Tanzania Safari Blog with Tanzania Odyssey

June 30, 2010

Camps reopen after the rainy season

Filed under: Tanzania Safari,The Selous,Uncategorized,ruaha — Tags: , — Tanzania Odyssey @ 5:53 pm

Our three camps in Selous and Ruaha re-opened after the rains on June 1st.

Selous Impala Camp has been completely rebuilt and is fresh and sparkling new.

In April and May Matteo worked hard to rebuild a beautiful new lodge – see above – on stilts, overlooking the Rufiji. The light airy shaded area is great for lunchtimes, and the veranda facing the river is perfect for breakfast and dinner. Wooden walkways lead out to the lounge and the sundowner area.

Impala Pool

The swimming pool has also been moved back, though it still looks out towards the river.

Tent 8 is now a family tent, similar to Tent 7 – with two tents on the same platform. This is ideal for families where parents want some privacy, while having their children close by.

Matteo has returned to Italy and Barbara is now camp manager, with the help of Andrea and Makomba.

Lake Manze Camp, Selous

Lake Manze camp is again in full swing, with Richard and Sarah at the helm.

Lunch at Manze

Many visitors are enjoying the relaxed lifestyle of this superbly natural camp. Wild dogs have already been seen and the prolific game of the Selous Game Reserve is being experienced to the full.

Mdonya Old River Camp

Mdonya camp in the Ruaha National Park is once more delighting visitors with its natural surroundings.
Animals wander freely through the game corridor of the old sand river.

Micol is again in charge, assisted by Benedict, and this year she will have another assistant too.
After the rains the camp is fresh and beautiful and game-viewing is excellent as usual.

For detailed information about Tanzania and Zanzibar please look at our site – www.tanzaniaodyssey.com, and click here for information about a Tanzania safari.

To view videos of the country and the various lodges please see our Video Console

Or for advice / quotes or anything else please call us in London on 44 (2) 7471 8780 or in the USA on (toll free) 1-866 356 4691

June 25, 2010

Zimbabwe

Filed under: Tanzania Safari — Tags: , — Tanzania Odyssey @ 3:22 pm

For a company that specialises in Tanzania you may think it odd that we are reproducing an article on Zimbabwe. But after so may years in the wilderness Zimbabwe is finally coming back onto the safari scene – happy reading: – for the original article please see Zimbabwe Safari article

Sitting alone at Pamushana Lodge beside a plunge pool that overlooks the vast Malilangwe Wildlife Reserve, it is hard to believe that I am in Zimbabwe, a country that has dominated the news with stories of cholera, hyper-inflation and the murder of white farmers.

But tourism here is bouncing back. The Foreign and Commonwealth Office no longer has official alerts warning against travel to the country.

Albee Yeend, the general manager of Africa for Steppes Travel, which has just reintroduced its Zimbabwe tours, says: “The fact that the US dollar is now the main trading currency has made a huge difference. Zimbabwe is such a jewel of a country.

“Before the troubles it was one of our biggest sellers. People may feel that they shouldn’t travel there because they don’t like Mugabe, but Zimbabweans are very dependent on tourism. They need it. Fortunately, investment is coming back.”

Pamushana is one of the best examples of a new generation of safari lodge in Zimbabwe. Set in the Lowveld, the former ranch was bought in 1994 by the Zimbabwean-owned and run Malilangwe Trust, with funding from the American billionaire Paul Tudor Jones.

For years the trust ran the property as a private wildlife conservancy, but in 2007 Jones signed up the South African safari operator Singita to refurbish and manage Pamushana as a high-end, low-impact lodge.

From the main lodge — all thatched, open sides and scattered with sofas, poolside loungers and four-poster outdoor beds — stretch endless vistas that change with the light. Thousands of trees speckle the plains. In the distance, I can spot giraffe. At the back, above lawns overhung with baobabs and strangling figs, I can hear birds chirruping in the morning light. It’s as close as you can get to an African Eden.

Unlike most safari camps in South Africa, which share game reserves with other lodges, Pamushana has the entire 40,500-hectare Malilangwe reserve to itself — and since the camp sleeps a maximum of 16, everyone has a fair amount of space to enjoy. Guests pay US$800 (£517) a night to stay at one of the most stylish places in Africa. (You can take over the camp privately — as did Catherine Zeta-Jones and Michael Douglas — for $19,000 a night.)

The Malilangwe Trust ploughs profits into conservation. In 1997 $1 million was spent buying 28 black rhino from KwaZulu-Natal, in South Africa, the largest wildlife purchase and reintroduction yet. This has brought the rhino population up to 58 black and 72 white (protected by 70 armed game guards recruited from the surrounding villages). Thirty-three roan antelope — a species that had died out — were reintroduced.

There are lion prides, more than 30 leopard and so many elephants that the resort’s management is desperately trying to persuade the Government to issue a permit so that some can be moved.

The game reserve has largely been left alone by poachers, thanks, says the manager, Jason Turner, to the camp’s relationship with local communities. The scale of Malilangwe Trust’s involvement in local welfare is like no other in Africa.

Each year it ploughs between $1.5 and $2 million into projects that benefit about 10,000 people in local villages and on former farms. They include education programmes, bursaries for children to go to school, a clinic and giving seed to local chiefs. Every day, with the help of other donors, it feeds 25,000 under-8s with porridge — the only meal that many will get that day.

Throughout the area, everyone I speak to says the same: that Malilangwe is their only means of survival. “Because they rely on us so heavily, we have been able to educate them about the value of wildlife,” Turner says. “Go to other places around here and they’re littered with traps and snares. The game has been written off. But, thankfully, most of ours is left alone. And so are we.”

This, for the visitor, is a blessing. During our four days there, we see everything you could hope to on safari, from roaring lion to baby rhino. And, on top of that, we indulge in the luxuries for which Singita has become well known: capacious bathrooms; private pools; friendly, accommodating staff; enthusiastic game guides; and a down-to-earth, relaxed atmosphere that is often absent in five-star lodges.

Luxury may be hard to stomach in a country where people struggle for food. But having seen what money from tourism can achieve in a poor area, it is difficult to advise you not to visit this little haven in Zimbabwe.

Need to know

A 12-day holiday in Zimbabwe, with four nights at Pamushana, three nights at Amalinda and three nights at Somalisa, including all road and light aircraft transfers, plus international flights with British Airways, costs £5,875pp.

Ethical Zimbabwe
In previous years I would not have advised tourists to visit Zimbabwe.

President Mugabe’s corrupt Government and Army, a politically biased police force and judiciary, poor human rights record and continued attacks on farmers do not make Zimbabwe an appealing holiday destination. However, having just visited the country, I have seen a marked improvement in the roads and food is now plentiful, thanks to the introduction of the American dollar as the currency.
For detailed information about Tanzania and Zanzibar please look at our site – www.tanzaniaodyssey.com, and click here for information about a Tanzania safari.

To view videos of the country and the various lodges please see our Video Console

Or for advice / quotes or anything else please call us in London on 44 (2) 7471 8780 or in the USA on (toll free) 1-866 356 4691

A New Star in the Serengeti

Filed under: Serengeti,Tanzania Safari — Tags: , — Tanzania Odyssey @ 3:19 pm

A new star is shining in the Serengeti. Olakira, meaning ‘Star’ in the language of the Maasai, is a mobile tented camp that has a fabulous new location at Mukatano, on the wild banks of the Mara River.

As well as being a very scenic river location, this is a very ‘active’ wildlife site with hippo and lion close by during the night, and elephant and wildebeest in the river for your breakfast viewing pleasure.

Anyone seeking a seriously special safari experience should consider aiming for the Serengeti, for the ultimate Tanzania safari. When the Great Migration is moving across its magnificent, wild plains, this area feels a world apart, a stunning pageant of natural life.

Now imagine camping in the midst of this landscape, a truly spectacular treat, and waking up each morning to a fully cooked breakfast, looking out over the Great Mara river, witnessing the life threatening crossing of the wildebeest through crocodile infested waters.

Consultants Tanzania Odyssey constantly revisit all of the best safari accommodation, and our Northern Tanzania expert Ed took this impressive footage on his last adventure in Olakira: Northen Tanzania safari action.

Semi-permanent mobile camps are an exciting new iteration of Northern Circuit safaris, with enough people currently travelling to warrant the existence of these fabulous mobile tented camp; large, safari tents with real beds and cooking facilities, just waiting for you to arrive, settle in and enjoy the action.

A stay here is a camping treat, with very high standards of food and service, although the focus is certainly on the wildlife, and the guiding here is truly superb. The point of being here is to settle down in the midst of the wild animal action, in a spectacular setting.
At Tanzania Odyssey we spend a great deal of time arguing the merits of the various safari experiences, but we all agree that Olakira is, without any doubt, one of the best mobile camps in the Serengeti. Guiding here is superb, food and service are also set very high.
Find out more about all kinds of different Tanzania safari.
For detailed information about Tanzania and Zanzibar please look at our site – www.tanzaniaodyssey.com, and click here for information about a Tanzania safari.

To view videos of the country and the various lodges please see our Video Console

Or for advice / quotes or anything else please call us in London on 44 (2) 7471 8780 or in the USA on (toll free) 1-866 356 4691

Scientist Unlock Secrets behind Serengeti’s Wildebeest Migration

Filed under: Serengeti,Tanzania Safari — Tags: , — Tanzania Odyssey @ 3:16 pm

“Once salt rises in park’s Southern waters, animals migrate north”. Something in the water in Tanzania’s Serengeti National Park is spurring the world’s most spectacular migration, according to a new study.

One of the spectacular and unique event of the year is the Serengeti wildebeest migration, which takes place between the months of November and July following year. This has been described by many as one of the greatest natural invent in the wildlife worldEach year a legion of nearly two million wildebeest, zebras and gazelles circulate through the park, settling in the verdant grasslands to give birth while the rivers flow and new wet season grasses grow in endless abundance. Then, as if. spooked, the herds suddenly begin to trek north in late May or early June, leaving behind an apparent paradise.

“When animals leave the south, there’s still plenty of green forage,” Ayron Strauch of Tufts

University said. “And plenty of water.”
Strauch and Frances Chew, also of Tufts, now think they know what sparks the exodus: An invis¬ible, rising tide of salts in the rivers from which the herds drink.

Late in the wet season, the plains in the southern part of the park appear healthy and full of nutritious food, but the rain has already begun to slacken. When Strauch and Chew sampled water from the Mbalageti and Seronera Rivers in the region, they found that concentrations of calcium, sodium and potassium salts soared to levels that could be dangerous to the animals’ health.

“These nutrients are vital to life on the plains, to be sure,” Strauch said. “But as base flow in the rivers decreases, concentrations of these nutrients sky-rocket to hundreds of times what animals might encounter in the plants they eat.”

Strauch will present the research next month at the annual meeting of the Ecological Society of America.

Studies of farm animals have shown that elevated salts in the water supply can cause cardiovascular disease and kidney failure in adults and cripple females’ ability to lactate. New-born animals that drink tainted water can suffer from impaired bone and nerve development, and have trouble gaining weight.

“Basically as soon as the water starts turning brackish, you start to see adverse effects,” Strauch said.

The same may hold true for Serengeti’s wild herds. Strauch and Chew reason that the spike in salt content in the southern waters acts as a signal that it’s time to move north, before the harsh dry season sets in and food sources begin dwindling.

However, John Fryxall of the University of Guelph in Canada said declining nutrients in grasses may drive migration, rather than water quality

“These animals need the green flush of nutrients in early growth-stage grasses,” he said. Grasses growing late in the wet season are too long and full of woody material that animals can’t digest.

In addition, animals also have to compete with humans living nearby for water. Villages surrounding the park are swelling, thanks in part to tourism generated by the famous wildlife. Local inhabitants are increasingly diverting river water for irrigation and drinking.

“There is increasing demand for a finite water resource,” Fryxall said. “Future changes in water quality will be important to pay attention to; worsening quality could impose additional mortality on the animals.”

What’s it like to witness “the Great Migration”?

Observing the animals on the Serengeti plains may bring to mind the decadence of a midnight buffet, the kind you find in Las Vegas or on cruise ships. A bonanza of feasting goes on: The greatest concentration of grazing animals on the planet, including wildebeests, zebras, gazelles and antelope, are there, munching on grass. As they feed, lions, hyenas and other predators feed on them, while vultures swoop in to clear the table, so to speak.

But the thought of all-you-can-eat buffets is likely your last thought of human civilization when you witness the Great Migration Every year, the grazing animals cross hundreds of miles, from the Serengeti in Tanzania to the Masai Mara National Reserve in Kenya and back again, to eat fresh grass, watered by the rains. Once these animals start moving, you have the sense of something primal.
In short: You’re seeing something that’s been seen by very few humans before.

The animals’ movement starts quickly and without any discernible warning. How do they know it’s time to move, you may wonder. While everything looks normal and serene on these grasslands to you, wildebeests can sense a thunderstorm from 30 miles away. They follow the scent to get the best grass.

For people who like to count sheep before going to bed, the migrating animals represent an insomniacs dream it would take almost 35 sleepless days and nights to count one migrating animal per second. The line of animals would stretch back for miles, giving you plenty of time to add up those 3 million animals, the majority of which are wildebeests. Nothing, not massive lines for Black Friday sales or queues for a subway after a down-town sporting event, could prepare you for that many animals moving together at once. The line of animals may stretch back as far as 25 miles.

But your ability to count the running wildebeests and leaping gazelles may be hampered by the beating hooves hitting the ground in the race for fresh grass or the cacophony of grunts and snorts that fill the hot air.

While the grazing animals leave many of their natural predators behind in the Serengeti, the trip, which may cover as many as 1,000 miles, isn’t without its dangers. When the wildebeests go leaping and splashing through rivers, you may spot a hungry crocodile emerge from below to snatch them. But the wildebeests will gain in numbers again in the early spring, during foaling season. Many in the group will give birth all at once, and their labour is quick. Look away for just a second and you may miss the foal making its entrance into the world. The tiny wildebeest will get its footing, and then the race for grass is on again.

After all the adventure, the grazing beasts wind up where they started, in the Serengeti, and nature’s food chain buffet begins again.For more information about the Migration please see our main site Tanzania Odyssey or our Serengeti Wildebeest migration page, or click here for more information about Tanzania Safaris

For detailed information about Tanzania and Zanzibar please look at our site – www.tanzaniaodyssey.com, and click here for information about a Tanzania safari.

To view videos of the country and the various lodges please see our Video Console

Or for advice / quotes or anything else please call us in London on 44 (2) 7471 8780 or in the USA on (toll free) 1-866 356 4691

Singita’s Sabora Tented Camp

Filed under: Serengeti,Tanzania Safari — Tags: , — Tanzania Odyssey @ 3:15 pm

Singita’s Sabora Tented Camp in the Grumeti Reserves (Tanzania), has undergone a number of new developments to expand the accommodation offering. This will meet continued high demand by affluent travellers seeking a quintessential ‘Out of AfricaSerengeti safari experience.

Singita Sabora is one of three distinct, luxurious lodges that form part of the Singita stable of iconic, low-impact, high-end lodges in East-Africa. Located in one of the most pristine wilderness locations on the Western corridor of the Serengeti, it is also the scene of Africa’s thrilling annual wildebeest migration.

Three luxurious, 1920’s-styled tented suites have been added to the six existing elegant tented suites, increasing guest capacity from 12 to 18 guests. Fitted from soft canvas and furnished with theatrical flair, complete with European finery and ethnic artefacts, the new tented suites are air-conditioned and offer all modern luxuries emulating the style of the existing suites. Meticulously designed, each is en-suite with a fully equipped bathroom, boasting newly designed open-air showers, period baths and larger viewing decks with panoramic, uninterrupted views of the Serengeti plains.

A second, spacious tented lounge has also been constructed to ensure that guests have abundant room to relax, recline and enjoy the well-equipped library and other facilities. Adjacent to the existing lounge, it is conveniently independently accessible, furnished with antique mahogany travel chests, Persian rugs and silk curtains reminiscent of a bygone era. With its own wrap-around deck, here sundowners can be sipped while gazing at game ambling by – almost within arms’ reach.

An integrated ‘health and fitness’ facility has been added at Singita Sabora. The new guest gymnasium is designed to provide guests with unobstructed vistas of the African wilderness while training. It is conveniently close to the well-equipped, intimate Spa and heated plunge pool with its ‘walk-in’ stairs. The pool deck has been extended to offer breathtaking views of the glorious sunrise, while providing abundant space to engage in poolside activities, or to enjoy a leisurely poolside brunch or dinner. In addition, an unfenced clay tennis court has been constructed on the western corner of the camp, where guests may engage in this age-old ‘gentleman’s game’ on one of the most comfortable surfaces imaginable.

The mild, temperate climate lends itself to lazy afternoons in the main camp with lavish tented dining room, where gourmet cuisine and exceptional wines can be savoured, or in the adjacent bar lounge, where sunset drinks are a stylish, cherished affair.

Exhilarating outdoor adventures and relaxing leisure pursuits augment the luxurious accommodation and world-class facilities and service offered here. Guests may indulge in superb game viewing or adventurous hot-air ballooning, or simply relax while reclining on a shaded daybed overlooking the plains – the charming ambience of this authentic olde world safari lodge will leave guests hard-pressed to depart.

More About Singita Grumeti Reserves

Singita Grumeti Reserves spans over 340 000 acres of untouched wilderness, offering a quintessential ‘Out of Africa’ experience. It comprises three spectacular lodges: the flagship Singita Sasakwa Lodge, Singita Sabora Tented Camp and Singita Faru Faru Lodge – each with its own unique charm and ambience, and set in a private concession almost the size of Kenya’s Masai Mara National Reserve.

The Singita Grumeti experience presents a fine, and tangible example of the new African eco-philanthropy that ‘gives back’ through tourism. Offering low-density tourism and a dense concentration of game, thus providing up-close, intimate experiences for guests, Singita Grumeti Reserves embraces the Singita philosophy of ‘touching the earth lightly’. This ethos underscores the approach of low impact and high value tourism, based on the philosophy that a minimal number of guests will have little impact on the land and its fauna and flora, thus benefiting the environment.

In addition to superb game viewing, other activities offered at Singita Grumeti include: archery, tennis, hot-air ballooning, horseback game viewing, a fully equipped spa and gym and a jogging track, as well as community tours to various projects initiated and supported by the Singita Grumeti Community and Wildlife Conservation Fund.

Recognised internationally as providing ‘the best safari experience in Africa’, the Singita product offering further includes six other iconic, low-impact, high-end lodges in three additional destinations: the Kruger National Park and Sabi Sand in South Africa, and in South Eastern Zimbabwe.

Multi-award winner of virtually every hotel and travel award both locally and globally, the focus of Singita is not only game viewing, cuisine, wine, high design and luxury, but also an uncompromising dedication to conservation and sustainability, which includes several significant community projects.

For detailed information about Tanzania and Zanzibar please look at our site – www.tanzaniaodyssey.com, and click here for information about a Tanzania safari.

To view videos of the country and the various lodges please see our Video Console

Or for advice / quotes or anything else please call us in London on 44 (2) 7471 8780 or in the USA on (toll free) 1-866 356 4691

Serengeti in June: The Great Migration

Filed under: Serengeti,Tanzania Safari — Tags: , , — Tanzania Odyssey @ 3:02 pm

For all of us at Tanzania Odyssey, June remains one of our favourite times of year in the Serengeti. At this time, the huge migration herds are fairly dispersed across the plains, relishing the glorious green that is now splashed across the landscape. To arrive in Africa after the rains is like setting foot in a strange paradise on earth. This continent, so often characterised by the deep red of its earth and sun-scorched plains, comes alive with new life; its incredible distances seem a vast and fruitful garden, awash with thousands of variations of green.

June is a good time for bird-watching, and sparks a proliferation of butterflies. The air is fresh and clear, with low humidity, and long hours in a Land Rover – necessary if you wish to see the best of this region – are far more appealing. At this time the vast herds of the Great Migration are making their way into the north western plains, soon to face the often fatal challenge of crossing the crocodile infested Grumeti River. The crocodiles here are quite used to waiting for their annual feast! Recently, clients driving out with Nomad Safaris witnessed a 5km long line of wildebeest marching near Musabi, and watched a large pride of lions take down two wildebeest at once.

For safari-goers and all wildlife watchers, each venture into the bush is laden with potential; wildlife is finally lured away from its dependence on the few remaining water sources at the end of the dry season, and anything can happen. The vast distances of the Serengeti are breathtaking in themselves, scattered with rock kopjes and ancient land forms that seem to be the very stuff of creation, but it is truly a breathtaking experience to witness this landscape when the migrating herds are chewing their way to each furthest horizon.

The thousands of unfenced acres of the Serengeti and surrounding parks have been fantastically fought for, to protect a vast and unique ecosystem in this glorious region of East Africa. Here the lives of myriad strange and wonderful wild birds and animals play out; their freedom remains paramount. The ever-changing beauties of the bush may never be qualified or quantified; Man has set this land aside to watch and wonder at the strange composition of Nature’s art, but can never presume or predict what he will see.

Tanzania: Mkomazi Receives Black Rhinos from Czech Republic

Filed under: Tanzania Safari — Tags: — Tanzania Odyssey @ 3:00 pm

Article from http://allafrica.com
6 June 2009 – Valentine Marc Nkwame

A pack of three Rhinoceroses from the Czech Republic arrived in Tanzania last weekend and were sent to the Mkomazi Rhino sanctuary in Kilimanjaro region.

The black Rhinos of Diceros Bicornis Michaeli species landed at the Kilimanjaro International Airport from Amsterdam aboard a large customized cargo craft, Boeing 747-400 BCF belonging to the Martinair Airline. They rode in three huge wooden crates.

“The rhino were crate-trained for two months to prepare them for the long flight inside the cages, it required a high level of skilled training to ensure that the animals rode comfortably,” stated the retired Brigadier General Hashim Mbita the chairman of the Wildlife Trust Fund.

The animals were taken from the Dvur Kralove zoo, Czech Republic. The Zoo, which specializes in Africa fauna, is reported to be one of the most successful captive-breeding programmes for the Black Rhino in the world. Their rarest animal is the Northern white rhino.

The translocation of the three black ‘Michael’ Rhinos from Czech Republic cost over US $70,000 this was made possible through a fund-raiser previously done by the Suzuki Rhino Club of Netherlands. Ted and Catrina van Dam who head the Suzuki Rhino club have also been supporting the Mkomazi Rhino project

Two decades ago, Tanzania, with the help of other African Parks, governments, and conservationists, including the George Adamson Wildlife Trust had hatched a protected breeding program to boost the black rhino numbers in parks. They started the Mkomazi Rhino Sanctuary, occupying 43 square miles of the total 2,200 square miles of the new Mkomazi National Park in Same District, Kilimanjaro region. The sanctuary is protected by 24-hours patrol guards and an electrified, alarmed fence.

“At Mkomazi the newly brought Rhinos will be kept under special care and monitoring within the sanctuary before being released into the wild,” explained the Director General for the Tanzania National Parks, Mr. Gerald Bigurube, adding that the animals must first learn to adopt to the local environment before being let out.

Which is just as well because, the first rhino refused to leave its crate, upon being let out at Mkomazi and it took a full hour of team effort to persuade the animal to enter the sanctuary.

Tanzania however shouldn’t entirely feel like a new planet to the three newly received black rhinos because according to the Director General of TANAPA, the animals were among those taken from East Africa in the early sixties and sent to the Czech’s zoo for their safety when their survivals here could not be guaranteed.

Ms Halima Mangi an Ecologist at Mkomazi said the new batch from Czech now brings up the total number of Rhinoceroses at Mkomazi National Park to Nine. “Rhinos had totally disappeared here in the 80s therefore this project, aimed at restoring the species, was started,” she said.

The first four rhinos brought from South Africa, two males and two females were introduced to the sanctuary in 1997 with the second batch of four following in 2001. They started to reproduce in 2005 and by 2008 four new babies had been born, however two of these young ones and an older Rhino later died.

The priority at Mkomazi, according to Tony Fitzjohn the Field Director of George Adamson Wildlife Preservation Trust, is to increase the founder population to at least 15 rhinos from which a whole new population can be created. Dr Dana Holeckova, the Director of the Dvur Kralove Zoo had previously visited Mkomazi with Dr Hamish Currie of Back to Africa and agreed to donate 3 black rhino of Diceros bicornis michaeli species to its Rhino sanctuary.

Dr Peter Morkel, Berry White and Dvur Kralove rhino keepers played an important role in ensuring smooth and safe translocation of Rhinos while back here Tony Fitzjohn, Elisaria Nnko, Wilfred Ayo, Semu Pallangyo and Philbert Shindano handled all the necessary responsibilities.

Ground transportation was taken care of by Grumeti Reserves, Frankfurt Zoological Society, Save-the-Rhino society and again the Suzuki Rhino Club. Support also came from A & K.

For detailed information about Tanzania and Zanzibar please look at our site – www.tanzaniaodyssey.com, and click here for information about a Tanzania safari.

To view videos of the country and the various lodges please see our Video Console

Or for advice / quotes or anything else please call us in London on 44 (2) 7471 8780 or in the USA on (toll free) 1-866 356 4691

June 24, 2010

TANAPA fights to improve and maintain Tanzanian Guides

Filed under: Serengeti,Tanzania Safari — Tags: — Tanzania Odyssey @ 5:56 pm

TANAPA (Tanzania National Parks Association) is ready to give financial and technical resources to build capacity for the guides in order to attract more visitors to the country, especially to the National Parks, after a three-day meeting organised by the management of the Serengeti National Parks with the Tanzania Tour Guides Association (TTGA), a body which is increasingly gaining importance in the industry.

The aim is to maintain local knowledge and local guides over the influx of foreign guides in Tanzania. Martin Laibooki, Serengeti chief park warden also said cultural attractions would be promoted for tourism within the vast park. These include the historical sites which have been sighted in recent years.

Tour guides at the meeting suggested improving the infrastucture of the Serengeti, so that northern and northwestern parts may be opened up to allow access to “undiscovered” impressive areas that are currently not easily visited due to bad roads.For detailed information about Tanzania and Zanzibar please look at our site – www.tanzaniaodyssey.com, and click here for information about a Tanzania safari.

To view videos of the country and the various lodges please see our Video Console

Or for advice / quotes or anything else please call us in London on 44 (2) 7471 8780 or in the USA on (toll free) 1-866 356 4691

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