Three days on Lamu Island — Kenya's slow corner, where the language is Kiswahili, the pace is polepole (slowly, slowly), and the welcome is karibu sana. UNESCO World Heritage since 2001. No cars — only punda (donkeys) on the narrow lanes. Nyumba za mawe (stone houses) from the 14th century with hand-carved milango (doors). Majahazi (dhow boats) under hand-stitched sails, unchanged since the trade winds first brought Arab and Persian merchants in the 9th century. Stay in a restored merchant's house in Shela or the Mji wa Kale (Old Town), sail at sunset, and walk a labyrinth of lanes that hasn't changed in 700 years.
"No cars, no schedule, donkey hooves on stone, call to prayer at dusk, dhow sail by moonlight. We extended by two days."
"Sleeping on the rooftop of a 17th-century merchant's house, lit by stars, was the most romantic night of our marriage."
Lamu Island has been stable since 2014 with strong security presence. We avoid the mainland (Lamu county) entirely. Travel advisories rate the island itself fine; we'll confirm at booking.
Yes — fly LAU → Mombasa (MBA), then 1-hr transfer south. Diani has the resort comfort Lamu deliberately lacks. +3 nights from $890/pp.
December–March is peak (calm seas, dry). November is the cultural festival. Avoid April–June long rains.