As the southern African winter settles over the Northern Tuli, Mashatu’s 42,000-hectare reserve moves into its clearest, most rewarding months for watching wildlife in the open.
It is June 2026, and the remote eastern corner of Botswana where the Limpopo and Shashe Rivers meet has slipped fully into the dry season. The grasses have thinned, the bush has opened up and the rivers have drawn animals towards their permanent water. For Mashatu, the private game reserve known across the region as the Land of the Giants, this is the heart of its peak game-viewing period, and the lodge is welcoming winter visitors who want to experience the Northern Tuli at its most accessible.
Mashatu sits within the Northern Tuli Game Reserve, on 42,000 hectares of privately held wilderness at the tri-border confluence where Botswana, South Africa and Zimbabwe meet. The landscape is unusually varied for a single reserve, taking in open plains, grasslands, riverine forests, rocky hills, marshland and sandstone ridges. That diversity is part of what makes a winter Botswana safari here distinct from the better-known delta and floodplain destinations further north and west. Visitors travelling through the dry months find sightlines that stretch far across the plains and game that concentrates around the reserve’s water sources.
Why winter is the season to visit
The southern African winter, running through the middle months of the year, is the driest and most predictable time on the reserve. Mashatu records rain-free conditions across the overwhelming majority of the year, a pattern measured over more than two decades, and the cooler winter days bring comfortable temperatures for time spent in open vehicles and on foot. With less surface water scattered across the bush, animals gather in more reliable places, and the reduced vegetation makes them easier to find and to watch for longer.
Mashatu is home to some of the largest elephant herds found on any private game reserve in Africa, and the reserve’s reputation for leopard and other predator sightings draws photographers and seasoned safari travellers in particular. More than 350 bird species have been recorded across its rivers, woodlands and ridges. The reserve also holds a deep human history, with archaeological remains in the area pointing to occupation stretching back over a million years, so a stay here sits within a far older story of the land.
A range of lodges and camps
Accommodation across the reserve spans six distinct properties, allowing guests to choose the style of stay that suits them. Euphorbia Mashatu offers five-star safari villas for those after a private wilderness escape. Mashatu Lodge provides fourteen luxury suites and is well suited to families. Tuli Safari Lodge Mashatu places eight luxury tented suites on the bank of the Limpopo River, while Mashatu Tent Camp offers eight private tents for a more intimate bush experience. For groups taking a whole property, Kolokolo Safari Home is a recently renovated exclusive-use safari home, and Shalimpo Safari Home sits at the tri-border confluence as a further exclusive-use option.
This spread of Botswana lodges means the reserve can host honeymooning couples, multi-generational families and private groups within the same wilderness, each in their own setting. A guest choosing a tented camp and one booking an exclusive-use home are both stepping into the same 42,000 hectares, with the same wildlife moving through it.
What guests can do on the reserve
Mashatu organises its experiences across three broad categories. The luxury offering centres on classic game drives and unhurried time in the bush. The adventure side opens the reserve up on foot, by mountain bike and on horseback, giving fit and curious travellers a closer, slower way to move through the landscape. The wellness category is built for guests who want their time in the wild to include rest and recovery as much as wildlife watching.
Game drives remain the foundation of a stay, led by a guiding team whose experience is a genuine point of difference. Guides on the reserve average around fourteen years of tenure, and some have spent more than four decades reading this particular stretch of bush. The reserve is also well known among wildlife photographers for its award-winning photographic hides, which allow low-angle, eye-level views of animals coming down to drink, a setup that the open winter conditions suit especially well.
Who a Mashatu stay is for
A stay here tends to appeal to travellers who already know what they want from time in the bush. Photographers come for the hides, the predators and the elephant herds. Families come for the space and the range of suites and homes. Active travellers come for the walking, cycling and horseback options that many reserves do not offer. Booking a Botswana safari lodge in the Northern Tuli during winter gives all of them the dry-season conditions that make sightings more frequent and time outdoors more comfortable.
The reserve is also relatively straightforward to reach, which matters to visitors weighing a winter trip. Mashatu is served by Limpopo Valley Airfield within the reserve itself, and Mashatu Connect operates flights from Johannesburg’s Lanseria Airport. By road, the reserve is roughly six and a half hours from Johannesburg and about two hours from Polokwane Airport, with the Pont Drift Border Post crossed by vehicle or by cable car. For travellers across southern Africa, that combination of air and road access keeps a Northern Tuli safari within practical reach for a winter break.
The wider context
Botswana has long been associated with low-volume, high-value safari travel, and the dry winter months are traditionally the busiest of the safari calendar across the region. Mashatu’s position in the Northern Tuli, away from the more heavily travelled northern circuits, gives it a quieter character while still delivering the elephant, predator and birdlife that draw people to the country in the first place. As 2026’s dry season reaches its peak, the reserve is encouraging travellers who have been considering a winter trip to plan around these clearer, cooler months while conditions are at their best.
Mashatu’s framing of itself as the Land of the Giants rests on the scale of what it protects, from its elephant herds to the sheer size of the wilderness under its care. Through June 2026 and the winter that follows, that wilderness is in the state most rewarding to visit, with open country, concentrated game and the long, clear days that define the season.
Travellers who would like to learn more about the reserve, its lodges and camps, and its winter experiences can find full details on the Mashatu website at https://mashatu.com/.
About Mashatu
Mashatu is a privately held game reserve set on 42,000 hectares within the Northern Tuli Game Reserve, in the eastern corner of Botswana where the borders of Botswana, South Africa and Zimbabwe meet. Known across the region as the Land of the Giants, it is home to large elephant herds, leopard and other predators, and more than 350 recorded bird species across plains, riverine forest, rocky hills and marshland. Guests can stay across six distinct lodges and camps and choose between game drives, walking, mountain biking, horseback safaris and the reserve’s award-winning photographic hides.
Media Contact
Mashatu
Email: reservations@mashatu.com
Phone: +267 74 988 822
Website: https://mashatu.com/










