Lamu-licious

3 October 2017 | East Africa Travel |

Reading Time: 3 MINUTES

Shannon Davis journeyed to Lamu with her family and friends and shares her do’s and don’ts for how to have the best time relaxing, exploring and enjoying all that the lovely little island has to offer

So the adventures of the Daviii continue (there are now three of us hence the triple ‘i’s). With baby P in tow, we set out on a long-awaited adventure to the Northern Coast of Kenya and the lovely island of Lamu. Simply put, for a good time in Lamu follow these simple do’s and don’ts:

Shela Beach

 

DO: Book a villa with a view (or guest house, or resort) – our preference is Shela, a small village 3km south of Lamu town: quiet and relaxing; close access to the beautiful beach just south of the town that stretches for miles; and with the Fort sitting at the gateway. Best time for blue tides? October through March.

Fort-Lamu

 

DO: Go to Lamu Town via Uber Boat Taxi – or any dhow taxi for that matter. Plan on spending the day to see the Lamu Museum, the Lamu Fort, and refuel at Seafront Café. Their Lime and Passion Fruit Juice hits the spot on a hot sticky day.

Uber Dhow

 

DON’T: Walk to Lamu Town from Shela after 10h00. The walk, although interesting, becomes clammy and sweaty! A dhow taxi is quick and supports the local community.

Seafood on Dhow

 

DO: Chat to the islanders – they know the drill. Our taxi driver, Asif, hooked us up for an amazing dhow sunset sail complete with his mom’s fish samosas.

A-day-on-a-dhow

 

DO: A full day sail with a stop at Manda Toto Island for lunch. Fresh fish caught then and there and grilled up for you. If you’re a twitcher like Tyler, be sure to bring your binos. Side trip for birders – stop at Manda Island to tick off the endemic Manda Boubou.

Relaxing in Lamu

 

DO: Book Magic Mercie to come to your villa for an amazing massage. With hands of gold, you will be jello before the end of an hour and oh-so-relaxed.

Donkeys-and-doors

 

DO: Wander through Shela and Lamu – snap as many donkey selfies as you can and every carved door is a beauty. The design in and around the buildings is exquisite. A mix of new and old.

SeaFrontCafe

 

DO: Eat all the seafood you can – crab, lobster, prawns, fish – you name it and all freshly caught daily. Heaps of good places on the island (our recommendation: Peponi) and many vacation houses come with a chef – what more do you need?

SeaTurtle

 

DO: Stumble into meeting a turtle researcher and witness a hatching of sea turtles making their way to the ocean.

Perin-in-Lamu

 

DON’T: Schedule too much. Do nothing and relax – be a beach bum and enjoy the sea or a good book or a nap.

A Shela Sunset

 

FILED UNDER: East Africa Travel
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AUTHOR: Shannon Davis

Shannon was one half of the Regional Director team that started the lodge (Tyler was the other). Shan has not, as far as is known, acquired a taste for chai, mbuzi or ugali but probably misses it in America nevertheless. Her addiction for Kenyan coffee still has no bounds.

COMMENTS (3)
Annette Nagni
October 4, 2017

An amazing article Shan; such a stunning place!! Love the photos especially the ones of your sweet little angel!!!

REPLY
Bunny
October 16, 2017

Lovely recommendations. We will try and get there and now know the form x

REPLY
Emma
March 20, 2018

Great blog Shannon, thank you! Very fond of Lamu.

REPLY
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