Ngorongoro crater will offer you a dazzling sight: gazelles, zebras, rhinos, lions, and if you're "lucky" you might even see cheetahs and leopards.
With its three volcanic cones, Kibo, Mawenzi, and Shira, Mt. Kilimanjaro is the highest peak in Africa and the highest free-standing mountain in the world at 5895 meters.
Just when you thought you've seen it all, planet Earth always has something up it's sleeve. And Cave of Swallows is really going to surprise you.
A landscape carved by glaciers, amazing scenery. Few places on earth can compete with this natural environment.
Discover lush native forests, amazing pancake rocks, delicate cave formations, underground streams, limestone canyons and towering ocean cliffs - all in one beautiful national park.
The park has excellent spots for high altitude alpine hiking, backpacking and rock climbing as well as ample opportunity for spotting wildlife.
Connemara has scenery like that out of a fairy tale, with deep mountains and rich colour of green and when the clouds roll in it seems almost magical.
This National Reserve belongs to the Masai people and it is one of the best known and popular reserves in Africa, visited by thousands of tourists.
New Zealand's largest National Park and one of the largest in the world, with a surface of 1.2 million hectares.
A World Heritage site, with spectacular fiords and a moonscape look.
The park is located in the isolated region of Madre de Dios, and it is one of the most diverse areas in Peru and South America.
The park covers about 12% of Iceland's surface and is home to Iceland's highest mountain, largest glacier and Europe's most powerful waterfall.
The park is like a little slice of the Alps tucked above the rolling moors and hills of North Wales.
Located close to Machu Picchu, Urubamba Valley is the gateway to the Inca ruins.
An extinct volcanic crater on the south coast of Oahu, measuring 1200 feet high.
Lying at the southernmost tip of Africa, where the Atlantic and Indian oceans meet, is the Agulhas National Park.