The strongest images from a Masai Mara photo safari are almost never captured during the initial sighting. They happen in the five seconds after — when the lion stands and begins walking directly toward the vehicle, when the cheetah shifts its weight and breaks into a sprint, when two cubs suddenly interact in the grass. Photographers trained to react to sightings consistently miss these moments. They nail the animal standing still, then freeze or scramble when behaviour changes. The Mara’s animals are habituated to vehicles. They walk up to you. They interact in front of you. The opportunity is not the sighting — the sighting is the beginning of the opportunity.
Anticipation is a learnable skill, not a talent. It starts with reading the animal’s body language — ears, tail, and eyes signal intent 10 to 15 seconds before movement happens. It continues with a pre-planned reframe: if the animal walks left, switch to portrait orientation; if it charges, stay wide. It requires keeping a second body or wide zoom on the seat rather than in the bag — access time matters at 1/1000s. And it improves significantly when you ask your guide what the animal is about to do, because after years of watching this specific ecosystem, they will often know. Mara Siligi Camp builds anticipation training into its Masai Mara photography tour programme through guide briefings, on-drive coaching, and evening reviews that specifically analyse what photographers saw versus what they captured — and why the gap exists. Closing that gap is where the portfolio-level images come from.

