Why British parents teach their kids to a wild safari from 6 months
Why British parents teach their kids to a wild safari from 6 months

Video: Why British parents teach their kids to a wild safari from 6 months

Video: Why British parents teach their kids to a wild safari from 6 months
Video: ПРЕМЬЕРА НА КАНАЛЕ 2022! ЗАБЫТЫЕ ВОЙНЫ / FORGOTTEN WARS. Все серии. Докудрама (English Subtitles) - YouTube 2024, November
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Natalie and Will Barrad-Lucas from England took their children on safari when they were not yet a year old. They took their daughter with them when she was only 6 months old, and they showed their son Africa at 9 months. The couple travels to African countries every year and are seriously thinking about moving there, as "life is easier there." "In an African village, you feel a support among the people that the UK has long gone."

Annual safaris
Annual safaris

Natalie and Will are both 35 years old and a doctor and he is a wildlife photographer. They met while studying in London, learning that both love to travel. In 2010, the couple got married and went on their honeymoon to Zambia. And later they moved there altogether, since Natalie found a job there in a hospital.

The couple is thinking about moving to Africa forever
The couple is thinking about moving to Africa forever

Not everyone will decide to move to Africa, and for Will and Natalie it was a joy. Where other people feel that there are too few comforts or too difficult, Natalie and Will found their romance and their pros. Will had to make his photography hobby a full-time job - he became a frequent visitor to African national parks, photographing local animals. Natalie worked in shifts that often lasted 30 hours.

Natalie and Will teach their children to be in the wild from a very young age
Natalie and Will teach their children to be in the wild from a very young age

“Of course, I had a tremor before moving from England to Zambia, I didn't know what to expect. The hospital provided us with a small house in a village called Katete, seven hours from the capital. The nearest supermarket was an hour away, but there were small local markets. We often lost electricity, had no internet, no hot water, had an old bathroom, but no shower. But among all these minor difficulties, there were pluses. Life is much easier there."

Natalie is sure that any child will like this life
Natalie is sure that any child will like this life

“In the evenings we spend time together. They sat by the fire under a mango tree. It was an idyllic time in many ways. It was a real detox from all screens - for a whole year. We could not buy ready-made food, it always had to be cooked, and in times without electricity, we did it on fire. We collected water to wash ourselves."

Little babies did not stop the couple from attending the safari
Little babies did not stop the couple from attending the safari

When Natalie's contract for a year ended, the couple returned home to England and thought about starting a family. Their daughter Rosie was born in 2015, and Natalie traveled to Africa when she was already pregnant, and the next time she went when the girl was only six months old. Benji was born in 2017 and went with his parents at the age of 9 months for a full two months in Africa.

Natalie and Will with their children
Natalie and Will with their children

“I truly believe that most kids would love to see elephants pass your car or baboons play in the trees. Children like to swarm about on the ground, looking at bugs, toads and chameleons. On safari, children are under our constant attention, and during these trips we disconnect from the outside world and focus on each other."

Natalie likes to live in Africa more than in England, because life is easier there
Natalie likes to live in Africa more than in England, because life is easier there

Natalie now works as a deputy general practitioner at her home in England, allowing her to take long vacations to travel. Traveling constantly to Africa, Natalie eventually decided to start her own account on Instagram and began to post photos from her family's travels there. In addition to talking about her life in Africa, Natalie also talks about the need to preserve wildlife.

Children on safari
Children on safari

Right now, the couple are in Kenya, where Will is finishing one of his photography projects. And while the couple is seriously discussing the possibility of moving from prosperous England to a simpler life in Africa.“Life in Zambia has changed me,” Natalie admits. - I became more grateful for what I have, I realized how short our life is. I realized how lucky I was and how little can overshadow the joy of a positive mindset and hard work."

Natalie in Africa
Natalie in Africa

“Living in the countryside of Kenya and Zambia is not easy, even difficult when compared to England, but they have mutual support that we have long forgotten in the UK. I enjoyed watching Zambians take care of each other in the hospital. A relative or friend stayed with the patient all the time - he slept next to him, fed him, washed him. I would like people in England to help each other like that. I am glad that my children can see how different people can live”.

See what life in Africa might look like in our review titled "Only in Africa".

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