Head south into the Rift Valley
Most travelers think of the Rift Valley as the stretch north of Nairobi, home to popular spots like Lake Naivasha with its boat trips and gardens or Lake Nakuru’s wildlife-filled national park. But heading south reveals an equally fascinating, far less visited side of the Great Rift.
The first stop is Whistling Thorns, a laid-back lodge that feels like an English Lake District youth hostel — except here, ostriches and gazelles replace the sheep. Continuing down the dramatic escarpment, you’ll reach Olorgasailie, an important prehistoric site scattered with ancient stone tools, offering budget-friendly camping and cottages. Further south, the surreal soda lakes of Lake Magadi come into view, where a factory town thrives alongside flamingo-filled waters, natural hot springs, and a public swimming pool perfect for cooling off.
For those looking beyond the usual tourist trail, this stretch of the Rift Valley is one of the best places to visit in Kenya, offering history, wildlife, and striking landscapes without the crowds.
Explore the north in a 4x4
If you have a week, you can rent a Land Rover or Land Cruiser and head north. The fast and empty new road from Isiolo to Merille (halfway from Isiolo to Marsabit) is a dream to drive, with a magnificent landscape of rocky buttes breaking the horizon. Three hours past tarmac’s end, Mount Marsabit – an old “shield volcano” emerging out of the desert – is swathed in thick forest surrounding hidden crater lakes. You can camp here, or there’s a basic lodge.
The town of Marsabit itself is a cultural melting pot, as is the whole eastern flank of Lake Turkana. The drive to the lake, through the remote mission station and trading post of North Horr, is a great adventure – across stony wastes and through nomadic pastoral communities where camels tend to have right of way. For those seeking off-grid Kenya travel tips, this region offers some of the most rewarding routes in the country.
If you have only a day or two with a 4x4, you could travel between Thika and Naivasha, just north of Nairobi, along a rarely used forest track where elephants push trees across the road. Take a winch and an axe – and a healthy sense of caution. For adventurous road trippers, these kinds of routes are what make Kenya travel tips worth reading twice.