
Tanzania 2025
Located in northern Tanzania, the Serengeti National Park is one of the most iconic and spectacular ecosystems in the world. Famous for hosting the Great Migration — the largest land-based animal movement on the planet — this park is home to more than 1.5 million wildebeest, hundreds of thousands of zebras, and thousands of predators such as lions, leopards, hyenas, and cheetahs.
This page is a visual celebration of pride life — an intimate photographic journey into the world of lions. Through images captured in their natural habitat, we explore the complexity, strength, and tenderness that define these majestic social felines. Each photograph reveals a moment of connection — between mothers and cubs, between siblings, between leaders — and invites us to witness, with respect and wonder, the wild heart of Africa.
01
Amid the vastness of the Serengeti, the kopjes — ancient granite formations that rise like islands from the savanna — are much more than geological features: they are strategic strongholds essential to the lives of lion prides.
Over time, many prides have established themselves around specific kopjes, using them as centers of identity and legacy. One such group is the Zebra Kopjes Pride, a resident pride in the eastern Serengeti led by the powerful coalition of Grumpy Boy and Pretty Boy. From their granite stronghold, they maintain dominance over the surrounding plains and raise new generations beneath the shelter of the rocks.
In the eastern Serengeti, understanding the role of kopjes is essential to understanding lion ecology. They are invisible pillars of the wild balance, where every rock holds the silent history of pride life.
02
In the remote plains of Namiri, where the wind sweeps across tall grass and kopjes rise like ancient fortresses, Pretty Boy moves with a quiet, steady grace. The inseparable brother of Grumpy, he forms part of a powerful male coalition that dominates the territory around Zebra Kopje, one of the most strategic areas in the Eastern Serengeti.
Unlike Grumpy’s rough temperament, Pretty Boy stands out for his calm demeanor and natural elegance. With a lighter mane and a slightly slimmer build, his nickname reflects not just his appearance, but also the composed way he navigates the landscape. Yet beneath that quiet exterior lies a strong, territorial, and determined lion.
03
At dawn, while the savanna still held the quiet of the night, three lionesses from the Semetu Pride emerged from the tall grasses, leaving their cubs well hidden and protected. With agile steps and coordinated focus, they began their morning hunt across the Namiri Plains, where survival depends on timing and precision.
Within minutes, an unsuspecting gazelle was brought down in a perfectly executed ambush. As the lionesses began to suffocate the prey, a shadow appeared in the distance—about a hundred meters away—moving swiftly through the grass: a male from the Saba Bora coalition, one of the territory’s dominant lions.
04
The lionesses of Semetu play a vital role in the group’s dynamics: they hunt cooperatively, raise their cubs together, and maintain a strong social structure. Among the kopjes and dense vegetation, they hide their young from potential threats, taking turns in guarding and resting.
05
In the soft blue-grey light of morning, a lion walks directly toward us, his stride steady and gaze unwavering. He is one of the five males from the Saba Bora coalition, the dominant males of the Semetu Pride, and responsible for the fall of Bob Junior. The light is present but not yet direct, casting a quiet clarity across the landscape that defines the edges of his mane and the tension in his moving body.
06
During my trip to Tanzania and Zanzibar, I had the opportunity to photograph other wild animals, both from the savannah and the coral reefs.







