Sunday, April 29, 2012

National College of Tourism

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Campuses

Bustani Campus

NCT comprises of three campuses notably; Temeke Campus, Arusha Campus and Dar es Salaam Campus. In order to promote efficiency and functional utilization of facilities, each campus offers training in specialized programmes.
This campus is located at Dar es Salaam city centre and has the capacity to accommodate 500 students annually. It is specialized in hospitality programmes and is fully equipped with the state-of-the art training facilities.

Location:
Shaaban Robert Street, Dar-es-salaam.

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Main Campus in Shaaban Robert Street, Dar-es-Salaam.

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Main Campus Facilities

National College of Tourism Tanzania


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Campuses

Arusha Campus

The campus is strategically located in the northern circuit where demand for tourism services is very high; so is the demand for qualified personnel. Currently, the college is offering hospitality programmes at certificate level. The existing infrastructure has the capacity to accommodate up to 150 students annually
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Arusha Campus

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Students at Arusha Campus
Location
Sakina, Nairobi Road, Arusha.

History
National College of Tourism - Arusha Campus was established in 1993 by the harms Seidel Foundation of Munich Germany and the Arusha Municipal Council with the aim of providing appropriate vocational skills to students who would like to seek a career in the hotel industry. The college has been taken over by the Ministry of Natural Resources and Tourism on 4th July 2008 as part of its National College of Tourism.

Courses offered
NCT- Arusha campus offers two years courses providing for the basic training of professions in Food Production, Front Office Operations, Food & Beverage Service, Bakery & Pastry Production and House Keeping.

Academic year begins on 1st September of every year. Applications can be done online or download forms from 2nd May at the college at Sakina Arusha along Nairobi road,

Apart from the professional knowledge, subjects English, French, Development Studies, Mathematics, Computer skills and Entrepreneurship education are taught each tailored towards the professional subjects.

In implementing the government policy in fighting against HIV/AIDS pandemic; the college under directives from VETA has started Social life skills as one of the subjects in each course and students also engage themselves in extra curricula activities like choir, sports, gardening and taking care of the environment around the college.

Students also undergo three months field attachment at hotel industry where students have the opportunity to acquire experience in the hotel environment.

The Institute has achieved a very Successful working relationship with the hotel industry who are involved in evaluating the final examinations of the college, This helps to ensure that a high standard of training is maintained and that the skills offered meets industry expectations.

The college is a member of AHSA (Association of Hotel Schools in Africa). Our mission along with the association is to promote an exchange of knowledge and experience amongst other member schools in order to attain the highest standards in hospitality training and also puts the college at almost similar level with other internationally recognized hotel schools.
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Administration Block NCT - Arusha Campus

The college also cooperated with Kaveibrogymnasiet a hotel and restaurant school in Skovde, Sweden.

The aim of this cooperation was to expose both students and staff of NCT - A rush and Kaveibrogymnasiet to the culture of the two countries, and also share experience and knowledge, in the hospitality industry.

NCT offers services which include outdoor catering for weddings, anniversaries, birthdays, send offs, baptisms, conferences/seminars and supplying of bread, cakes to individuals and supermarkets in Arusha as a means of generating funds and expose our students to business environment.

Facilities
Accommodation in Arusha Campus
We are non-residential campus. The College can arrange, on request, accommodation for its international students. We do not provide our own accommodation but students will be provided with support and assistance in finding local accommodation in the area.

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various facilities, including a training restaurant, computer room, training bedroom and training kitchen

Specialist training rooms provide real working environments and including;
Training and Practical kitchens, Training and Practical Restaurants, Training and Practical rooms for hotel housekeeping studies Training Front Office Operation / Desk Rooms.

National college of Tourism

Offering tourism training.


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Campuses

Temeke Campus

Temeke Campus is Located At Mahunda Street, Temeke District, 10km away from the DSM city centre and has capacity to accommodate 150 students. This Campus is responsible for training tourism and related programmes.

The Campus is close to residential and commercial hubs, that are safe and secure and are conveniently close to major traffic routes. A variety of student accommodation and conveniences are located around the campus.

Academics
Programmes Offered in Temeke Campus:

NCT offers unlimited opportunity for both me and women to join and advance career in hospitality and tourism industry.
Currently, the College offers the following programmes.

See Programmes and Courses

Getting here
Maps and directions to the Temeke Campus .

Location:
Tandika, Mahunda Street, Dar-es-Salaam.


Temeke Campus

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Administration Block

Accommodation Facilities.
College can accomodate about 200 students by their own or their sponsors' accomodation costs if a student prefer to do so, although it is optional and the college has no any influence on this, NCT posses standard beds, sleeping matresses and rooms which are not far from classes for students who will be accomodated in the college's hostels in Temeke Campus.

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various facilities, including a training restaurant, kitchen, computer room and library
More Photos Here

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classrooms and special training rooms

Specialist training rooms provide real working environments and including;
Training and Practical kitchens, Training and Practical Restaurants, Training and Practical rooms for hotel housekeeping studiesTraining Front Office Operation
 

 

Lake Rukwa




Crocodiles on the shore of Lake Rukwa 
  
Lake Rukwa
Locationsouthwestern Tanzania
Coordinates8°00′S 32°25′E / 8°S 32.417°E / -8; 32.417Coordinates: 8°00′S 32°25′E / 8°S 32.417°E / -8; 32.417
Lake typealkaline
Basin countriesTanzania
Surface elevation800 m
Lake Rukwa is a lake in the Rukwa Valley of southwestern Tanzania. The alkaline Lake Rukwa lies midway between Lake Tanganyika and Lake Nyasa at an elevation of about 800 metres, in a parallel branch of the rift system. The lake has seen large fluctuations in its size over the years, due to varying inflow of streams. Currently it is about 180 km long and averages about 32 km wide, making it about 5760 square kilometres in size.[1]. In 1929 it was only about 30 miles (48 km) in length, but in 1939 it was approximately 80 miles (128 km) long and 25 miles wide (40 km)[2]. Almost half of the lake lies in Uwanda Game Reserve

Kitulo National Park African Gardens


Mysterious mountains of the south

           
Flowers in Kitulo National ParkHigh up on a distant plateau in the southern highlands of Tanzania, perched beside Lake Malawi in the fertile Mbeya region is Tanzania’s newest national park, the Kitulo plateau. There is almost no information for potential visitors to the park and, fow now, a lot of personal research is necessary to pull off the trip. Most visitors won’t have the time to do the trip planning I did, and some visitors might not be able to put up with lack of travel amenities and typical safari-style luxury on offer.
However, if you want to experience a real African adventure into the unknown, and something different from the usual game parks where you are forced to sit through hours in a 4X4 vehicle in search of elusive animals, this might be for you.
Kitulo is primarily a hikers’ and botanists’ paradise, but the place would appeal to anyone who wants to get away from it all and experience remote mountain life with stunning and varied scenery. Like the green, cool mountain area of Lushoto, it would make a great getaway spot in the summer months for those living on the coast in Dar es Salaam or Zanzibar and wanting to escape the heat in December-February. This also happens to be the best time on Kitulo for the spectacular flower bloom season that earned it the name “Serengeti of Flowers” by researchers or “Bustani Ya Mungu” (‘Garden of God’) by locals.
Day 1: My journey began in Zanzibar just after the Zanzibar International Film Festival. I slept at home in Dar es Salaam overnight, and promptly set off at 5.30am. Yes, 5:30am - pay attention as this is the time you’ll need to get up every day to make the trip happen smoothly. Road trips in Tanzania need maximum daylight time. Driving at night is simply not advisable. Distances travelled on known stretches of road often exceed 400km and lesser-travelled and mapped roads can be almost any distance, therefore the odds of completing each stretch successfully with time to spare and explore increase the earlier you wake up.
By 2pm we reached Iringa, where I met with family friends of the Asas Group, transportation and dairy products producers, who helped us ask around and research how to get to the Kitulo plateau. There is no readily available information (even online) to book a guide or room and board in Kitulo, let alone which road drive on to approach the park. We used our time wisely to source this information - after a few phone calls we were finally put in touch with Solo, a guide at Tanzania National Parks , who told us to take the Chimala turnoff on the Iringa to Mbeya road to reach the plateau - and that was that...
Dar-Iringa road
Dar-Iringa Road leading to the Southern highlands
Day 2: At 5am, we set off and about 260 kilometres down the Iringa-Mbeya road we reached the Chimala turnoff, which was also signed for the Kitulo plateau National Park. Iringa is fairy temperate in June (for Tanzanians, read COLD) and so is the rest of the Mbeya region, so expect lots of low lying fog on the road in the morning. At times this creates strikingly beautiful scenery, especially as the sun rises.
Ascending up to the plateau begins the first adventure - the driving conditions are tough to say the least. The road can test even the bravest 4X4 drivers as you climb from 1,100m to over 2,000m (6,000ft) to reach the lowest levels of the plateau. Occasionally, you see overloaded buses full of locals coming the other direction and you can only wonder how often they get stuck. I wouldn’t recommend public transport for tourists. One thing is for sure, you’ll need a very reliable and powerful 4X4 vehicle to get up here safely.
At the top, a further 30 minutes’ drive along a nicer road leads to the busiest town on the plateau, Matamba, where the park headquarters is located. We arrived around noon. I had planned to do a tour of the park and descend onto Matema beach that very day, but was quickly given the information I should have been able to obtain before setting off on the trip:
"No, you can’t do that all in one day, the hike itself takes up to eight hours, and Kitulo Park itself take a few hours to just browse… There are at least seven hiking trails to explore in the park itself..."
It became clear that we would have to stay the night up on the plateau and proceeded to check in at Mama Izengo, the local guesthouse in Matamba (there are no fancy hotels). We paid about TSH5,000 (USD3) for the night, excluding meals. Whilst at the park headquarters, I proceeded to check the guestbook. I counted no more than 100 tourists during all of 2010, about half were German or Swiss. The park officials told me that they had seen dramatic rises in numbers in the past few years! Just to put the 100 visitors in perspective, I was the first visitor in the last two weeks. This is not surprising given the park is barely ten years old and is not on the main tourist circuit.
Iringa-Mbeya road
Iringa-Mbeya road – low-lying fog at dawn
Climb to Kitulo plateau
The flattest part of the climb to Kitulo plateau on the Chimala turnoff
Mama Izengo hotel
Mama Izengo Hotel – a local guesthouse where rooms start at USD3 a night
After hiring a guide and paying park fees, we spent the rest of the afternoon exploring the park itself, which was even higher in altitude at 3,000 metres. The place is incredibly tranquil and resembles something you’d see in the Scottish highlands with meadows and rolling hills full of bright and unique flowers. I had come in the dry season so the flowers were not in full bloom, especially the unique orchids the park is famous for (these had been eaten by locals or had dried out), but despite that there were enough year-round flowers to see.
Other attractions included waterfalls and small caves to explore. As you wonder around the plateau there is evidence of fresh water everywhere as little streams wind their way across the plateau and down the mountains. I was reminded that the plateau is the ultimate source of water of Lake Malawi, Mtera dam and the mighty Ruaha river that winds through huge areas of Tanzania towards the Indian Ocean. Without the plateau these ecosystems, which support a wide range of life, would not exist.
Rolling hills of Kitulo plateau
Rolling hills of Kitulo plateau
Waterfall in Kitulo National Park
Waterfalls within the Kitulo plateau
Walking on the Kitulo plateau
Walking on the Kitulo plateau
Cave on the Kitulo plateau
Caves in Kitulo
Wild strawberries in Kitulo National Park
Wild strawberries
Day 3: The next day was the highlight of the trip – descending from the plateau onto Matema beach on Lake Malawi. Setting off at 5am again, we picked up two guides including one that was a trainee and another who had done the hike regularly.
A quick note on guides: it is strongly advised to hire one as you do not want to get lost out here - I heard stories of visitors who were stubborn and ended up getting lost for days on the plateau. Phone reception is spotty; for those concerned, Vodacom works best, and Airtel kicks in once you start descending through the Livingstone mountains.
The roads were frosty and temperatures hovered between one to three degrees Celsius at dawn. At times the road led to some spectacular scenes down below where you could see the distant Lake Malawi - after 68km by road we reached the town of Bulongwa. On the way we passed through the park again as day broke to reveal some amazing landscape photo opportunities in the dawn light.
From Bulongwa, I said goodbye to the vehicle to meet me later that day at Matema beach. Gaspa, my driver, had to drive down the plateau and rejoin me at the beach, a distance of at least 100 km to circumvent the mountains. Meanwhile, I was some 2,500m above sea level and would descend through the Livingstone Mountains/Kipengere Range onto Lake Malawi at about 500m. Talk about a short cut... this is a full 2,000m descent over about 11km...
Matamba road
Matamba to Bulongwa Road - temperature 2 degrees Celsius at more than 2,000m above sea level
Mountain village life, Kitulo
Village mountain life near Kitulo
Hike begins at Bulongwa
Beginning of hike at the edge of Bulongwa - Lake Malawi shore below
As the hike began, I became concerned about the frosty path. Both the guides and myself slipped several times and before long a passer by climbing the path the other way had to cut me a walking stick that I badly needed to help me balance. We walked across knife edge ridges that are not for the faint hearted.
Interestingly I saw more flowers here than I did on the plateau. Some species looked similar but slightly different - further showcasing the amazing biodiversity in the area. The plateau environment quickly gave way to the Livingstone forest - if you have hiked Kilimanjaro one can’t help but be reminded of that hike, especially on the day 2-3 ascent or on the final descent, when the environment is constantly changing as you change altitudes. To me Kilimanjaro is about the sheer rapid ecological zones you transition through quickly.
We saw numerous migratory bird species and at one point spotted a Thomson’s Gazelle that was being shouted at by a group of monkeys protecting their territory – and where there are monkeys and gazelles, there must be leopard! I had to banish the thought and remind myself that leopards mainly hunt at night. I had other things to worry about like navigating the perilous knife edge hiking trail. I was hoping to see the recently discovered and endangered primate species unique to the region, the Kipunji, but no luck this time.
Flowers on Livingstone mountains
Flowers still present at the top of the Livingstone mountains/Kipengere range
About three hours into the hike, the temperature had risen enough to dry out the frost and make it more safe for hiking. However, unlike many hikes I have been on, the trail did not seem to flatten out - in fact at times it only seemed to be getting steeper. This was alarming for me as my knees and thighs were beginning to give way. In the end the hike was a seven hour continuous downhill at about 15-20% gradient.
The GPS reading later told me I only ascended 300m but descended well over 2,000m. The views give way to even broader spectacular Lake Malawi scenes pretty quickly and then the view of Matema beach, a fishing and tourist town.
The last hour of hiking was the most painful for me as my legs were hurting the most, my pace probably halved and it was incredibly frustrating how steep the trail remained right to the very end. The sun was also strongest at this time overhead and we quickly finished all our water. By around 4pm the sun begun to get weaker and we could hear the sounds of children playing on the lake beach. Some children came up to the lower slopes to collect firewood from the forest.
The hike ends abruptly right in the heart of the village - it is as if you emerged right into the town square or high street and then this gives way right onto the lake. The time it took me was seven hours, whereas the guides had quoted between five to eight hours.
I would estimate that fit hikers who are not afraid of continuous downhill could certainly do it in five hours or less. However, I heard some parties taking up to ten hours - which is alarming given you only have 12 hours of daylight. The guides pointed out to me along the way maybe one or two areas large and flat enough for a camping spot, so that is an alternative to break up the hike but would require bringing your own camping gear and would not be suited for larger or multiple groups at once.
Knife edge ridges in the Livingstone mountains
Kipengere range, Southern Tanzania
Knife edge ridges along the Livingstone mountains breaking into forest
After the hike I stayed at neighbouring Kyela Resort, about 20km from Matema beach, but visitors could choose to spend more time at Matema beach as it has some notable tourist hotels, not to mention the lake and beach. I thoroughly enjoyed the adventure – the limited infrastructure was made worth tolerating by the barely touched trails and biodiversity that is unique on earth, as well as utter peace and quiet.
The people of Kitulo plateau are very friendly and I had lively conversations that grounded me in the realities of life in the rural Southern highlands - many people are totally self sufficient and reliant only on the mountains.
I was left wondering whether mass tourism would ever reach this area - it is unlikely in the near future so long as the road to access the plateau remains such a perilous one. It’s also bound to be a niche destination appealing to hikers and botanists mainly - right now maybe a third of the visitors are researchers.
I plan to return to see the plateau in full bloom during the rainy season, however here lies the dilemma - the road conditions will be much worse yet the plateau will be even more rewarding in terms of floral display.
The other limiting factor is the lack of decent accommodation. There are plans for the Government-owned dairy farm on the plateau to open up a ranch for horse riding, and hopefully this will be matched with decent accommodation. Camping is a real option here if you have your own gear and allows you to bypass the town and experience the park to full effect without driving in and out.
Given most tourists won’t want to visit just Kitulo, I can see this being a great addition after a safari at nearby Ruaha National Park to end with an active or relaxing week. Rather than drive all the way from Dar you can fly into Ruaha via Coastal Aviation or into Mbeya region.
View down to Matema beach, Lake Malawi
Emerging out of the Livingstone forest - steep all the way to Matema beach
 



Amboni caves and their rich attractions.

Amboni caves and their rich attractions









 
The Amboni caves are situated almost eight kilometres north of Tanga Town, at Kiomoni Village, off the Mombasa highway. The caves can be reached by a dirt road which passes through Kiomoni Village.
The caves were declared a conservation area in 1922 by the British colonial government after receiving notification from Amboni Limited, which has been operating sisal plantations in Tanga Region since 1892.
According to Mr Tabu Mtelekezo who is involved in the conservation of antiquities in the area, the limestones were formed naturally in Tanga over a period of about 150 million years ago.
He explains: “Limestone is nearly insoluble in pure water, but it is quite easily dissolved by water containing small quantities of carbonic acid. The carbonic acid that has affected the caves forms when rain water dissolves carbon dioxide as it falls through the atmosphere.”
Mr Mtelekezo added that the process is called carbonation, in which water percolation through the soil acquires more carbon dioxide from decaying organic matters to form the acid.
The carbonic acid reacts with calcite (calcium carbonate) in the rocks and dissolves the insoluble carbonate to form soluble bicarbonates which are washed down through the soil.
He said the 70 caves cover a 234-square kilometre area but due to lack of personnel to exploit all of them, only two caves with thirteen stops are used.
“We are currently using the thirteen stops only as there is a shortage of workers… We cannot afford to take our visitors around all the caves,” said Mr Mtelekezo.
The caves which are owned by the government through its Natural Resources and Tourism ministry, are currently used for ritual purposes, tourism and training.
“The caves were used as a holy place in 16 A.D, after someone discovered the formulation of various features, some of them representing human organs, Virgin Mary, a ship, an airplane and so on,” said Mr Mtelekezo.
He said the caves have been the subject of local legends and a number of mythical and awe inspiring stories have been attributed to the caves. The local people regard them as a supernatural formation where the ghosts are believed to have resided since the caves’ formation.
During the tour, a group of tourists - including the writer of this article - noticed bottles containing perfumes, oil and blood from sacrificed animals at the chamber’s entrance.
“Some traditionalists believe that there is a powerful deity which can increase wealth, bring justice, cure sickness, alleviate sickness or suffering, and increase one’s fertility,” explained Mr Mtelekezo.
Getting into the caves for the first time can be very terrifying as the place is dark to the extent that one cannot identify anyone two steps away.
The first stop is the ‘Mzimu’ area where various people go for ritual services; the second area has three layers of rocks, which students use for their studies.
On the third stop, there is a cave which the guide elaborated that it was a hideout for two freedom fighters namely Osale Otango, a Mau Mau fighter from Kenya and Paulo Hamis from Tanzania.
“They used to steal goods and terrorise some of the colonialists in the region and were also believed by some of the natives to have used witchcraft in their movements,” said Mr Mtelekezo.
He added that although the government regarded them as criminals, the natives treated them as freedom fighters during the struggle for independence.
“While the stalactites grow as downward limestone pillars or columns, stalagmites grow upwards,” he explains.
“In certain circumstances a downward growing stalactite and an upward growing stalagmites may join to form a column,” added Mr Mtelekezo.
On the fifth stop features which formed naturally become visible. Here, there is a road which the guide tells the curious group that it is called the Amboni Road. On the sixth stop there are two roads which he identifies as Mombasa Road and Maweni Road.
The features extend to the seventh stop, where there is a swimming pool, an airplane wing, a human skull, a map of the African continent, and an elephant head.
The eighth stop has an open space which the guide calls a picnic site, because the place can accommodate up to 300 people and was used as a picnic site by the natives before the government took over the caves.
At the ninth stop stands Mount Kilimanjaro and the American Statue of Liberty, while at the tenth stop there are statues of Virgin Mary and Angel Gabriel with an open Bible.
The eleventh and twelfth points consist of features of buildings while the last stop is the exit which resembles an airplane entrance.
Mr Mtelekezo explained that the neighbouring community indirectly benefits from the site by selling their commodities to visitors. “The collections at the site go directly to the government,” he added.
He urged Tanzanians to visit the caves noting that the country is blessed to have them as people travel from far to come and see them. “It is very cheap and therefore affordable for everyone,” he added.

Gombe Stream National Park overview




NATIONAL PARKSGombe Stream National Park poster
Arusha
Gombe Stream
Katavi
Kilimanjaro
Kitulo Plateau
Mahale Mountains
Lake Manyara
Mikumi
Mkomazi
Ruaha
Rubondo Island
Saadani
Serengeti
Tarangire

Gombe Stream National Park

An excited whoop erupts from deep in the forest, boosted immediately by a dozen other voices, rising in volume and tempo and pitch to a frenzied shrieking crescendo. It is the famous ‘pant-hoot’ call: a bonding ritual that allows the participants to identify each other through their individual vocal stylisations. To the human listener, walking through the ancient forests of Gombe Stream, this spine-chilling outburst is also an indicator of imminent visual contact with man’s closest genetic relative: the chimpanzee.
Gombe is the smallest of Tanzania's national parks: a fragile strip of chimpanzee habitat straddling the steep slopes and river valleys that hem in the sandy northern shore of Lake Tanganyika. Its chimpanzees – habituated to human visitors – were made famous by the pioneering work of Jane Goodall, who in 1960 founded a behavioural research program that now stands as the longest-running study of its kind in the world. The matriarch Fifi, the last surviving member of the original community, only three-years old when Goodall first set foot in Gombe, is still regularly seen by visitors.
Chimpanzees share about 98% of their genes with humans, and no scientific expertise is required to distinguish between the individual repertoires of pants, hoots and screams that define the celebrities, the powerbrokers, and the supporting characters. Perhaps you will see a flicker of understanding when you look into a chimp's eyes, assessing you in return - a look of apparent recognition across the narrowest of species barriers.
The most visible of Gombe’s other mammals are also primates. A troop of beachcomber olive baboons, under study since the 1960s, is exceptionally habituated, while red-tailed and red colobus monkeys - the latter regularly hunted by chimps – stick to the forest canopy.
The park’s 200-odd bird species range from the iconic fish eagle to the jewel-like Peter’s twinspots that hop tamely around the visitors’ centre.
After dusk, a dazzling night sky is complemented by the lanterns of hundreds of small wooden boats, bobbing on the lake like a sprawling city.

About Gombe Stream National Park
Size: 52 sq km (20 sq miles), Tanzania's smallest park.
Location: 16 km (10 miles) north of Kigoma on the shore of Lake Tanganyika in western Tanzania.

Getting there
Kigoma is connected to Dar and Arusha by scheduled flights, to Dar and Mwanza by a slow rail service, to Mwanza, Dar and Mbeya by rough dirt roads, and to Mpulungu in Zambia by a weekly ferry.
From Kigoma, local lake-taxis take up to three hours to reach Gombe, or motorboats can be chartered, taking less than one hour.

What to doChimpanzee trekking; hiking, swimming and snorkelling;
visit the site of Henry Stanley's famous “Dr Livingstone I presume” at Ujiji near Kigoma, and watch the renowned dhow builders at work. .

When to goThe chimps don't roam as far in the wet season (February-June, November-mid December) so may be easier to find;
better picture opportunities in the dry (July-October and late December).

Accommodation
1 new luxury tented lodge, as well a self-catering hostel, guest house and campsites on the lakeshore.

 

Beach at Gombe Gombe Stream Waterfall


Baby Chimpanzee sleeping

Baboon



Kids playing in the surg at Kigoma