You leave the forest behind. The trees thin out. The canopy opens. Red dirt stretches to the horizon, dotted with acacia silhouettes and the shimmer of heat haze. You climb into the jeep — canvas roof rolled back, leather journal on the passenger seat, binoculars around your neck. The engine turns over with a satisfying rumble.
This isn't a hunt. This isn't a build. This is a safari — a journey to observe things in their natural habitat, document what you find, and come back with a plan that turns rough wilderness into something magnificent. Every stop is a discovery. Every creature in the wild gets its own page in the journal. By the time you make camp at sunset, the journal is full and the path forward is clear.
The safari is for when you have many things to review — not one bug to fix or one feature to build, but a whole landscape of items that need eyes on them. Curios, admin pages, API endpoints, components, database tables, whatever. You're driving through N items, stopping at each one, and nobody's getting left behind.