Wildlife seasons, weather, prices — and the Jewish calendar. The only safari timing guide that plans around all four.
Ask Google when to go on safari and you’ll get the standard answer: dry season, May to September. True — and incomplete. Because your calendar doesn’t just have seasons; it has chagim, school bein hazmanim, the Three Weeks, and a Pesach that moves. This is the timing guide that overlays the wildebeest calendar on the Jewish one.
For Southern Africa (South Africa, Botswana), the dry winter — roughly May through September — is prime: thin bush, animals gathered at water, cool mornings, minimal malaria risk. For East Africa, timing follows the Great Migration’s chapters: calving in January–March, river crossings July–October. Green season (November–March in the south) trades some sighting ease for lush scenery, baby animals, and meaningfully lower prices.
January–February. Southern Africa is green, hot, and dramatic — afternoon thunderstorms, impala lambs everywhere, peak birding, low-season prices. East Africa: the Serengeti calving spectacle. Jewish calendar: mid-winter yeshiva break makes January one of the smartest-value windows of the year.
March–April. The south begins drying out; East Africa’s long rains arrive. Jewish calendar: Pesach. A safari Pesach program is a serious logistical lift and an unforgettable one — here’s what a Seder in the bush actually looks like. Book these earlier than anything else.
May–June. Southern Africa’s sweet spot opens: dry, mild, superb game viewing, and shoulder-season rates in May before the July crowds. Some of the best value-to-quality weeks of the year.
July–August. Peak everything: peak dry-season viewing in the south, peak Mara River crossings in the east, peak prices, peak demand. Jewish calendar: summer break makes this the classic family window — but note the Three Weeks and Nine Days land here; if your community’s practice affects travel and simcha-adjacent trips during this period, talk to your rav before locking dates. Early booking matters most in these months.
September–October. Arguably the connoisseur’s choice in Botswana and Kruger: the bush at its driest, wildlife concentrated at shrinking water, days warming up. Jewish calendar: Rosh Hashana through Sukkot. A Sukkot safari — a sukkah under African stars — is one of the most special trips we know, and Chol Hamoed timing can make a shorter trip work.
November–December. The rains return south: green flush, newborn antelope, dramatic skies, and prices that reward flexibility. East Africa’s herds drift back toward the calving grounds. Jewish calendar: Chanukah trips and December school break — a lovely, underrated window.
Sightings vs. scenery. Dry season concentrates animals and strips the bush bare — easier viewing. Green season scatters them through paradise — harder viewing, prettier photos, more babies.
Price vs. peak. The difference between green-season and peak-season rates at the same lodge can fund several extra nights. If your dates are flexible, May and November are the arbitrage months. (Full numbers in our cost breakdown.)
Heat, rain, and health. Summer in the south is hot and is also higher malaria-transmission season; winter is cool and low-risk. Either way, prophylaxis planning starts 6–8 weeks out — see our travel health guide, and pack for the season with our checklist.
Here’s what other timing guides can’t tell you: kosher logistics have their own seasonality. Chag programs (Pesach especially) need the longest lead times — kitchens, supervision, and supplies are arranged months out. Shabbat falls every week regardless of season, and a well-chosen lodge makes it the highlight rather than the complication (here’s how). And dedicated kosher departures cluster around school holidays and chagim — traveling with one often beats building a private program from scratch.
Tell us your dates — or let us suggest them →
What is the single best month for safari in Southern Africa? If forced to choose: September. Driest bush, busiest waterholes, warming weather — with August a close second.
Is the rainy season a bad time for safari? No — it’s a different safari: lush, full of newborns, cheaper, with afternoon storms rather than washed-out days. Sightings take a little more work.
When should I book? Peak season and chag programs: 12–18 months ahead. Green season: 4–6 months is usually fine. Kosher logistics always reward the early planner.
Devora Levy
Co-Founder & Travel Writer, The Kosher Safari
Devora has been organising luxury kosher safaris across Africa since 2022. She writes from first-hand experience — every lodge, route, and meal plan in these guides is one she has personally arranged for guests.
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