Before you plan Africa alone — the questions that matter more than a checklist
Solo planning is not a failure of imagination — but Africa rewards a different kind of preparation. Here are the quiet questions that change a journey before a single lodge is booked.
There is a certain pride in planning a trip alone. Spreadsheets, forums, late-night tabs of lodge reviews, a map covered in pins. It can feel like mastery. And yet, when the continent is as large as Africa — and the seasons as precise as a migration corridor or a gorilla permit window — the checklist is often the wrong tool. What matters first is not where you go. It is what kind of traveller you are becoming for those weeks.
Fanny does not begin with destinations. She begins with tempo, companions, and the kind of silence you can live with. Alone or with a partner, the same truth holds: Africa is generous to those who arrive with clear desires — and gentle with those who admit what they do not yet know.
A beautiful lodge in the wrong month is still the wrong lodge.
Ask what “alone” really means for you
Some travellers want solitude in the landscape — empty decks, private vehicles, no schedule louder than birdsong. Others want independence from groups, but still crave warm conversation at supper. Those are different journeys. Confusing them leads to camps that feel lonely when you wanted quiet, or resorts that feel crowded when you wanted space.
Write it down in one sentence. Not a list of countries. A sentence about how you want the days to feel. Fanny will translate that sentence into places, seasons and rooms.
Season is not a footnote
Online itineraries often treat “best time” as a badge on a destination card. On the ground, season decides whether a river crossing is possible, whether a beach is soft or wind-cut, whether a forest trek is muddy but magical or simply hard. Planning alone, people often lock flights first and seasons second. We reverse that. The continent sets the calendar. Your leave days negotiate with it — not the other way around.
The travellers who suffer most are those who keep every option open until nothing good remains. A designer’s job is to hold provisional dates early, then refine — so you keep the mornings that matter without pretending the world waits forever.
What to research — and what to leave to someone who knows
- Your non-negotiables: pace, privacy, walking vs vehicle, cultural time vs wildlife
- Your hard edges: dates that cannot move, fitness, dietary needs, how you sleep
- What Fanny carries: which camps still feel human, which airstrips save a day, when to skip a “famous” place for a quieter one
Planning alone is not wrong. Planning alone with only a checklist is incomplete. If you want a journey that still feels like your own — but lands in the right light, the right month, the right kind of quiet — write to Fanny.