The most memorable wildlife encounters do not always happen on a guided game drive or behind the gates of a reserve, but on the open road between various places, writes Lee-Ann Steyn.
Eric Kilby/Wikimedia Commons
The journey is where the wild still surprises you
There is a quiet assumption in travel that wildlife experiences begin at the lodge gate or park entrance. You drive with purpose, eyes fixed on the destination, mentally switching into safari mode only once you arrive. But across Africa, some of the most authentic wildlife moments unfold in transit, on dusty back roads, tarred highways, mountain passes and floodplain crossings where animals move freely through human space.
These are not sightings you plan for. They happen when you least expect them. A giraffe stepping onto the road at sunrise. A convoy of elephants is bringing traffic to a standstill. A line of vultures circling above the road, hinting at unseen drama just beyond the verge. The in-between moments are fleeting, unscripted and often more emotionally powerful than anything on a checklist.
Why wildlife moments should not be missed between destinations
When wildlife appears between destinations, it feels different. There is no radio call, no guide framing the moment, and no vehicle lineup. The encounter feels personal, almost private.
Animals moving between habitats are engaged in real-life behaviour. They are migrating, foraging, protecting young or simply crossing terrain that predates modern roads. These moments strip wildlife encounters down to their rawest form. You are not visiting the wild. You are passing through it.
For self-drivers, overland travellers and slow road trippers, these moments become the stories that linger long after the journey ends. They are the reason you remember a road as vividly as a lodge.
South Africa’s iconic in-between wildlife roads
A white-fronted bee-eater at H4-1 Road, west of Lower Sabie, Kruger NP, Mpumalanga/Bernard DUPONT/Wikimedia Commons
Kruger to Blyde River Canyon
The road linking the Kruger Lowveld to the Blyde River Canyon is one of South Africa’s richest in-between wildlife corridors. Kudu and impala frequently graze along the roadside, particularly in the early morning. Troops of baboons patrol the tar with impressive confidence, and at certain times of year, carmine and white-fronted bee-eaters flash colour from telephone wires.
This stretch is a reminder that the Greater Kruger ecosystem does not end at the park fence. Wildlife flows outward, adapting to farms, rivers and road verges with remarkable resilience.
Northern Cape back roads and Kgalagadi approaches
A bat-eared fox in the Northern Cape/Derek Keats from Johannesburg, South Africa/Wikimedia Commons
Long, empty roads in the Northern Cape are punctuated by sudden life. Springbok herds appear like mirages across the plains, while kori bustards and secretary birds stride through roadside grasslands with prehistoric elegance. Near the Kgalagadi, bat-eared foxes and black-backed jackals are often spotted trotting parallel to vehicles at dawn.
The stillness of the landscape amplifies every sighting. One animal can feel monumental.
Botswana’s slow-moving wildlife highways
A group of Lechwes/H.Zell/Wikimedia Commons
Maun to Moremi and Khwai access routes
In Botswana, the road itself often becomes part of the safari. The sand tracks between Maun, Moremi and Khwai are shared spaces where wildlife dictates the pace. Elephant families cross without urgency, sometimes pausing mid-road to dust bathe or nurse calves. Lechwe graze in flooded verges, while red lechwe and impala weave through mopane woodland.
These roads reward patience. The slower you move, the more nature reveals itself.
Namibia’s wide-open wildlife encounters
Oryx gazella (Gemsbok)/ near Wolfsnes, Western Etosha/© Hans Hillewaert/Wikimedia Commons
Windhoek to Etosha
Namibia’s vastness creates a different kind of wildlife moment. Oryx and springbok are often spotted silhouetted against endless horizons, while warthogs dart across roads with comical urgency. Kori bustards, among the heaviest flying birds in the world, patrol roadside grasslands with regal indifference.
The long distances between destinations heighten awareness. You learn to scan constantly, knowing that life can emerge from the emptiness at any moment.
ALSO READ: Africa’s quiet safari seasons and why off-peak travel matters
East Africa’s everyday wildlife crossings
Kirk’s dik-dik in Kenya/© Giles Laurent, gileslaurent.com/Wikimedia Commons
Nairobi to Maasai Mara
The journey from Nairobi to the Maasai Mara is a masterclass in transitional ecosystems. Baboons sit casually on guardrails, dik-diks vanish into roadside scrub, and giraffes appear in open farmland where wild and cultivated landscapes blur together.
These sightings underscore a fundamental truth about East Africa. Wildlife does not exist in isolation from people. It coexists, adapts and persists along shared routes.
The wildlife moments no one puts on a checklist
Not every in-between encounter involves iconic megafauna. Some of the most memorable moments are quieter and easily overlooked.
Bushbuck slipping through misty tea farms en route to Eastern Cape reserves. A honey badger illuminated briefly by headlights on a remote Northern Cape road. Raptors diving dramatically toward roadkill on desolate stretches where the sky feels impossibly big.
These are the sights travellers rarely photograph well and seldom forget.
How to spot wildlife while travelling between destinations
Slow down and stay alert
Wildlife is most active at dawn and dusk, which also happens to be when many travellers are on the move. Driving slower during these hours increases your chances of spotting animals and reduces the risk of collisions.
Watch for signs, not just animals
Circling vultures, nervous antelope or birds suddenly lifting from the verge often signal something happening nearby. Learning to read the landscape turns the road itself into a guide.
Use pull-offs and viewpoints wisely
Stopping safely at lookout points allows time to scan without disrupting traffic or wildlife. Binoculars are invaluable for roadside viewing.
Respect boundaries
Never approach animals on foot outside protected areas. Avoid feeding wildlife and remain inside your vehicle when animals are nearby. These encounters are special precisely because they are unforced.
The stories that stay with you
The wildlife moments that happen between destinations reshape how we think about travel. They remind us that wildness is not confined to parks or schedules. It exists in the margins, in the pauses, in the spaces we usually rush through.
Sometimes, the road is not just a means of getting somewhere. It is the experience itself.
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