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Today β€” 7 January 2025News

We paid $190 to go on an Uber Safari in South Africa. I'd totally recommend the service to anyone looking for a stress-free day trip.

7 January 2025 at 09:32
The writer Sharon Waugh holds a metal wine glass and smiles with a safari game reserve vehicle and desert area in the background
I tried out Uber Safari for the first time.

Sharon Waugh

  • Three friends and I paid about $190 for an Uber Safari experience in Cape Town, South Africa.
  • The flat rate covered a welcome drink, a buffet-style lunch, and the safari.
  • I thought the experience was a great value for the money, and I hope to do it again.

As someone who lives in South Africa, I'm no stranger to going on safari. However, I was intrigued when I heard I could reserve a safari ride through the Uber app, and decided to try it out to celebrate a friend's birthday.

The experience, called Uber Safari, is a limited-time service the company rolled out from October 2024 to January.

In this daylong experience, a driver picks up Uber passengers from anywhere in Cape Town and takes them to go on safari at Aquila Private Game Reserve in the Western Cape. Once at the reserve, the staff at Aquila provides welcome drinks, lunch, and, of course, the game drive.

The whole experience costs a flat rate of 3,550 South African rand, or about $190, for up to four people. I also paid an additional ZAR45 for tolls. Here's what the experience was like.

The Uber Safari was fully booked for a few weeks out.
A screenshot from the Uber app showing "safari," "trip," "courier," and "teens" options
I logged into the Uber app to book our safari experience.

Uber

The Uber Safari picks up passengers in Cape Town at 9:30 a.m. on Fridays and Saturdays.

I booked the first available date I saw about two months in advance but was able to move my reservation up a few weeks when I noticed a cancellation.

Our driver arrived just before 9:30 a.m. to pick us up.
The writer Sharon Waugh wears a black dress and smiles next to a white BMW with an Uber Safari sign on the side
We rode to Aquila in a white BMW X3.

Sharon Waugh

Our driver arrived at my home in Cape Town just before our 9:30 a.m. pickup time. He drove a white BMW X3, a luxury vehicle with leather seats and enough space for four passengers.Β 

We drove alongside a group of other Uber Safari vehicles on the way to Aquila.
Three Uber Safari vehicles parked next to the entrance of Aquila Wildlife Reserve next to a pond
We parked by other Uber Safari vehicles when we got to the game reserve.

Sharon Waugh

During our trip, we joined a convoy with other BMW X3s, all Uber Safari vehicles on their way to Aquila.

This game reserve is known for its array of wildlife and luxurious accommodations, such as a spa and on-site lodging. It's very popular, with many people visiting Aquila independently or as part of aΒ group tour.Β 

With Uber, we'd booked Aquila's "big five" safari β€” an experience where participants hope to see lions, leopards, elephants, buffalo, and rhinos.

Upon arriving at Aquila, we needed to sign forms and provide photo IDs.
An Aquila Reserve staff member stands at a black table with different cocktail ingredients and metal wine glasses in a grassy area
Once we signed our forms, we were greeted with welcome drinks.

Sharon Waugh

We signed indemnity forms at Aquila's entrance gate and were dropped off at the main reception area, where we were asked for photo IDs.

I was a little surprised since I didn't see that passengers would need to provide photo IDs on the Uber app, but fortunately, we all had some form of identification with us.Β 

Then, we were led to an outdoor area and greeted with a welcome drink of our choice β€” pink sparkling wine or carbonated apple juice.Β 

Before our safari, we were directed to Aquila's restaurant for a buffet-style lunch.
A dining room filled with square wooden tables and white cushioned chairs with circular lighting fixtures hanging down from a high ceiling
We ate lunch in the game reserve's restaurant.

Sharon Waugh

The buffet-style lunch had lots of food options, including hot meals like vegetarian lasagna, seafood hot pot, and oven-roasted chicken. We were also offered desserts like chocolate cake and crème brûlée.

I thought the food was delicious and a great value, considering it was included in the cost of our booking.

We boarded a game-drive vehicle for the safari portion of the trip.
A tan game drive safari vehicle in a desert area with hills and grass in the distance
We boarded a large game-drive vehicle along with other Uber Safari passengers.

Sharon Waugh

Just after 1 p.m., we boarded a large safari vehicle with the passengers we saw arriving in the other Uber Safari cars.

The open-air vehicle had a roof that provided some shade as we rode through the 10,000-hectare (about 24,710-acre) wildlife reserve.

We saw lions in their own separate enclosure.
The edge of a game safari vehicle as it passes by two lions laying on the grass in a game reserve
Lions were among the first animals we spotted.

Sharon Waugh

Lions can be hard to spot on an afternoon game drive, as they sleep most of the day and are usually active early in the morning and late in the afternoon. However, they were the first of the big five that we spotted.Β 

Our driver explained that Aquila's lions had been rescued from the canned-hunting industry, which means they had been bred in captivity to be hunted (a practice many wildlife organizations have deemed highly unethical).

Because these lions never learned to hunt or fend for themselves in the wild, Aquila's rangers care for them in an enclosure separate from the rest of the reserve.

We saw plenty of other animals during the rest of the game drive.
View from a safari vehicle of a herd of water buffalo in a desert area
We drove past water buffalo during the safari.

Sharon Waugh

The other animals on the property roamed freely around the reserve.Β 

We saw a range of animals, including elephants, rhinos, buffalo, ostriches, hippos, and zebras. Our guide did a great job educating us about the animals, their characteristics, and their behavior.

Our game drive ended two hours later at about 3:10 p.m. After a bathroom break and a quick browse through the gift shop, we boarded the same BMW X3 for our trip back to Cape Town, arriving just before 6 p.m.

Uber Safari was a great value, and I would do it again.
Selfie of the writer Sharon Waugh in the front passenger seat of an Uber Safari car with three of her friends in the backseat and one person giving two thumbs up
We had a blast during our Uber Safari experience.

Sharon Waugh

As someone who's traveled extensively, I feel that when you go on a trip with a tour guide, the experience starts as soon as you get in the vehicle. However, the Uber part of the experience was just that β€” a simple car ride.

Still, our driver was polite, professional, and friendly. Plus, the flat ZAR3,550 rate seems pretty reasonable for visitors, especially since our excursion covered two-hour Uber rides in each direction, lunch, and a game drive.

I would gladly try the experience again and have already recommended it to friends visiting from Canada. I just hope they take me with them.

Read the original article on Business Insider

How JPMorgan got to 5 days a week in the office — a timeline

7 January 2025 at 09:21
The outside of a JPMorgan office building.

Artur Widak/NurPhoto via Getty Images; Chelsea Jia Feng/BI

  • JPMorgan is gearing up to call its workers back to the office 5 days a week, Bloomberg reported.
  • The bank's CEO, Jamie Dimon, has been an outspoken critic of remote work.
  • See how the bank's return-to-work policies have changed over the years.

JPMorgan Chase may soon call all of its workers back to the office, marking the latest large finance company to return to pre-pandemic working conditions, according to a report.

According to Bloomberg News, America's biggest bank by assets is developing a new policy that could eliminate remote work entirely. The policy, which has not yet been announced and is subject to change, follows Amazon's decision to call its workers back to the office five days a week starting this month.

A spokesman for JPMorgan, which reported 316,043 workers as of the end of September, didn't immediately return a request for comment.

JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon has been an outspoken critic of remote work, and the company has been calling people back to the office for several years now.

In September, Dimon criticized the federal government for its remote work policies during a discussion with The Atlantic magazine in Washington, D.C., saying that he'd "make Washington, D.C., go back to work."

"I can't believe, when I come down here, the empty buildings. The people who work for you not going to the office," Dimon said, adding: "That bothers me. I don't allow that."

Here's a timeline of JPMorgan's work-from-home policies:

July 2021: JPMorgan started calling workers back to the office on a rolling basis, focusing on people who worked in bank branches or in investment-banking jobs like sales and trading.

April 2022: CEO Jamie Dimon said in a letter to shareholders that 40% of the bank's employees, which then numbered around 270,000, would be permitted to work a few days at home. The remaining 10% could work from home full-time. Everyone else was expected to be in the office five days a week.

April 2023: Dimon called all of the bank's managing directors back to the office five days a week, whether they work in demanding revenue-producing jobs or lead back-office departments like technology and compliance.

January 2025: Bloomberg reported that JPMorgan is working on a policy that could call all of its workers back to the office five days a week.

Read the original article on Business Insider
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