Your guide on a Masai Mara photography tour is not a mind reader. They know the Mara better than almost any human alive — which lion pride has cubs this week, where the cheetah family has been hunting, when the river crossing is likely to build. But they do not know whether you want a leopard in a tree at golden hour, a river crossing sequence, or a wide environmental cheetah portrait against the open plains unless you tell them. Most photographers arrive, get in the vehicle, and wait. The guide does their job — gets them to animals — and the animals may not be the right animals, at the right light, in the right moment, because the guide was never briefed on the photographer’s creative priorities.
The fix takes three minutes before every drive. Tell your guide what species you most want that morning, what you didn’t get yesterday that you’re still chasing, and what light condition matters most to you right now. Say it clearly: “I want a cheetah hunt sequence — can we prioritise the open plains this morning?” or “I didn’t get a leopard yesterday — is there a known area we should revisit?” or “I need the river crossing — what’s the crossing likelihood today?” That three-minute brief turns your guide from a driver into an active creative collaborator. At Mara Siligi Camp, guide briefings before every drive are built into the structure of every Masai Mara photography tour package — not as an optional extra, but as a standard part of how each morning begins. The creative output difference between a guided brief and a passive departure is visible in the images by day two.

