The farm is set on the lower slopes of Londiani Mountain

Deloraine House Nakuru

Deloraine House was built in the 1920’s by Lord Francis Scott, a prominent early settler. Deloraine has to be one of the grandest examples of colonial architecture in the country, and is a unique hosted property with half of Kenya’s history bottled up in it. The farm is set on the lower slopes of Londiani Mountain, which is a forest and bamboo shrouded extinct volcano, on the western edge of the Great Rift Valley. The house is run by the Voorspuy family who are well known for their Offbeat Riding Safaris.
Each tent is built on solid foundations at the edge of the cliff

The Cliff Nakuru

Each tent is built on solid foundations at the edge of the cliff, and faces the lake, allowing guests 180 degree views of the panoramic paradise, yet maintaining privacy. Not wanting to waste the view, the tent is spacious and the freestanding bath looks outwards. While the exterior environment at The Cliff is pure Africa, the room interiors combine organic chic with international design to create the understated style of a modern boutique hotel.
Variety of treatments from our poolside spa room

Loldia House Naivasha

Loldia House is an original Kenyan home set on an old farm on the shores of Lake Naivasha. Here guests can enjoy a gentle pace of life; relax by the pool, take in the views, head off on a game drive or indulge in a variety of treatments from our poolside spa room.

Nakuru Kenya

Lake Nakuru, centerpiece of the national park by the same name, is most famous for the two million or so flamingos that feast on the lake’s algae. This is the lake which, if you haven’t, you really should see, if only for the moment when the lake seems to come to life and only heaven knows how many hundreds of thousands of flamingos lift off in a magnificent pink cloud. This is just another of Africa’s many natural, theatrical spectacles.

Overall significance of the Rift Valley is far greater than the canyon caused by the Colorado; it marks the steady tectonic dismembering of the African continent, and long, deep lakes like Turkana and Tanganyika (earth’s second deepest lake), and shallower lakes like Nakuru and Naivasha are previews of an Atlantic-sized ocean that will one day split Africa into two.