“Mozambique is one of the most underrated and exciting destinations. It’s a place where you can experience raw wilderness. For example, Gorongosa is three-and-a-half times the size of the Maasai Mara and yet it has only 32 commercial beds! That sort of exclusivity is rare, and there is some seriously good game viewing. It’s an especially good place to see wild dogs, which are the apex predators here,” shares Suzanne Bayly, Managing Director of Classic Portfolio.

For travellers who value more than just comfort and exclusivity, we share two regenerative travel experiences In Mozambique, curated by Classic Portfolio. Regenerative travel aims to actively improve the places we visit. It’s a philosophy of leaving a destination better than you found it: restoring ecosystems, uplifting local communities, and giving you, the travellers, a chance to leave a positive legacy.

Encountering pangolins in Gorongosa National Park
Gorongosa National Park in central Mozambique has undergone one of Africa’s most inspiring conservation recoveries. Mozambique’s civil war and the resultant poaching caused devastation to this area, but since 2004, a concentrated restoration project has resulted in a magnificent resurgence of wildlife populations.

Perhaps one of the most poignant symbols of that revival is the presence of pangolins, the shy, scaly mammals, which are also unfortunately among the most trafficked animals in the world. In recent years, conservation teams have rescued and rehabilitated over 150 pangolins and reintroduced them into secure wild habitats in Gorongosa.

If you visit the park for five nights or more, you have the opportunity to join the Pangolin Project on the morning foraging walk. A team of vets and rangers take pangolins, which are in the process of being rehabilitated, to different parts of the park every day. Pangolins are nocturnal and notoriously elusive, yet through the Pangolin Project, you can spend an hour walking alongside them. While you can’t touch the pangolins, you’ll witness something incredibly rare in the wild and enjoy exceptional photographic opportunities as they feed and explore.

Guides deeply versed in pangolin behaviour, ecology, and conservation will share the story of their rescue work, their survival prospects, and the park’s broader restoration efforts. Through your visit, you support ranger patrols, habitat protection, and the ongoing rehabilitation work. In regenerative-travel terms: you’re not just a spectator, you’re a contributor.

Seeing dugongs off the Bazaruto Islands
If Gorongosa is a testament to the restoration of Africa’s terrestrial heartlands, then the turquoise seascape of the Bazaruto Archipelago, off Mozambique, tells a similar story for the ocean. The protected marine area is among the last viable strongholds for a rare and vulnerable marine mammal, the dugong, also known as the “sea cow.” Dugongs rely entirely on seagrass for food and the conservation of seagrass beds that run from the northern islands of the Bazuruto Archipelago to the south around Azura Benguerra is a critical part of ensuring their survival.

“I’ve been going to the Bazuruto Archipelago since the 1990s and for years it was as if the dugong was a mythical creature, like a unicorn. I hadn’t seen them. However, since 2016, I’ve seen dugongs each year when I return. And although I’ve never seen a juvenile, recently, the owner of Azuru Benguerra Island was on Peri Peri Beach and spotted a baby dugong in the water!” shares Suzanne.

“Another exciting conservation project is the seahorse restoration project, which takes place in the same seagrass beds. Little flag markers are placed in areas where seahorses have been spotted and then at low tide, you can wade out in water that’s about thigh high and see the seahorses!”

Over recent decades, unsustainable fishing practices, habitat destruction and loss of seagrass meadows have decimated dugong populations along much of the East African coast. However, thanks to the management efforts of African Parks, which co-manages the marine reserve, and concerted conservation law enforcement efforts that include regular patrols, community engagement, and monitoring, the Bazaruto Archipelago remains a marine refuge. 

In 2024, a pioneering satellite-tagging project was launched to monitor dugong movements, their feeding grounds and migration corridors, which is a critical step to ensuring their survival. 

Guests staying at Azura Benguerra (and other luxury spots in Bazaruto) can look for the shy, elusive dugong from boats or kayaks. In the quiet seagrass meadows off Benguerra or Santa Carolina, you may catch one drifting peacefully through the clear water. Sightings are rare, but seeing a dugong in the wild is a true privilege. By choosing protected-area lodges and responsible operators, you support marine conservation, help local communities, and play a small part in safeguarding this unusual creature’s future.

Both Gorongosa’s pangolin rescue-and-release programme and Bazaruto’s dugong-protection efforts are active, ongoing initiatives which embody regenerative travel. When you choose these lodges, your stay directly supports real restoration and luxury travel becomes stewardship rather than consumerism.

What better way to unwind, and rejuvenate yourself than by enjoying regenerative travel that allows you to move beyond admiring Africa’s beauty to actively protecting it? And if Mozambique is calling, a bush-and-beach journey might be the most meaningful way to answer. If so, we’d love to help you plan a trip like this, ensuring seamless logistics and a holiday tailor-made to suit your needs. Reply to this email, and we’ll happily answer any questions you have.

Because true luxury in 2026 won’t just be about how soft the sheets are, or how blue the sea is. It will be about what you leave behind.

Happy travelling,

The Leopard Team

P.S. Read ‘Discovering Mozambique: A Family Adventure in Paradise’ on our blog or watch ‘Zanzibar vs Bazaruto, which is best?’ on our YouTube channel.

P.P.S Watch the Pangolin Project in action.

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    Crafting your ideal holiday can be a time consuming exercise, especially if you don’t know the region well, or you’re travelling in a group (like a multi-generation family holiday, or for a special celebration). We take your requirements and then distill and simplify all the travel info into a perfect itinerary for you. You’re welcome to be involved in the planning process as much, or as little, as you like.

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    We curate each journey for you. Every itinerary is handcrafted to ensure that it matches perfectly with your wishes. We tailor each itinerary so every detail feels perfect. From breathtaking beaches to adventurous safaris, spectacular views, hotels and knowledgeable guides.

    Jessica Maitland-Stuart
    Brand Identity Designer
    Jessica is an accomplished strategic brand designer known for her typography and concept-led design approach. She used these finely-honed skills to develop Leopard’s branding and continues to design each of our personalised client itineraries.

    Jessica’s design philosophy focuses on collaborating with clients and building successful working relationships with small start-ups that share her drive to make an impact through the work she produces. That means her design doesn’t end with the artwork; extending into production to find ways of reducing both cost and environmental impact in symmetry with the design.

    Jessica is an avid runner, winning multiple marathons and ultras, a wife and mother of two, and she holds a BA degree in Brand Communication. She was recognised by the International Society of Typographic Designers and founded her own studio in 2007. Her company, Garage East (inspired by the ‘garagistes’ of France), is driven by the pursuit of meticulous craftsmanship.
    Hailey-Rose Kirsten
    Social Media
    Hailey-Rose lives in Cape Town and loves the city she grew up in. When she’s not working, she loves trying restaurants in beautiful locations (she has a ‘no eating in a shopping mall’ policy – if she can help it). She loves walking in nature and swimming in the ocean. (You may even find her occasionally taking a dip in the middle of winter).

    Hailey-Rose helps Leopard execute its social media strategy. She gathers relevant images and video content and publishes Leopard’s posts along with catchy audio. She keeps on top of Instagram trends and works with Elise to bring Leopard’s social media to life, keeping it in alignment with the Leopard brand.
    Elise Kirsten
    Digital Strategist
    Elise is passionate about travel and storytelling, like the rest of the Leopard team. She was the former online editor of Getaway magazine, South Africa’s oldest travel publication, and since 2020 has worked as a freelance travel journalist, helping brands and organisations in the travel sector to communicate with clarity and purpose.

    At Leopard, Elise helps to shape the company’s digital strategy and brings her writing expertise to life by alternating with Diana to pen newsletters, social content and website features.

    Married to her straight‑out‑of‑high‑school sweetheart and a proud mother of two adult daughters, Elise loves wide open spaces. When she’s not behind her desk, you’ll find her travelling, hiking, mountain biking or exploring the ocean — always chasing the next remarkable story.
    Caitlin Sidebottom
    Journey Support Specialist
    Growing up in Johannesburg, fondly known as the “City of Gold”, Caitlin was privileged to explore diverse destinations across South Africa, from game reserves to the warm shores of KwaZulu-Natal. She also treasures memories of visiting family in Vumba, Zimbabwe, where she loved being immersed in nature and the sense of freedom it brought. “I was awestruck when I visited both Victoria Falls and the Great Zimbabwe Ruins,” she recalls.

    Married with two small children, Caitlin enjoys spending time in nature, with friends, running, swimming and scuba diving. She describes her career as “meandering and colourful”. With a background in psychology and social development, she has worked as both a researcher and a counsellor. While moving into tourism seemed like a big shift, she soon discovered a clear continuity. "Travel can help people encounter life-giving experiences that reveal what it means to truly thrive and have the potential to influence how you live after returning home," says Caitlin.

    At Leopard, Caitlin supports the sales team to ensure every client enjoys a seamless experience. She also supports travellers while on the road, helps refine systems and processes, plans events, works closely with Leopard’s suppliers and conducts site inspections. Caitlin is passionate about tailoring each experience to fit you perfectly, so you can focus on the stories and memories you’ll take home.
    Pilar Peña
    Travel Designer | Spanish
    Pilar grew up in Marbella, in the south of Spain, known, much like Africa, for its sunshine. She moved to Johannesburg in 2013, and after more than a decade of living in Africa, she says that she feels her heart is half South African.

    When she arrived in South Africa, Pilar worked as a journalist and covered many big news stories for a newspaper and radio station in Spain. She considers it an amazing period of her life in Africa, but she wanted to embrace something different.

    Between working and being dedicated to raising her family, she travelled through southern Africa. During this time, her love for Africa, its sunsets, people, culture and landscapes continued to grow. Pilar wanted to share ‘the preciousness of this country and continent with everyone’. Now, as part of Leopard, she can do that.

    As a Spanish speaker, she works with the Spanish and Latin American markets and feels she is a true ambassador for South Africa. At Leopard, she works with clients to create a bespoke, tailor-made itinerary, where each day in Africa forms part of a perfectly dreamy trip. Pilar says that everyone should get to experience the magic of Africa.
    Helen du Toit
    Finance Manager
    Until the age of three, Helen lived in a little stone cottage in the Kyle Game Reserve, in Zimbabwe until she and her family relocated to the Kariba Dam on the great Zambezi River. Here, Helen’s father managed a Fisheries Research Institute and she grew up immersed in a culture of tourism. She also spent many Sunday afternoons in the bush observing wildlife with her family.

    Helen moved to South Africa in the early ’80s and after leaving school, she entered the travel industry. She travelled to many countries for business research and later became a specialist in travel to South America, which she visited numerous times.

    Her husband’s work required the family to settle in the little town of Mtunzini, a beautiful spot on the north coast of KwaZulu-Natal, where she took a job in the finance department at the local school. This began a chapter in Helen’s life that prepared her for corporate finance. Later, Helen worked as an imports and exports administrator and then as treasurer for a large multinational company in Johannesburg while undertaking post-graduate studies in Corporate Governance and Administration.

    When she and her family moved back to Durban, Helen worked as a bursar of a large private school. She was delighted to be living near the ocean again and couldn’t resist getting her open-water diving certificate, as her son was a scuba diving instructor. Helen’s love of adventure and creation has been a constant theme throughout her life.

    She was delighted to return to the travel industry and joined Leopard in September 2022 as a finance manager.
    Daphnée Filliette
    Senior Travel Designer | French and English
    Daphnée was born in Lille, in the Hauts-de-France region of France. A passionate traveller, she has lived and worked in several countries around the world.

    She first worked in the United States, where she has family, then moved to England to complete a Master’s in International Marketing, and later to Oceania, where she tried “WWOOFing” — working on a farm in exchange for room and board. Along the way, she met a great love in Paris, who would later become her husband, and this brought her back to France to find work and start a family.

    Daphnée began her career in fashion marketing and, in 2012, created her own fashion brand, managing all aspects of building a business.

    In 2016, Daphnée and her family had the wonderful opportunity to live in South Africa. “The question didn’t even arise — let’s go, that was obvious!” she recalls. Since then, they have welcomed three children and are enjoying life in Johannesburg.

    Daphnée has worked in the tourism industry for 10 years, specialising in Africa. Her favourite countries include Kenya and Namibia, though she also fell in love with Madagascar and Botswana. Her next adventure will be to Zambia.
    Diana Granoux
    Founder | Senior Travel Designer
    Diana was born in Zimbabwe and started her life on the banks of the great Lake Kariba. She moved to South Africa when she was a toddler and grew up in Kwa-Zulu Natal. Diana has vivid memories of long winter holidays spent camping in Zimbabwe, Namibia, Botswana and South Africa with her family. Her parents loved the bush and her father started his own tour operating company in 1992. He was an early pioneering specialist in bird watching safaris in South Africa.

    As she grew up, Diana became aware of the big, wide world outside of the African countries she knew so well, and she took her first solo overseas trip at age 14 to London to visit her father’s family. From that moment she became fascinated with experiencing the world beyond what she knew. Diana has since travelled extensively through Africa, Europe, America and Asia.

    Diana is married to a Frenchman and has two young kids, who are simultaneously developing a love for biltong & braai’s, and baguettes & brie. After 16 years gaining valuable experience working for big corporates in South Africa, Diana decided to follow her passion for travel and start Leopard. Diana has had the privilege of planning holidays for American celebrities, European royalty and high-net-worth individuals as well as regular folks who want to do a trip of a lifetime to Africa.

    She wants to create, with Leopard, a company that gives customers something unique: a curated experience of Africa, made especially for them. She says, “From the moment they arrive in Africa, to the moment they depart, I want them to have a seamless experience. I want them to enjoy the best the continent has to offer, leaving with memories that last a lifetime.”