhow sunset when the light is kind
Pairing with the mainland
Serengeti or Ngorongoro into Zanzibar is a classic for a reason — dust, then salt. Fanny will time the flights and the beach days so the contrast lands gently, not as a jolt. If you prefer solitude, we look north or to quieter bungalows where the only schedule is the tide.
Ready for an island chapter that still feels like Africa? Write to Fanny.