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Planning a Gorilla Safari in Africa

Gorilla Tracking

Visiting mountain gorillas in Africa in there natural habitats is one of the fantastic once-in-a-lifetime experience everyone has to perform before he or she leaves planet earth. These mountain gorillas can only be visited in the destinations of Uganda in Bwindi and Mgahinga National Park, Volcanoes in Rwanda and Virunga in DR. Cong. As i have told you that one shouldn’t miss before leaving planet earth, it is the number one wish list of visitor who are planning a visit to East Africa.

Before planning a gorilla safari, there are certain things that you should bear in mind before visiting the apes.

  1. What are mountain Gorillas?

There are only several hundred mountain gorillas remaining on Earth, and about half live in the forests of the Virunga mountains in central Africa. Mountain gorillas are a subspecies of the eastern gorillas. A bit more than half of these gorillas live in the Virunga Mountains, a range of extinct volcanoes that border the Democratic Republic of Congo, Rwanda and Uganda. The remainder can be found in the Bwindi Impenetrable National Park in Uganda. Since the discovery of the mountain gorilla subspecies in 1902, its population has endured years of war, hunting, habitat destruction and disease—threats so severe that it was once thought the species might be extinct by the end of the twentieth century.

As their name implies, mountain gorillas live in forests high in the mountains. They have thicker fur, and more of it, compared to other great apes. The fur helps them to survive in a habitat where temperatures often drop below freezing. But as humans have moved more and more into the gorillas’ territory, the gorillas have been pushed farther up into the mountains for longer periods, forcing them to endure dangerous and sometimes deadly conditions.

Since they have 99% of the human DNA, mountain gorillas in families/ groups led by a dominant male silver back which ensures protection and safety of the family. The groups are also composed of females and the younger males, adult and juvenile females, and infants. The largest gorilla group or family ever studied is in Rwanda and is led by Cantsbee (now 38 years old!), who is the oldest known mountain gorilla in the whole world.

  1. How is gorilla trekking like?

After your breakfast with your park lunch and depending on which lodges you would have slept in, you may drive or walk to the pack headquarters for registration and allocation of gorilla families depending on your interests and physical fitness. You will definitely be divided into groups of eight people per gorilla family and after briefing, each given a guide, a ranger and a tourism police officer who has to ensure that you are safe while trekking gorillas. You will then walk to the starting point as each gorilla family has a different starting point depending on its movements with in its territory. From the starting point, you will start your trek which may take from 30 minutes to even six hours and once you have seen the gorillas, you will then spend an hour with them before returning back to the park headquarters. At the park headquarters, each of you will be given a certificate in recognition of your contribution to the conservation of the endangered mountain gorillas. The experience varies from one family to another, from one day to another and from hour to hour depending on the mood and activity of a given mountain gorilla family.

  1. What is the best time to visit gorillas in Africa?

The gorilla trekking in Africa is done throughout the year. However, the best time to visit Africa for a gorilla trek is during the short dry season from mid-December to early February or over the long dry season months of June to September. These periods offer by far the easiest hiking conditions and the lowest malaria risk.

You can visit Rwanda, Uganda, DR. Congo and trek gorillas outside these optimum times of year but bear in mind that hiking will be more difficult in the rainy season as paths are steep and maybe muddy. It pays to be as fit as possible before you commence your trek.

  1. What to have for gorilla Trekking in Africa?
  1. What to pack for a Gorilla Trek?
  1. What are the trekking rules?
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