Bwindi Impenetrable National Park

Hike to see the rare mountain gorillas in a misty rainforest.

Bwindi Impenetrable National Park

The dense forests of Bwindi Impenetrable National Park are located in southwestern Uganda, on the edge of the rift valley. The area is a typical tropical rain forest with an annual temperature range of 7–15°C minimum to 20–27°C maximum. Its annual rainfall ranges from 1,400 to 1,900 millimeters. The heaviest rains occur from March to April and from September to November. The forest plays a key role in regulating the outside area’s environment and climate.

Bwindi Impenetrable National Park was designated as a national park in 1991. In 1994 it was listed as a UNESCO world heritage site because of its ecological importance. The lush forest became known to the world because of gorilla tracking, providing a habitat for around half of the world’s remaining mountain gorilla population. These gentle primates are a highly endangered species and the forest is home to an estimated 400 of the 800 or so mountain gorillas in the entire world. They are highly endangered because of poaching, habitat loss and disease. This national park generates one of the highest revenues to Uganda Wildlife Authority among all the safari parks in Uganda. Gorilla tracking here requires a permit, the proceeds from which goes towards the further conservation of mountain gorillas. Try to look at the money you spend on permits from the perspective of helping these endangered mountain gorillas grow and multiply in numbers.

Species diversity:
The forest’s mist-covered hillsides are blanketed by one of Uganda’s oldest and most biologically diverse rainforests, which dates back over 25,000 years and contains almost 400 species of plants.
This biologically diverse region also provides shelter to a further 120 mammals, including several primate species such as baboons and chimpanzees, as well as elephants and antelopes. There are also around 350 species of birds hosted in this forest, including 23 Albertine Rift endemics. The park is a sanctuary for Colobus monkeys and chimpanzees and the endangered mountain gorillas. Several groups of gorilla have been habituated and can be tracked.

Size and accessibility:
Bwindi National Park covers an area of 331 square kilometres and is located in the highest parts of Kigezi highlands, with an altitude of 1,190 to 2,607 meters above sea level. 60% of this magical park has an elevation of over 2,000 meters above sea level. Bwindi currently has six sectors, namely Buhoma, Nkuringo, Ruhija, Rushaga, Nyundo and Rubugiri.

By Car:
Bwindi can be reached from Queen Elizabeth National Park to the north (2-3 hours), from Kabale to the south (1-2 hours), or from Kampala via Mbarara (6-8 hours). The roads meet at Butogota, 17 km from the Buhoma entrance gate. A 4WD vehicle is necessary during the rainy season.

By Air:
Travellers can fly from Entebbe to the modern tarmac airstrip at Kisoro. Those going to track gorillas in the northern sector may use Kihihi airstrip.

Activities:
Gorilla tracking
Bird watching
Nature walk

Experience With Kikooko

Kibale National Park

Spot chimpanzees and other primates on guided treks in a biodiverse forest.

Kibale National Park

Kibale National Park is the home of the great chimpanzees. It is the most magnificent of Uganda’s tropical rain forests and one of the most rewarding areas to explore. Established at the end of the 18th Century, Kibale boasts 13 species of primates, including the localized Red Colobus and L’Hoest monkeys.

A single group of chimpanzees has been habituated for tourism. Chimp tracking / primate spotting and bird watching are the major tourist activities here. With well-developed nature trails, tourists can enjoy exploring this impressive forest.

Species diversity:
At least 71 species of mammals have been recorded, with leopards, bush pigs, three species of duiker and two species of otter among them.  The forest is also home to 375 species of birds, including African Green-breasted and African Grey Parrots, 250 species of butterflies, 350 species of trees and shrubs, 27 different frogs and toads, and 14 types of snakes. Among the reptiles, the rock python is the largest. The park’s population of elephants travels between Kibale and the Queen Elizabeth National Park.

However, primates dominate the national park. 13 species have been recorded, of which the chimpanzee and the Red Colobus monkey have both been assessed by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) as endangered or critically endangered. The rare L’Hoest’s monkey lives in this forest too.

Size and accessibility:
Established in 1993, the park covers 795km² of rainforest, swamps, rivers and a few areas of grassland.

By Car:
The park headquarters, Kanyanchu, is 36km from the nearest town of Fort Portal, while Kampala to Kanyanchu, via Fort Portal, is a distance of 358km.

By Air:
Flying to Kasese and driving to the forest in a 4WD vehicle would be the best option for reducing the travelling time.

Activities:
Chimpanzee tracking
Chimpanzee habituation
Nature walks
Bird watching

Experience With Kikooko

Lake Mburo National Park

Enjoy an easy-to-reach savanna park for wildlife and water activities.

Lake Mburo National Park

Lake Mburo National Park is Uganda’s second smallest park, characterized by gallery forest, open savannah and acacia woodland, rock kopjes, seasonal and permanent swamps, and open water. This diversity provides a suitable ecosystem for a wide range of fauna and flora. Lake Mburo National Park enjoys a tropical climate. Six swamp-interconnected lakes are home to a variety of water birds including the rare and endangered African finfoot and shoebill.

What makes this park even more special is the opportunity to experience walking, cycling or horseback safaris.

Species diversity:
The impala, slender mongoose and bush rat, found nowhere else in Uganda, are conserved here. A small population of klipspringer remains around a few isolated rocky outcrops.

325 bird species and 68 mammal species have been recorded.

On boat trips you come close to hippos, Nile crocodiles and water birds. On a game drive you can see large mammals including impala, buffalo, bush-bucks, water-bucks, monkeys, oribi, duikers, klipspringer, bush babies, dwarf mongoose, and the shy and elusive sitatunga. Lake Mburo is home to the largest population of zebra in Uganda.

The park also supports many endangered species of birds, providing refugee to over 22 species of Palaearctic, as well as Afrotropical migrant birds in the wooded savannah, acacia thickets and grasslands.  The lake itself is also home to the endangered cichlid fish species.

Size and accessibility:
The park lies in western Uganda and is 370 km² in size. It’s approximately 255 km from Kampala and 55 km from Mbarara.

By Car:
Lake Mburo National Park can be reached in 4 to 5 hours from Kampala. It is advised to use a 4WD vehicle.

Activities:
Game drives
Bird watching
Boat tours
Game exploration on foot, on horseback or by bicycle

Experience With Kikooko

Murchison Falls National Park

Marvel at the world’s most powerful waterfall and see lions, elephants, and giraffes on safari.

Murchison Falls National Park

Murchison Falls National Park is the oldest of Uganda’s National parks, having been established in 1952.  In addition to being an excellent park in which to spot big game and other wildlife, a key feature of the park is the River Nile.  It bisects the park, before joining Lake Albert.  Along the way, it squeezes through a narrow gorge, just 7 metres wide, and plunges, with a thunderous roar some 45 metres over the remnants of the rift valley wall and into the “Devils Cauldron”, creating its trademark rainbow.

This mighty escape drains the last of the river’s energy, transforming it into a broad, placid current that flows quietly across the rift valley floor into Lake Albert. One of the main attractions is a relaxing cruise on the Nile to the bottom of the falls, during which wildlife can be observed on the river banks and in the river itself.

The Nile below Murchison Falls offers exciting challenges to anglers, coupled with a chance to land a huge Nile Perch (the record is 108kg). Fishing is restricted to designated sites & permits are limited so advance booking is recommended.

Species diversity:
The park includes forests, wetlands, savannahs and tropical forests, which are home to over 76 mammal species and over 450 different bird species. Large mammals include hippo, Rothschild’s giraffe, warthog, Cape buffalo, Uganda kob, hartebeest and elephant. The Nile corridor of Murchison has a large collection of water birds such as the rare shoebill stork and has a large concentration of Nile crocodiles.  Primates, chimpanzees and over 360 different bird species find a home in Kaniyo Pabidi Forest, within the park

Size and accessibility:
Covering 3,893km², Murchison Falls National Park the largest in Uganda.

By Car:
The park can be reached in about 5 hours from Kampala.

By Air:
For those who want to save driving time, it’s possible to fly directly into the Park, landing at Pakuba airstrip.

Activities:
Game drives
Boat tour
Bird watching
Fishing

Experience With Kikooko

Queen Elizabeth National Park

See elephants, lions, and hippos on a classic African safari and boat trip.

Queen Elizabeth National Park

Queen Elizabeth National Park is one of the best savannah parks found in Uganda. Whilst it is treasured amongst the country’s national parks, it is also one the most popular national parks on the African continent.  With diverse habitats such as lakes, swamps, rivers, thickets, forests and open savannah, it is home to a wide range of species of mammals. It protects at least 98 species, 28% of the total 343 mammal species in Uganda.

UNESCO has listed the park as a Biosphere Reserve. It also contains a RAMSAR wetland site and is classified as an important bird area by Birdlife International.

Species diversity:
Queen Elizabeth National Park is famous for tree climbing lions in Ishasha sector, chimpanzee tracking in Kyambura gorge, nature walks in Maramagambo forest and incredible boat trips on the Kazinga Channel (where you will often encounter elephants playing in the water, hippos, crocodiles and hundreds of species of birds) to the shores of Lake Edward and Mweya Peninsula.

Queen Elizabeth National Park game drives are famous for spotting lions, leopards, hyenas, Ugandan kob and elephants. For bird enthusiasts, the check list is 600 species.

Size and accessibility:
Queen Elizabeth National Park is 1978 km2 in size.

By Car:
The park lies 5-6 hours from Kampala via surfaced road via Mbarara.

By Air:
It is possible to reduce driving time by flying to Kasese, from where it takes approximately 1 hour to reach the entrance to the park.  For those who are interested in the tree climbing lions only, a flight directly to Kihihi is also possible.

Activities:
Game drives
Bird watching
Boat tour
Nature walks
Chimpanzee tracking

Experience With Kikooko

Ziwa Rhino Sanctuary

Walk with rhinos and learn about conservation efforts in Uganda’s only rhino sanctuary.

Ziwa Rhino Sanctuary

The Ziwa Rhino Sanctuary  is the only place where you will be able to see rhinos in the wild in Uganda. In 1970, about 300 black rhinos roamed wild in Uganda, divided between the Murchison Falls and Kidepo National Parks, while a population of roughly 120 white rhinos resided in Ajai, a small wildlife reserve to the northwest of Murchison Falls. Within little more than a decade, both species had been poached to local extinction.  Uganda’s last white Rhino was shot in Murchison Falls National Park in 1982, and no black rhinos have been observed in either Murchison Falls or Kidepo since 1983.

The main cause of this sudden decline was poaching for rhino horn which is used as dagger handles in the Middle East and as an aphrodisiac in some parts of Asia.  Poached rhino horns fetched up to USD 1 million on the black market, exacerbated by the general atmosphere of lawlessness that prevailed during and after the war in 1979, in which Idi Amin was ousted.

Founded in 1997, Rhino Fund Uganda is an NGO dedicated to reintroducing both species of rhinos to their former Ugandan haunts.

Species diversity:
The sanctuary contains about 30 rhinos and a range of smaller game species. The rhinos can be tracked on foot in the company of a ranger, and are habitually found in wetland areas, so wear appropriate footwear for the conditions.

The prehistoric-looking shoebill can also be found in the nearby swamps. The sanctuary contains over 300 bird species.

Size and accessibility:
Ziwa Rhino Sanctuary, is a 7,000 hectare ranch of savannah and woodland.

By Car:
It is a 4 – 5 hour drive (176 km) from Kampala on the Gulu road.  It’s an ideal place to visit en route to or from Murchison Falls National Park.

By Air:
There is no nearby airstrip, however it is possible to fly to Pakuba airstrip in Murchison Falls National Park and drive to Ziwa from there. But you might want to stay in the park for the night before driving to the rhinos.

Activities:
On-Foot Rhino tracking
Nature walks
Bird watching
Night walk

Experience With Kikooko