|

With thanks to Nomad Safaris for the use of
the above photographs from Greystoke Mahale and Chada Katavi.
Mahale Mountains National Park
Mahale Mountains National Park is without doubt one of Africa’s
most beautiful parks. It is located on the edge of Lake Tanganyika
in the west of the country. It is generally around 6,000 feet high
with accompanying high rainfall so the best time to visit is in
the drier months, normally May to September. The park is made up
of montane forests and grasslands, along with small pockets of alpine
bamboo.
Mahale is most famous for being a chimpanzee sanctuary with an
estimated 1,000 chimpanzees living here in around 20 family groups
and even though access to the park is only by aeroplane and boat,
the allure of seeing chimpanzees in the wild is enough to tempt
many visitors to the region.
As well as chimps, there are eight other primate species:
- red colobus
- red-tailed monkey
- blue monkey
- vervet monkey
- yellow baboon
- Angola black-and-white colobus
- lesser galago
- thick-tailed greater galago
Primates aside, the brush-tailed porcupine and giant forest squirrel
are another two interesting species found here.
Katavi National Park
Close to Lake Tanganyika is Katavi National Park. This lovely and
extremely remote park has very few visitors mainly owing to its
isolation and lack of facilities but those willing to make the journey
here will be rewarded with a really sensational safari experience.

The vegetation is a mixture of miombo woodland, acacia parkland,
grassland plains and swamps surrounding the Katuma River, which
joins the park’s two lakes, Katavi and Chada. During the rainy season
(light rains in November and heavier rains in April and May) it
is probably best avoided as the game disperses into the woodland,
temperatures soar, humidity escalates and mosquitoes come out in
their droves – not the best combination of factors for a successful
safari!
A flourishing habitat for a plethora of game
During the dry season, the story is quite different. The wildlife
is incredible – great numbers of elephant, buffalo (which congregate
in 1,000 strong herds) zebra, giraffe, hartebeest, topi, impala,
reedbuck and Defassa waterbuck along with a prolific lion population
and plenty of spotted hyena and leopard. The rivers support an astonishing
number and density of hippos and some seriously large crocodiles.
Water birds are wonderful here. There are pink-backed pelicans,
yellow-billed and open-billed storks, African spoonbills and great
numbers of herons, egrets and plovers. Elsewhere in the park, such
exotic sounding gems as the sulphur-breasted bush shrike, the paradise
flycatcher and the African golden oriole can be found.
One resident of the park that its visitors are not so keen to see
is the irritating tsetse fly. Luckily, their distribution is restricted
to the woodlands away from the more popular game-viewing areas on
the floodplains.
|