
Riding horses across the Masai Mara, a large reserve park in Southwestern Kenya, is something I’d love to do. Paying $5,675 plus $875 for the single supplement is something I really don’t want to do. And won’t.
In this case, even if I were spared the single supplement, I wouldn’t shell out close to $6,000 for an eight-day vacation. But it is fun to dream about. For those who have the bucks, Cross Country International, the company that offers it, promotes itself to single travelers:
"Many
of our customers travel alone. Many of our riders are single. This is a
great way to meet other people and just be yourself."
(They seem to have left off the "well-to-do" between "meet other" and "people.")
I’ve never been to Africa. It would be amazing to go horseback riding and visit a wild animal reserve and meet with the local Masai at Acacia Camp, a game-viewing area.
But some things simply are out of reach. For now. (Who says a bag packed with $1,000 bills couldn’t fall on my head tomorrow?)
Still, I give the company credit for understanding the needs of solo travelers. It offers to tell solo travelers
the composition of the group for any specific week. It also puts together "singles only" vacations. When it
comes right down to it, the only thing missing, for me, is a hefty
checking account.

But I’m not going to argue those prices. Maintaining
and transporting horses is an expensive business. So are most "comfortable" trips to game reserves in Africa. Who am I to say
what a trip like that is worth?
I could save up and make it my one big
trip for, say, the next three-to-five years. But I’d prefer to visit many
different places. And I can, if I travel inexpensively.
Have you ever been on an expensive trip like this?
Would you tell us what you loved about it so we can drool? Or, alternatively, tell us why you’d never spend your money on such a
thing.
Photos from wikimedia commons by:
1. Whit Welles
2. Paul Mannix
3. Dan Lundberg
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