About Bahari Adventures

About Bahari Adventures

Watamu through the eyes of two people deeply connected to it

A project shaped by the mangrove, local life and a more naturalist approach to Watamu.

Our story

How Bahari started

Bahari Adventures

Bahari Adventures was created by two people who met in Watamu and slowly built the project together. One grew up alongside the creek, the mangrove and the rhythm of the coast, with the kind of local knowledge that comes from living in a place for years. The other brought a background in biology and field experience across different coastal ecosystems. Together, those two perspectives naturally shaped the way Bahari Adventures approaches the mangrove today.

Over time, those perspectives naturally came together. We both learn from the field, from observation, from conversations and from time spent in the mangrove itself. Bahari Adventures grew out of that shared curiosity and a common way of experiencing and discovering this place.

Bahari Adventures started from a simple idea: creating the kind of experiences we ourselves wanted to find in Watamu. Slow walks through the mangrove, a more naturalist way of understanding the ecosystem, and experiences that feel personal, relaxed and accessible in both French and English.

On the ground

What people often remember most

The thing about the mangrove is that it’s alive in ways you can’t really predict. You’ll be walking through the water, talking about the trees or the tides, and suddenly a group of baboons moves through the canopy above you, branches shaking as they pass.

People rarely remember just one moment. It can be the silence of the creek, the light through the trees, baboons moving above the canopy, tiny creatures hidden in the roots, the way the mangrove moves with the tides, or simply the feeling of slowing down in a place where nature and local life still exist side by side.

Why this place

Why we built this around Mida Creek

Mida Creek is a mangrove ecosystem shaped entirely by the tides. Twice a day, the water rises and retreats, changing the channels, the movement of wildlife and the way the whole landscape feels.

Most tourism in Watamu happens around the beaches, the reef or out on the water. Far fewer people actually move through the mangrove itself. Yet it is one of the most alive, changing and surprising parts of the coastline.

Mida Creek mangrove

Come walk with us

Tell us your dates and what you're looking for. We'll guide you to the right experience.