Prive Safari, tentsafaris in Tanzania en zuid Kenia

Tanzania en het zuiden van Kenia.

Een klassieke tentsafari voor een ontmoeting met de

Serengeti wildebeest Migration

 

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Waarom Prive Safari?
Hoe reist u Prive?
- Tenten
- (special) campsites

Tanzania

Nationale parken
Wildlife
Maak een virtuele  safari door de parken
Overzicht safari programma's
Out of Africa
Avontuurlijk Prive
Lengasiti Maasai
Het zuiden en oosten

de Great Migration

in Tanzania en Kenia

Kilimanjaro
Relaxen aan zee
Vliegreizen Int/lokaal
Safari met kinderen
Safari in gezelschap
Voorwaarden-disclaimer
Europeesche reisverzekeringen

Steun de Maasai Lengasiti Primary School in Tanzania.

Koop hun kalender!

 

 

 

 

Foto's van prive safari reizigers 

Klik op de foto's voor een vergroting en het starten van de dia show.

Lake Manyara NP.

Lake Manyara NP
Vervet monkey Yellow billed stork Baboon Giraffe
Impala Hippos Impala Het meer

Foto's mogen zonder onze toestemming niet worden gekopieerd of gebruikt worden.

These pictures may not be used or copied without our explicit approval.

 

Lake Manyara NP is opgenomen in onze volgende safari's:

- Avontuurlijk Prive

- 6 dagen beroemde parken van Tanzania

- 7 dagen beroemde parken van Tanzania

 

Lake Manyara National Park

Stretching for 50km along the base of the rusty-gold 600-metre high Rift Valley escarpment, Lake Manyara is a scenic gem, with a setting extolled by Ernest Hemingway as “the loveliest I had seen in Africa”.

The compact game-viewing circuit through Manyara offers a virtual microcosm of the Tanzanian safari experience.

From the entrance gate, the road winds through an expanse of lush jungle-like groundwater forest where hundred-strong baboon troops lounge nonchalantly along the roadside, blue monkeys scamper nimbly between the ancient mahogany trees, dainty bushbuck tread warily through the shadows, and outsized forest hornbills honk cacophonously in the high canopy.

Contrasting with the intimacy of the forest is the grassy floodplain and its expansive views eastward, across the alkaline lake, to the jagged blue volcanic peaks that rise from the endless Maasai Steppes. Large buffalo, wildebeest and zebra herds congregate on these grassy plains, as do giraffes – some so dark in coloration that they appear to be black from a distance.

Inland of the floodplain, a narrow belt of acacia woodland is the favoured haunt of Manyara’s legendary tree-climbing lions and impressively tusked elephants. Squadrons of banded mongoose dart between the acacias, while the diminutive Kirk’s dik-dik forages in their shade. Pairs of klipspringer are often seen silhouetted on the rocks above a field of searing hot springs that steams and bubbles adjacent to the lakeshore in the far south of the park.

Manyara provides the perfect introduction to Tanzania’s birdlife. More than 400 species have been recorded, and even a first-time visitor to Africa might reasonably expect to observe 100 of these in one day. Highlights include thousands of pink-hued flamingos on their perpetual migration, as well as other large waterbirds such as pelicans, cormorants and storks.

About Lake Manyara National Park

Size: 330 sq km (127 sq miles), of which up to 200 sq km (77 sq miles) is lake when water levels are high.
Location: In northern Tanzania. The entrance gate lies 1.5 hours (126km/80 miles) west of Arusha along a newly surfaced road, close to the ethnically diverse market town of Mto wa Mbu.

 

When to go
Dry season (July-October) for large mammals;
wet season (November-June) for bird watching, the waterfalls and canoeing.

 

Met dank aan de Tanzanian National Parks Organisation