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Tanzania Attractions
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GOMBE STREAM NATIONAL PARK
Located 16 kilometres north of Kigoma on the shores of Lake
Tanganyika, is the smallest but one of the best known of
Tanzania's national parks. It is one of the few places where
chimpanzees can still be found in their natural habitat.
Since 1960, Dr. Jane Goodall and colleagues have lived here
studying the primates. Other attractions include the red
colobus, the red-tail and blue monkeys, grey duiker,
bushback and bushpig. The birds include the African and the
trumpeter hornbills, Ross's turaco, pied and giant
kingfishers, and the crowned eagle.
Access to the park is only by water vessel from either
Kigoma or Ujiji.
Park entry fees is US$100 per person for each 24 hours spent
in the park.
Accommodation is available at a guest house and "hostel"
which consists of several huts. Bring all provisions. The
hostel's library is well-stocked and worth a visit. Camping
is with permission along the lakeshore.
KATAVI NATIONAL PARK
This remote and difficult park to reach (strictly
recommended for those of an adventurous spirit) lies on a
high flood plain surrounding Lake Kitavi, to the south of
the Mahale Mountains. The main vegetation found here is the
Miombo woodland. It has a wide variety of wildlife
(crocodile, hippo, leopard, lion, roan and sable antelopes,
southern reedbuck, topi, eland, elephant, and one of the
largest herds of buffalo, with as many as 1,600 animals) and
offers excellent game viewing with a real wilderness
atmosphere. The diverse woodland, acacia bush, lakes and
swamps have attracted over 400 species of birds, including
large flocks of pelicans. Other attractions are Lakes Katavi
and Chada, which are joined by the River Katuma.
The best months to visit are July to October.
Accommodation is at designated camp sites within the park.
Hotels and lodges are at Mpanda, 40 km north.
KILIMANJARO NATIONAL PARK
When Johann Rebman reported that he had seen at the latitude
of the equator a vast mountain capped with snow, the British
Geographical Society Laughed!
Mount Kilimanjaro is the highest mountain in Africa and
stands at 5,895 meters, three degrees south of the equator.
The mountain, a dormant volcano, has two peaks - Kibo and
Mawezi, which are surrounded by dense forests full of
dazzling variety of flora and fauna. The area around the
mountain is protected territory. The 756 sq. km lying above
2,700m comprise Kilimanjaro National Park, while parts of
the lower slopes - which support five vegetation zones - are
protected as forest reserves.
The main attractions are the volcanic centres; Shira, Mawezi
and Kibo, and the change in forest from savannah grassland
to raw forests, moorland, tundra, semi-desert, and snow.
Mount Kilimanjaro has attracted many tourists and
researchers from all over the world. No visit to Tanzania's
northern circuit would be complete without at least a
glimpse of Mount Kilimanjaro. It is the only peak of its
size that can be climbed with relative ease by
non-mountaineers, and many take the opportunity to do so.
The mountain can be climbed any time of the year, although
it is often wet in the rain forest zone from mid-March to
May. The summit can be conquered in three days. The youngest
person to have climbed it was an 11-year old and the oldest,
74 years old.
LAKE MANYARA NATIONAL PARK
Sheltering under the massive escarpment of the Great Rift
Valley, and covering an area of 325 sq. km, this park is a
flash of green amid an otherwise parched landscape. (In The
Green Hills of Africa, Hemmingway describes the park's
magnificent hunting country.) A line of springs support the
lush vegetation of a groundwater forest, where blue monkeys,
baboons and the curious-looking silvery-cheeked hornbill
live, among the more than 350 bird species, the most profuse
being the flamingo. It is also home to large herds of
buffalo, elephant, giraffe, leopard, civet, black rhino,
hippo, zebra, impala, antelope, aardvark, the shy pangolin,
bushbuck, waterbuck, and many others. It is also known for
its hot springs and the famous tree-climbing lions that laze
in the branches of the acacia trees.
The park is ideal for a day trip. The best time to visit is
during the dry season - January to February, and June to
September. Four-wheel drive vehicles are recommended during
the rains.
Budget accommodation is available at Mto-wa-Mbu Village.
There are designated campsites in and outside the park.
Other facilities include a hotel, a hostel and self-catering
bandas.
MAHALE MOUNTAINS NATIONAL PARK
Located at Ujiji on the shores of Lake Tanganyika, where
Stanley is reputed to have met Livingstone and given the
famous greeting "Dr. Livingstone I presume". The Mahale
Mountains, like Gombe, are one of the last natural home to
chimpanzees and are rich in birdlife. The the park is a
unique ecological zone with lowland forest, miombo and open
woodlands, moist and dry savannah grasslands. Wildlife in
the park includes primates, kudu, eland, roan and sable
antelopes, giraffe, buffalo, elephant, lion and leopard.
Access is by boat or plane, both of which are available for
charter. There are no roads and all game viewing is done on
foot. It is virtually the only Tanzanian park where you can
walk around.
The best months to visit are May to October.
MIKUMI NATIONAL PARK
Located astride the main Dar to Mbeya highway, to the north
of Selous Game Reserve and only 283 km from Dar-es-Salaam,
the park is an important educational centre for students of
ecology and conservation, having been established to protect
the environment and resident animals.
The Mikumi flood plain is the main feature of the park along
with the bordering mountain ranges. It has a landing strip
and is home to, among others, the buffalo, zebra, giraffe,
lion, wild dogs, python, monitor lizard, hartebeest,
wildebeest, elephant (these elephants are grazers and do not
damage trees), hippo, impala, warthog, eland and antelope.
Birds include the hammerkop, saddle-bill stork, and the
malachite kingfisher. The vegetation is made up of woodland,
grassland and swamp. There are two water holes, Mkata and
Chamgore.
The park is popular as a weekend outing for Dar residents.
Both budget and luxury accommodation is available and
include a tented camp, a luxury lodge and designated camp
sites.
NGORONGORO CONSERVATION AREA
This vast protected area stretches from Lake Natron (the
breeding ground for East Africa's flamingos) in the
northeast, to Lake Enyasi in the south, and Lake Manyara to
the east. The area includes the still active Ol-Ndoinyo
Lengai (meaning "Mountain of God" in Maa, the language of
the Masaai) volcano (which last erupted in 1983), Olduvai
Gorge and the NGORONGORO CRATER, the largest unbroken
caldera in the world. It has been described as one of the
great natural wonders of the world. Eight million years ago,
the Ngorongoro Crater was an active volcano but its cone
collapsed, forming the crater that is 610 meters deep, 20
kilometres in diameter, and covers an area of 311 sq. km.
Spectacular as it is, the crater accounts for just a tenth
of the Ngorongoro Conservation Area.
The crater is home to many species of wild game and birds.
With the exception of impala and topi (due to fierce
competition with the wildebeest) and the giraffe (because
there is not much to eat at tree level), almost every
species of African plains mammal lives in the crater,
including the endangered black rhino, and the densest
population of predators in Africa. A strange thing is that
the crater elephants are mainly bulls. The birdlife, which
includes the flamingo, is mainly seasonal, and is also
affected by the ratio of soda to fresh water in Lake Magadi
on the crater floor.
In the northern, remote area of the Ngorongoro Conservation
Area are the Olmoti and Empaakai craters, Lake Natron and
Oldoinyo Lengai.
The mysterious Engakura Ruins, the remains of a terraced
city and a complex irrigation system, lie on the Eastern
side of Empakaai Crater. Their origins are a mystery as
there is no tradition of stone building in this part of
Africa.
Views from the rim of the crater are sensational. On the
crater floor, grassland blends into swamps, lakes, rivers,
woodland and mountains. You can descend to the floor of the
crater in a four-wheel drive vehicle. Only 4WD vehicles are
allowed into the crater and game rangers are compulsory for
all.
The Maasai are permitted to water their cattle at the
permanent lake and can be seen leading their animals in and
out of the crater.
RUAHA NATIONAL PARK
At 13,000 sq. km, it is the second largest Tanzanian park
and one of the wildest. It is also the world's largest
elephant sanctuary.
"There is not a blade of grass here in the dry season", says
Kenyan Wildlife sculptor Rob Glen about Ruaha National Park,
his home for the past two years. This is difficult to
believe once the rains have started and the Great Ruaha
River is swollen to a mighty torrent strong enough to drag
an adult hippo downstream. Glen, like watercolour artist Sue
Stolberger, has special permission from Tanzania National
Parks (TANAPA) to live in the country's second largest
National Park. Both camp alongside the northern bank of the
river, and are actively involved in the conservation of the
spectacular and abundant wildlife upon which they base their
work.
The park represents a transition zone where eastern and
southern African species of fauna and flora overlap. It is
the northernmost example of miombo woodland, common in
central Africa, and the most southerly protected area in
which Grant's gazelle, lesser kudu and striped hyena are
found. To be able to see both greater and lesser kudu and
roan and sable antelope in the same park is one of the
special attractions of Ruaha. In the dry season, the river
is an excellent place for observing large numbers of game
including lions, leopards, hunting dogs, giraffe, waterbuck,
eland and warthogs. Thousands of birds flock to Ruaha on
their annual migration from Europe to Asia, and 465 bird
species have been sighted in the park. The park's residents
include kingfishrs, plovers, hornbills, green wood hoopoes,
bee-eaters, sunbirds and egrets.
Britain's bilateral aid programme to Tanzania is funding a
project to prepare a management plan for the Ruaha
ecosystem, and to 'direct benefits from wildlife' to the
communities living in the game-controlled area, or 'buffer
zone', adjacent to the park. Hunting by tourists and local
residents goes on inside the area, explains project leader
Dawn Hartley, as well as some poaching by the latter, "so
its conservation presented a complex problem for the
wildlife authorities". Work carried out so far includes
assisting four villages to establish wildlife committees,
select their own game scouts and organise meat utilisation
schemes.
Access is by road. The best months for game viewing are July
and November when the animals are concentrated around
shrinking water holes. During the rest of the year the
tracks are almost impassable.
Camping is permitted at various sites including around the
park headquarters at Masembe. There are bandas equipped with
beds at the headquarters. Essentials except food and drink
are provided. There is also a lodge and a tented camp.
SELOUS GAME RESERVE
The pristine reserve, a World Heritage Site since 1982,
comprises an area of 55,000 sq. km, covering about six per
cent of Tanzania's land surface. Larger than Switzerland, it
is the world's largest game reserve and second only to the
Serengeti in its concentration of wildlife. It is also the
sanctuary of the biggest elephant herd in the world, about
32,000 elephants live in the reserve - 70 per cent of those
in Tanzania. The reserve is difficult to describe without
the use of superlatives.
Named after British hunter and writer Frederick Courteney
Selous who was killed during the First World War in the Beho
Beho region (of the reserve), the reserve is part of the
75,000 square kilometre Selous ecosystem, which includes
Mikumi National Park, the Kilombero Game Controlled Areas
and sparsely populated areas towards Kilwa and Dar es
Salaam. It encompasses a wide variety of habitats, including
open grasslands, acacia and miombo woodlands and extensive
riverine forests. The reserve contains some of Africa's
largest and most important populations of buffalo and
hunting dogs. There are also populations of black rhino in
isolated areas. The swamps form an important habitat for
wetland plants, reptiles and resident and migratory birds.
The tourist sector of the Selous Game Reserve, which is
located north of the Rufiji rivers, contains all the forms
of vegetation found in the ecosystem, including savanna with
its mbugas, patches of sticky black cotton soil that form a
perilous trap to motorists during the rainy season. Tall
borassus palms grow alongside the river, dying off when the
water level drops, leaving eery looking collections of what
look like giant cigars. The river supports an abundance of
wildlife including elephants, hippos, crocodiles and plains
game, not to mention a spectacular variety, and number, of
bird species.
SERENGETI NATIONAL PARK
Covering an area of 14,763 square kilometres, equal in size
to Northern Ireland, the world famous Serengeti National
Park is Tanzania's oldest park, and one of the world's last
great wildlife refuges. It is contiguous with Kenya's Masai
Mara Game Reserve and stretches as far as Lake Victoria to
the West. Its name comes from the Maasai word Siringet,
meaning 'endless plains'.
The park's vegetation ranges from the short and long grass
plains in the south, to the acacia savannah in the centre
and wooded grasslands concentrated around the tributaries of
the Grumenti and the Mara rivers in the park. The western
corridor is a region of wooded highland and extensive plains
reaching the edge of Lake Victoria. In the early morning and
evening light, the Serengeti landscape is stunningly
beautiful.
The Serengeti ecosystem supports the greatest remaining
concentration of plains game in Africa, including more than
three million large mammals. It is the sanctuary of an
estimated four million different animals and birds. The
animals roam the park freely and in the spectacular
migrations, huge herds of wild animals move to other areas
of the park in search of greener grazing grounds (requiring
over 4,000 tons of grass each day) and water. The annual
migration into Kenya (in a continuous search of water and
pasture) of more than 1.5 million wildebeest and hundreds of
thousands of zebra and gazelle is triggered by the rains and
usually starts in May, at the end of the wet season. Called
the Great Migration, this constitutes the most breathtaking
event in the animal kingdom ever known to humans. As the dry
season intensifies, the herds drift out towards the west,
one group to the north (to Lake Victoria, where there is
permanent water), the other northeast heading for the
permanent waters of the northern rivers and the Mara. The
immigration instinct is so strong that animals die in the
rivers as they dive from the banks into the raging waters to
be dispatched by crocodiles. The survivors concentrate in
Kenya's Maasai Mara National Reserve until the grazing there
is exhausted, when they turn south along the eastern and
final stage of the migration route.
Before the main exodus, the herds are a spectacular sight,
massed in huge numbers with the week and crippled at the
tail end of the procession, followed by the patient vigilant
predators, including lions (the adult males of Serengeti
have characteristic black manes), cheetahs, hunting dogs and
spotted hyena.
The migration coincides with the breeding season, which
causes fights among the males.
TARANGIRE NATIONAL PARK
The park's permanent water supply ensures a huge and varied
animal population, especially during the dry season when it
rivals that of the Serengeti. The animals include large
herds of elephants, rhino, buffalo, zebra, lesser and
greater kudu, eland, wildebeest, hartebeest, gerenuk, impala
and fringe-eared oryx. This attractive park, with its
statuesque baobab trees, is the main refuge for wildlife
from the surrounding part of the Great Rift Valley during
the dry season.
Prime game viewing months are between September and
December.
It is also an excellent place for birdwatching. The best
birdwatching months being October to May.
Accommodation is available in a luxury tented lodge and at
camp sites.
COASTLINE/BEACHES
Tanzania has an 804-kilometre long coastline boasting of the
finest unpolluted beaches in Africa. The entire coastline is
covered by coconut palms, offering a serene atmosphere for
repose. The coastline offers unlimited opportunities for
bathing and water sports.
MARINE PARKS
Kilwa Reserve: One of the few places where the Dugong
(Dugong Dugong) can be seen.
Other marine parks include Tanga Coral Gardens, Rufigi Delta
and Latham Island Reserve
OFFSHORE ISLANDS
The largest are the clove rich islands of Zanzibar and Pemba.
Zanzibar is dotted with tourist attractions ranging from its
historic buildings with unique architecture, narrow and
winding streets and, rich culture and traditions.
Slightly off the coast south of Dar es Salaam lies Mafia
Island, a diver's paradise. The Island is one of the most
popular deep sea fishing locations in the world, offering
opportunities for scuba diving, snorkelling, and big game
fishing.
HISTORIC RUINS
Tanzania is full of historical relics. These include the
ruins of Zanzibar, Bagamoyo, Kilwa, and the Stone Age
remains of Ismani, and the Olduvai Gorge (pupolarly known as
the "cradle of mankind") which lies between the Serengeti
and Ngorongoro. The Amboni caves and rock paintings of
Kondoa Irangi in Central Tanzania are other destinations for
the curious and adventurous tourist.
It was here in 1959, where the famous Dr. Louis Leakey
unearthed fossils of the early man.
CULTURE AND TRADITIONS
Tanzania has about 126 major different ethnic communities
with their vernaculars, cultures, traditions and customs.
National cohension has been attained partly through the use
of the national language - Kiswahili - and the interaction
of the country's people.
The cultures, traditions and customs manifest themselves in
unique tourist attractions in the form of rich traditional
dances, handicraft such as weaving and pottery and art in
the form of paintings and wood carvings of the Makonde
ethnic community of south Tanzania.
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