In the highlands of northeastern Togo, the Tamberma people have been sculpting the earth into fortified tower-houses for centuries. These are not ruins — they are living architecture, still inhabited, still sacred.
The Koutammakou landscape — designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2004 — stretches across the Atakora Mountains and into neighbouring Bénin. Here, the Tamberma (Batammariba) people construct their famous tata somba: multi-storey mud tower homes that double as grain stores, shrines and fortresses.
But Togo's craft tradition runs deeper than architecture. In the highland town of Kpalimé, artisans have practised batik printing, hand-loom weaving and coil-pot pottery for generations — trades passed down through families, taught by touch and rhythm, not by textbook.
"We do not build houses. We grow them from the earth, and the earth remembers."— Tamberma master builder, Koutammakou
Every Asina Tour journey to Togo is guided by Spanish-speaking local experts — artisans and cultural custodians who open their workshops, their homes and their knowledge to travellers who come with genuine curiosity.
The Kpalimé region offers some of West Africa's most rewarding hiking — through coffee and cocoa plantations, rainforest canopy and to waterfalls hidden in the hills.
Togolese cuisine is built on fermented corn, slow-cooked stews, fresh river fish and the complex spice knowledge of the Ewe, Kabye and Mina peoples — one of West Africa's most underrated culinary traditions.
Every Asina Tour itinerary in Togo includes dedicated food experiences — guided meals at market stalls, family courtyards and riverside cookfires where Togolese cooking actually happens. Your guide eats alongside you, names every ingredient in Ewe and French, and takes you to the exact spot where the city's best Gboma Dessi is ladled out each noon.
Every journey is designed around you — your pace, your curiosity, your craft. Our local artisan guides shape an experience no itinerary can fully predict.
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