Africa reveals its grandest form in Tanzania. The Serengeti defines vastness, a living plain where the Great Migration surges in a continuum of motion and survival. Ngorongoro Crater encloses an entire ecosystem within ancient walls, while Tarangire sets elephants against the silhouette of baobabs. Offshore, Zanzibar unites coral reef and Swahili heritage, its beaches extending into the Indian Ocean with unbroken grace. To the west, Mahale and Rubondo protect rainforests alive with chimpanzees, landscapes as secluded as they are pristine. In the south, Ruaha and Nyerere reveal wilderness without parallel, where wildlife moves unobserved, and silence defines scale. Accommodation responds to this diversity: bush camps tracking herds across open plains, lodges perched above volcanic calderas, island retreats wrapped in spice and tide. A country defined by range, Tanzania holds multitudes: savannah and ocean, crater and reef, wilderness and heritage. A land where travel does not move in straight lines, but unfolds as a series of revelations.