Each Redwood journey is built around eight travellers, an honest pace, and the small kind of detail that makes a place stay with you. What follows is each route in full — what you'll see, what's included, and who you'll travel with.
The Serengeti by morning, the Indian Ocean by week's end.
You seek wonder in its most ancient, unfiltered form. The Serengeti dawns. The grand migration moving in slow waves across volcanic plains. Maasai voices echoing in the rift. And then — when sand and silence are what you need — the spiced warmth of Zanzibar's coast, stone-walled rooms with shutters open to a turquoise sea.
Arrive Kilimanjaro. Two nights at a coffee-farm lodge. Down into the Crater on day three — black rhino, lions on the soda lakes.
Four nights under canvas. Dawn balloon over the migration herds. Game drives at golden hour. Bush dinners by lantern light.
Two days with a Maasai family near Lake Natron. Walking with a warrior-guide, sharing meals, learning the rhythms of the rift.
Stone Town's spice markets, then a drive to the east coast. Snorkel reefs, lounge in the dhow, farewell dinner at the water's edge.
The kind of silence that reorganises something inside you.
You're someone who needs to be physically moved before you can be emotionally moved. The wind off the ice fields. The Towers at first light. The quiet of a glacier under a wide grey sky. This is the landscape that doesn't perform — you walk into it, and it changes how you carry yourself afterwards.
Arrive Punta Arenas, transfer to Puerto Natales. Two nights at a fjord-side lodge to acclimatise. Estancia visit, briefings, gear check.
Four days hiking the W route at a considered pace. The Towers at sunrise, the French Valley, ice-blue lakes, condors overhead.
Cross to Argentina. Day hikes in Los Glaciares — the Laguna de los Tres at sunrise, when the granite glows pink.
The glacier face — calving ice, the cracks like cannon shots. Walk the boardwalks, then a private boat to the south wall.
Slow morning, late check-out. Estancia farewell asado under the willows. Transfer to El Calafate for departure.
A country that still feels new — and stops you in your tracks.
Milford Sound emerging from morning mist. The Routeburn Track above the treeline. Glaciers calving into jade-green lakes. The South Island is the planet at its most theatrically, overwhelmingly beautiful — and we travel it slowly, with Māori guides and kept secrets.
Arrive, garden city walk. Drive to Tekapo — Aoraki/Mt Cook in the distance. Stargazing in a Dark-Sky Reserve.
Three days in alpine country. A guided two-day section of the Routeburn Track. Wanaka detour for those who want it.
Cruise into Milford at first light, when the waterfalls run new. Overnight on the Sound, kayaking among seal colonies.
Drive the Haast Pass. Walk on the glacier with a local guide. Punakaiki's pancake rocks at sunset.
Whale watching in the morning, Māori cultural evening, farewell dinner before the flight back to Christchurch.
Eight days in one of earth's least-visited landscapes.
AlUla's Nabataean tombs rise from rose-red rock. The desert turns gold at dusk. The silence at night, under those stars, is something you'll be telling people about for years. We move slowly, sleep at Habitas, and let the place do the work.
Welcome dinner in Riyadh. Private transfer to AlUla through dramatic desert terrain — the long, slow approach matters.
Hegra at sunrise. Jabal Ikmah's open-air library of ancient inscriptions. Dadan archaeological site with a Nabataean specialist.
Stargazing with an astronomer. Falconry at sunrise. Camel journeys at dusk. Two nights at Habitas AlUla.
Old Town AlUla at golden hour. Farewell dinner under the stars. Transfer back to Riyadh for departure.
Beauty without the battle — the Mediterranean as it was always meant to be.
Hidden coves accessible only by sea. Mountain villages where lunch lasts three hours. Olive groves you walk into and never quite want to leave. Mallorca rewards travellers who slow down — and we plan it that way, with afternoons left empty on purpose.
Arrive Palma. Boutique stay in the old quarter. Cathedral at golden hour. Tapas crawl with a local food writer.
North to Deià. Cycling through olive terraces, lunch at a finca, swimming at Cala Deià. Two nights in a stone-walled hotel.
A private boat from Port de Sóller to coves you can't reach by road. Snorkel, swim, eat lunch on the deck.
Slow morning in Sóller's market. Train back to Palma on the historic line. Farewell long-table dinner.
A country that engages all the senses at once.
Incense and lemongrass. Lantern light over a slow brown river. Hill tribes at the end of unpaved roads. Limestone karsts at dusk, when time pauses. Thailand contains multitudes, and we visit the parts most travellers miss.
Lantern-lit temples at dawn. Cooking school in a teak farmhouse. Night markets with a local food critic.
Drive the loop into the highlands. Two nights with a Karen homestay family. Slow walks through paddy and jungle.
Long-tail boat through Bangkok's khlongs. Riverside hotel. Dinner at a chef's table run by a Thai-French chef.
Fly south. Four nights on a quiet island — limestone karsts, snorkelling, freediving lessons. Final dinner on the beach.
Ancient pyramids, mezcal under stars, the wild Pacific.
Mexico rewards those who go deep and slow. Oaxacan markets where someone will hand you something extraordinary in a paper cone. Mole that takes a day to make. Small hours by candlelight in a Mazunte casita, the surf going on forever.
Welcome dinner in Polanco. Day at Teotihuacán with an archaeologist. Frida's Casa Azul on a private tour.
Fly to Oaxaca. Markets with a chef-guide. Mezcal tasting in the Tlacolula valley. Monte Albán ruins at dusk.
Drive to the Pacific. Three nights in a hilltop casita above empty beaches. Turtle release at dawn. Long lunches.
Fly back. Farewell dinner at a chef's table — twelve courses, all things you'd never order for yourself.
Twenty-six atolls of glass-clear ocean, and the kind of horizon that pulls something tight in you back loose.
You came for the water. We came for the silence. Days of reef life that humbles, free-diving lessons with a coach who makes it feel like breathing, lunches eaten on the deck of a wooden dhoni, and nights with no sound except the water against the pylons. A small group, an atoll mostly to ourselves.
Arrive Velana International. Seaplane transfer to a private island in the Baa Atoll — a UNESCO biosphere reserve.
Two days of guided snorkelling on the house reef. Marine biologist evening on coral restoration. First sunset dhoni.
Half-day clinic with an AIDA-certified coach. Breath work, equalisation, descent technique. Afternoon to swim or sleep.
Boat morning to Hanifaru Bay (seasonal). Snorkel with manta rays in their feeding aggregation. Picnic lunch on a sandbank.
Two slow days. Optional excursions. Farewell dinner over the water, then the long ride back to Malé.
Volcanic islands where evolution wrote one of its most readable chapters.
Naturalist-led days among species that have never learned to fear us. Snorkel with sea lions that nibble your fins to play. Walk among Galápagos penguins on the equator. Watch marine iguanas surface from a dive looking like small dragons. Few places left feel this honest.
Arrive Quito (2,850m). Two nights in the colonial Old Town. Walking tour, equator visit, briefing for the islands.
Fly to Baltra. Three nights on Santa Cruz. Tortoise sanctuary in the highlands, lava tubes, snorkelling at Las Grietas.
Live-aboard yacht for three nights. Western islands — penguins, flightless cormorants, Sierra Negra volcano.
Floreana's flamingo lagoon. Post Office Bay's traveller mailbox. Final morning snorkel. Fly to Quito for departure.
Beyond the journey-specific items above, every Redwood expedition includes these standards. We hold them constant so the surprises happen in the right places.
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