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Queen Elizabeth National Park

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  • Home
  • Queen
  • Uganda Tours
  • Lodges
    • Ishasha Wilderness Camp
    • Jacana Lodge
    • Katara Lodge
    • Kyambura Game Lodge
    • Kyambura Gorge Lodge
    • Mweya Safari Lodge
    • Savannah Resort Hotel
    • Simba Safari Lodge
  • Activities
    • Bird Watching
    • Boat Cruise
    • Chimpanzee Tracking
    • Game Drives
    • Hiking & Guided Nature Walks
    • Hot Air Balloon Ride
    • Katwe Salt Works
    • Lion Tracking
  • Conservation
  • Park Sectors
  • Operators
  • Gallery
  • Contact Us
  • Blog
    • Accessibility
Monthly Archives

March 2023

4x4 rooftop tent car
Travel

Road Trips and Self-Drive Journeys in Uganda

by admin March 20, 2023
written by admin

Book with 4×4 Car Hire Uganda for a self-drive safari in Uganda. Uganda is the place to go for a self-drive trip. The experience of driving yourself around Uganda is exciting. With a self-driving safari in Uganda, you will be the one behind the wheel driving through what is often a national park or a reserve.

This type of trip is good if you’re adventurous, when you want to have the freedom to plan your own route, go at your own pace and be in the company of people of your choosing. And as an added benefit; self-drive safaris are a lot cheaper than guided safaris or organized tours. If this is supposed to be a relaxing holiday, consider a guided safari.

On a self-drive camping safari, you’ll spend quite a bit of time each day setting and packing up camp, and cooking, not to mention sleeping on what are usually thin mattresses which is a great experience. Uganda’s list of gazetted conservation area contains ten national parks and several other game reserves and forest reserves for which you can choose to visit.

Knowing your route, the best places to stop, how to stay safe, and how to get the most out of your experience can help make your self-drive safari successful and memorable. Uganda in particular support a wide variety of mammal and bird species which are not present elsewhere in eastern and southern Africa. The accessibility of Uganda’s forests when compared with those in West Africa means that, practically speaking, Uganda is almost certainly the best place to see a wide variety of African animals in their natural habitat.

When it comes to more conventional game viewing, Uganda is not a safari destination to bear comparison with Tanzania or Kenya, or for that matter the majority of countries in southern Africa. Nevertheless, Queen Elizabeth, Murchison Falls, and Kidepo National Parks support a good range of plains animals and if you are on a tight budget, the first two reserve are among the easiest and cheapest to visit independently anyway here in Africa.

With an overall wonderful experience filled with friendly helpful people, never forget wildlife and scenery which will leave you breathless. Whether it is the falls at Murchison Falls National Park, do the hike it is so worth it. Of more interest to tourists are Uganda’s forest reserve in particular the Budongo and Kanyiyo Pabidi Forest Reserves south of Murchison Falls National Park, both of which have tourist sites with camping facilities and trained guides who can take visitors on chimp tracking excursions and bird walks.

Track the Chimps of Kibale or the Gorillas of Bwindi you will have memories to cherish for the rest of your life. Your greatest challenge will be trying to keep up. And that is only a glimpse of what could await you in this adventure.

Always eat a good breakfast, you will need it!!!!! Bring a mask to see the chimps and the Gorillas, for their safety not yours!!! Enjoy lots of the local fruits, it is excellent. Buy Ugandan coffee, I did, and it is excellent. Whether your thing is Elephants or Giraffes or Hippos or Lions you will see them all. I saw more butterflies that I have ever seen in the most beautiful colors and to many little birds to even count never mind name.

Queen Elizabeth National Park is home to great numbers of animals and one is sure to spot them very soon into their safari. I particularly loved the misty mountains and the gorilla trekking activity in Bwindi Impenetrable Forest. A short but intense adventure that still respects and protects the amazing gorillas. Lake Bunyonyi is definitely worth a stopover for relaxation, very serene and picturesque after tracking the mountain gorillas.

Man and nature can co-exist in harmony and that is something we need to think of and try to practice more. And this is why I keep returning to Africa.

Food was excellent (loved rolex!!), no stomach issues although tap water is to be avoided. The weather varied depending on the itinerary, it was hot in the savanna but quite cold up in the misty mountains so t shirts and fleeces would all serve well. Changing money to local currency is not very easy so you best change at the airport (we tried changing at a bank and they refused saying they would only change 50usd bill or higher!).

Bring dollars in large bills ($50 or $100) as you get a better exchange rate for local currency. Charging can be challenging in the more remote lodges so bring power banks fully charged if you can. Always carry your passport as many parks will look for it or at least the number of it.

March 20, 2023 0 comment
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Selfdrive Africa
Travel

Encounter Car Rental & Trips in Africa

by admin March 3, 2023
written by admin

Do you fancy a safari in Uganda? Then be sure not to miss the Bwindi Impenetrable National Parks, Murchison Falls National Park, Queen Elizabeth National Park or Kidepo Valley National Park nestled in the north eastern trip of the country.

Our family of 4 booked a round trip with 4×4 Car Hire Uganda together with two close friends, so we had a private tour with six. Our friends visited Uganda before, also with 4×4 Car Hire Uganda, so Maike arranged another round trip: From Jinja, to Sipi, Moroto, Kidepo, Murchison falls, Queen Elizabeth, Bwindi Forest and back to Entebbe. We had to have patience: the trip was postponed 2 years, due to the Covid lock downs. This was no problem with 4×4 Car Hire Uganda, since we had a private visit of a school project the week before our tour, we were picked up by our guide/driver Caleb at our hotel in Kampala.

The car was a huge four-wheel drive safari car, where we fitted in all six. Emma was a skilled and safe driver. One day we had to drive a very wet and muddy slippery road, and he managed to get us through safely. Emma could tell us really much about the country and its history, culture and the different people inhabiting Uganda. He drove us around spotting game really skillfully, with a very sharp eye, and visibly enjoying it himself. 4×4 Car Hire Uganda can be happy to employ good dedicated guides like Emma.

Uganda is a beautiful country to see, experience and photograph. Winston Churchill, the former British leader who famously toured it in 1907 as a widely traveled young British minister was so impressed, he wrote a book on it. He called it the ‘Pearl of Africa’ to encourage others to come enjoy it. Some of the treasures on offer are the country’s highlights and just a hop from the airport.

When it comes to mountain gorillas, they are the largest of the great apes and share 97% of their biological make up with humans. Gorillas used to inhabit a swathe of land that cut right across central Africa, but the last remaining eastern mountain gorillas’ number just over 1063, divided between two 459 plus population in the forests of Uganda’s Bwindi Impenetrable National Park and on the slopes of the Virunga Volcanoes, encompassing Uganda’s Mgahinga Gorilla National Park.

Trekking to see the fabled mountain gorillas is something everyone should get to experience at least once in their lifetime. Gorilla permits are certainly not cheap ($700) and the hour you get to spend with these gentle giants whizzes by in a flash, but the experience will linger for a lifetime. When a family of gorillas permits you to enter their safety zone and their guardian silverback allows your group of eight privileged tourists to sit quietly in their presence, it’s the ultimate honor.

Be prepared for some steep, muddy climbs on indiscernible tracks that frequently demand machetes to hack a way through the vines, thorns and shrubs. Bwindi currently has 12 groups fully habituated for tracking, with only eight visitors allowed to visit a group on any one day. A very different encounter – the Gorilla Habituation Experience – has recently started involving the Bikingi group that isn’t fully habituated: they’re used to their trackers but not to seeing different people every day. It’s an exciting alternative – instead of just one hour, we had four hours starting from when we reached their previous night’s nests.

Aside from the chance to chill with our distant relatives, Bwindi also offers a whole host of picturesque forest walks and half-day birding safaris.

We visited see are tree climbing lions of Ishasha. Lions are one of the most sought- after safari species. The shaggy mane of the male, blonde or brunette, in its natural environment is unforgettable. In Queen Elizabeth National Park in western Uganda, the lions offer an added spectacle they climb trees. The prides of around 15 individuals adhere to strict social structures. They communally raise cub which are often born around the same time but lionesses are responsible for 90% of the hunting. They hunt in coordinated groups which allow them to purse larger species like buffalo and giraffes.

We did a game drive at the queen’s pavilion and katwe and on the northern bank of the impressive Kazinga Channel we did a boat cruise. Many guests enjoy the pleasurable two hour luxury 20 seater boat cruise along the channel from the Mweya peninsula. It offers splendid views, including the Rwenzori Mountain.

We visit Uganda’s largest national park Murchison Falls which features on most safari itineraries because of its mix of beauty and wildlife. Four of the Big Five are here (only rhinos are absent, but they can be seen at the Ziwa Rhino Sanctuary on the drive from Kampala) and lions and leopards’ sightings are pretty common.

There are two things every visitor should do at the park. First is taking a boat trip up the Nile River. You will travel past plentiful hippos, crocodiles, and buffaloes stopping near the base of the park’s awesome namesake waterfall. But you can only really appreciate the power of the falls from the top, and going there is the other must-do. The mighty river explodes through a tiny gap in the rock and drops 45 meters down a narrow gorge. It’s far from one of the world’s biggest waterfalls, but it’s definitely one of the most impressive.

With sprawling savannah and soaring mountains, Kidepo Valley National Park might be the most picturesque park in all Africa. Sharing borders with South Sudan and Kenya’s Northern Frontier District, it is Uganda’s most remote and least-explored park. Apoka Lodge is one of Uganda’s finest accommodation options and, although game-driving from here can be unforgettable, you have a good chance of spectacular sightings without even stepping off your veranda.

Kidepo was once the playground of Idi Amin, and the haunting ruins of a lodge that could just as easily have been designed as a massive bunker is currently (although slowly) being converted into a lodge.

Kidepo Valley was the traditional hunting territory of the mysterious Ik tribe, one of Africa’s most culturally-intact communities. The 3-hour trek up to the Ik villages high on the slopes of Morungole Mountain offers an unforgettable opportunity to make friends among the charming people who were (inexplicably) portrayed as the world’s nastiest people in the 1973 best-seller The Mountain People by Colin Turnbull.

March 3, 2023 0 comment
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Recent Posts

  • Road Trip Adventure Through Northern Uganda
  • How Can I Find Car Rentals Near Me in Kampala?
  • 4×4 Car Rental Discovering Queen Elizabeth National Park
  • Road Trips and Self-Drive Journeys in Uganda
  • Encounter Car Rental & Trips in Africa

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