Birdwatching

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Call us to talk about Birdwatching.

Tanzania is a country in which the keen ‘twitcher’ will be able to discover a particularly rich and varied birdlife, with over 1000 different species able to be viewed in different locations, and at different times of the year.

Thus, for example, in the Ngorongoro Crater and Lake Magadi (including Lake Natron), apart from the many birds to be seen in the crater area, there are the thousands of flamingoes to see at Lake Magadi, a soda lake. Lake Natron lies further north and is another flamingo "hot spot". The best time for flamingo viewing is January and February.

Then in the Serengeti National Park, the sweeping grasslands make viewing the many birds in the area a delight. On Rubondo Island close to 400 species can be seen, including fish eagle, storks, cormorants, martial eagle, goliath heron, sacred ibis and kingfishers. [cont]

In Ruaha National Park – one of the best general game viewing areas generally - over 400 bird species reside here such as Dickinson's kestrel, violet-crested turaco, pale-billed hornbill, racket-tailed roller and Eleonora's falcon.

Eurasian migrant birds flock to Ruaha twice a year - October to November and March to April on the their outward journeys to feed with resident kingfishers, plovers, hornbills, green wood hoopoes, bee-eaters, sunbirds and egrets.

Finally, in the Katavi National Park, there are more than 400 bird species, the park being home to large flocks of pelican, as well as the go-away-bird, pale-billed hornbill and Tanzania masked weaver.

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Destinations
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ARUSHA

Arusha National Park is perhaps best known for being the nearest location to both Mount Kilimanjaro and Mount Meru.

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GOMBE STREAM

The smallest National Park in Tanzania - famed for its chimpanzees and the pioneering work of Jane Goodall.

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KATAVI

Tanzania's 'best kept secret', the remote and unspoilt Katavi National Park is a veritable throwback to nineteenth century Africa.

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LAKE MANYARA

Lake Manyara National Park’s most famous attraction just has to be its remarkable and legendary tree-climbing lions.

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MIKUMI

An interesting small game park, lying close to the mighty Selous Game Reserve, bizarrely bisected by the mighty Tanzam highway.

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NGORONGORO

The largest intact caldera in the world, the Ngorongoro Crater is one of the few areas in Africa where the ‘Big Five’ can all be seen together.

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RUAHA

One of the least well known National Parks in Tanzania, Ruaha is also one of its finest, with breathtaking scenery and an exceptionally high density of game.

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SELOUS

Tanzania's and Africa's largest game reserve. And, being a game reserve, rather than a National Park, with many fewer restrictions on activities.

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SERENGETI

The Serengeti is Tanzania’s oldest game park, famed for its wildebeest migration, and is known as "the place where the land moves on forever"

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TARANGIRE

Probably the best place in Tanzania to view elephants, not to mention tree-climbing lions and black rhino.

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