12-day Slave Coast tour — Ouidah to Cape Coast Castle
Next departure · dates upon requestSlave Routes & Vodun HeritageA 12-day journey across Benin, Togo and Ghana
Walk the routes. Listen to the silences.
Request a proposal →For twelve days, walk the slave routes from Ouidah to Cape Coast Castle, accompanied by elders, scholars and Vodun practitioners. This Slave Coast journey crosses Benin, Togo and Ghana — four places where history is lived, not only told.
— Our framework
We do not curate the slave routes. We accompany those who walk them.
Heritage & Routes is a ground operator — not a packager. Each itinerary is built from cultural framework upward, with the elders and scholars who carry this history in their lives, not in archives alone. The 12-day Slave Coast journey is our flagship program for travellers who refuse to skim.
— Why these twelve days
Memory as ground, not chapter
The slave trade is not a chapter. It is a coastline.
Four hundred kilometres of memorial route, from Ouidah's auction square to the dungeons of Cape Coast. Twelve days lets you walk it slowly enough to understand what one day in any museum cannot teach.
Vodun, received not visited
You will not visit the Vodun. You will be received by it.
Benin is the birthplace of Vodun, and Vodun is a living religion — not a costume. We work with initiated practitioners who decide what is open to outsiders and what stays closed. No ceremony is performed for cameras.
Elders, not guides
Walk the slave routes with elders, not with guides.
Each section of the journey is accompanied by someone who carries that history personally — descendants of the merchant families of Ouidah, historians from the University of Cape Coast, custodians of the royal palaces of Abomey. They are partners, not staff.
— Who walks with you
Three kinds of presence on every day
Elders
Carriers of family memory in Ouidah, Abomey, Cape Coast and Elmina. Descendants of the merchant families, of the resistance lineages, of the royal courts. They open rooms that guides cannot.
Scholars
Historians from the University of Cape Coast, from Université d'Abomey-Calavi, from independent research institutes. They give you the architecture of the history while you walk through it.
Vodun practitioners
Initiated members of the Vodun communities in Ouidah and the surrounding villages. They decide what is open to a group of outsiders and what stays closed. Their authority is absolute on this question.
What you read about, you forget. What you walk with someone who lived it, you carry.
— What is included, what is not
Included
- All ground transfers (private vehicle, English-speaking driver)
- All accommodation (4-star equivalent, single or shared rooms)
- All meals as indicated in the itinerary
- All access fees, museum entries, ceremonial access where applicable
- Three categories of accompaniment on every day (elder, scholar, practitioner where relevant)
- 24/7 ground operator support throughout the journey
- Pre-trip briefing call (1h) and post-trip debrief call (45 min)
- Documentation pack — historical timeline, glossary, reading list
Not included
- International flights to Cotonou and from Accra
- Visa fees (Benin, Togo, Ghana — visa-on-arrival in some cases)
- Yellow fever vaccination
- Travel insurance (mandatory)
- Personal expenses, beverages outside meals
- Optional add-ons (one-on-one elder sessions, private museum tours outside group programme)
— Logistics & practical
- Group size
- 6 to 12 travellers maximum
- Physical level
- Moderate — walking 4 to 8 km some days on uneven ground
- Climate
- Tropical · programme avoids the rainy peak (Jul–Sep)
- Visas
- Benin e-visa · Togo visa-on-arrival · Ghana e-visa (step-by-step guidance)
- Vaccines
- Yellow fever mandatory · others per WHO advice
- Currency
- West African CFA franc (BJ · TG) · Ghanaian Cedi (GH)
- Languages
- FR (BJ · TG) · EN (GH). All accompaniment in English
- Single supplement
- Available on request
— Pricing
This is a built program, not a catalogue trip
We do not publish a per-person rate. Every Slave Coast journey is built for a specific group — small-group operator, university programme, museum-affiliated trip, diaspora collective. Pricing depends on group size, dates, room category, and the level of access (some ceremonial events have an absolute group-size limit that we will tell you about during the proposal stage).
For a working frame, our 12-day Slave Coast journey sits in the same range as comparable scholar-led programs by Road Scholar, Smithsonian Journeys, and Wilderness Travel. We work with each partner on margin, branding, and pre-trip preparation separately.
Request a proposal — we respond within 48 hours— Day by day
Twelve days, walked slowly
Each day below opens to its detailed editorial body. Click any day to expand.
Day 01Cotonou — arrival on the coast+
Day 02Cotonou & the southern coast+
Day 03Abomey — the Kingdom of Dahomey+
Day 04Allada & Ouidah — into the Vodun heartland+
Day 05Ouidah — the Slave Route, in full+
Day 06Ouidah — the Door, on its own+
Day 07Crossing into Togo — Aného and Petit Popo+
Day 08Lomé — the Togolese coast+
Day 09Crossing into Ghana — Accra & Volta+
Day 10Cape Coast Castle+
Day 11Elmina, the older sister+
Day 12Cape Coast — Door of Return, then home+
— Questions before you walk
Twelve questions, twelve answers
Q1 — Who is this journey for?
Q2 — Is this trip emotionally difficult?
Q3 — What is the difference between this and a standard West Africa tour?
Q4 — Do you operate this trip year-round?
Q5 — Can you customise the 12-day frame?
Q6 — Do you offer this in French?
Q7 — How do you select the elders and scholars on the journey?
Q8 — What level of physical fitness is required?
Q9 — Are children welcome?
Q10 — What is the carbon footprint of the journey?
Q11 — Do you work with documentary producers?
Q12 — What happens after the trip?
Twelve days. Three countries.
One coastline that taught the world the cost of forgetting.
Tell us about your group, your dates, the angle you want to bring. We respond within 48 hours with a proposal — or with a refusal if we judge the fit isn't right. Both answers happen.