Need some inspiration for your big day?
The website of Bushfellows Private Game Lodge and Conference Centre recently received a major facelift from Flow. The four-star game lodge’s new-look website is designed to draw wedding planners and eager brides-to-be to the idea of an African bush wedding (among other improvements).
The weddings section is a great resource for those planning a wedding, with sections detailing wedding-specific food, accommodation and packages. There are also built-in social media buttons allowing you to share images and links on Pinterest, Facebook and Twitter.
Besides showcasing the lodge as an ideal venue for weddings, the site also focuses on wildlife rehabilitation, with interesting content such as the heart-warming story, “Raising Silo, the bat-eared fox”, about an abandoned little fox that was nursed back to health.
The lodge is also a go-to place for conferencing and accommodation – it has a superb restaurant and conferencing facilities, as well as vast wildlife that includes leopard, Cape buffalo, lion, hippo, wild dog and more than 170 bird species.
Owner of Bushfellows Kyne Lupini says she is delighted with the new site. “Working with Flow was so easy; I actually enjoyed doing this site! Your team was 10/10. I will only suggest Flow again and again.”
The site has a clean layout, with rich tones and colours that illustrate a luxury bush experience.
Project manager Gianluca Tucci, whose responsibilities included managing, content loading and client communications, says of the site: “The site has a strong visual appeal and design. The wedding section offers a distinctive layout and functionality, which lends itself to one of the lodge’s key features and offerings. It was a fun, interesting and awesome project to have worked on.”
Christine Marot, who was in charge of most of the content development and editing, says: “I enjoyed working on the site and weaving the content around some stunning imagery. It was also rewarding to help showcase the wildlife rehabilitation work being done at Bushfellows. I hope to visit in person one day.”