Katavi National Park
Isolated, untrammelled and seldom visited,
Katavi is a true wilderness, providing the few intrepid
souls who make it there with a thrilling taste of Africa
as it must have been a century ago.
Tanzania's third largest national park, it lies in the
remote southwest of the country, within a truncated arm
of the Rift Valley that terminates in the shallow, brooding
expanse of Lake Rukwa.
The bulk of Katavi supports a hypnotically featureless
cover of tangled brachystegia woodland, home to substantial
but elusive populations of the localised eland, sable
and roan antelopes. But the main focus for game viewing
within the park is the Katuma River and associated floodplains
such as the seasonal Lakes Katavi and Chada. During the
rainy season, these lush, marshy lakes are a haven for
myriad waterbirds, and they also support Tanzania's densest
concentrations of hippo and crocodile.
It is during the dry season, when the floodwaters retreat,
that Katavi truly comes into its own. The Katuma, reduced
to a shallow, muddy trickle, forms the only source of
drinking water for miles around, and the flanking floodplains
support game concentrations that defy belief. An estimated
4,000 elephants might converge on the area, together with
several herds of 1,000-plus buffalo, while an abundance
of giraffe, zebra, impala and reedbuck provide easy pickings
for the numerous lion prides and spotted hyena clans whose
territories converge on the floodplains.
Katavi's most singular wildlife spectacle is provided
by its hippos. Towards the end of the dry season, up to
200 individuals might flop together in any riverine pool
of sufficient depth. And as more hippos gather in one
place, so does male rivalry heat up bloody territorial
fights are an everyday occurrence, with the vanquished
male forced to lurk hapless on the open plains until it
gathers sufficient confidence to mount another challenge.
About Katavi National Park
Size: 4,471 sq km (1,727 sq miles).
Location; Southwest Tanzania, east of Lake Tanganyika.
The headquarters at Sitalike lie 40km (25 miles) south
of Mpanda town.
Getting there
Charter flights from Dar or Arusha.
A tough but spectacular day's drive from Mbeya (550 km/340
miles), or in the dry season only from Kigoma (390 km/240
miles).
It is possible to reach Mpanda by rail from Dar via Tabora,
then to catch public transport to Sitalike, where game
drives can be arranged. If travelling overland, allow
plenty of time to get there and back.
What to do
Walking, driving and camping safaris.
Near Lake Katavi, visit the tamarind tree inhabited by
the spirit of the legendary hunter Katabi (for whom the
park is named) - offerings are still left here by locals
seeking the spirit's blessing.
When to go
The dry season (May-October).
Roads within the park are often flooded during the rainy
season but may be passable from mid-December to February.
Accommodation
One seasonal luxury tented camp overlooking Lake Chada.
A resthouse at Sitalike and campsites inside the park.
Basic but clean hotels at Mpanda.
Rubondo Island National
Park
A pair of fish eagles guards the gentle bay, their distinctive
black, white and chestnut feather pattern gleaming boldly
in the morning sun. Suddenly, the birds toss back their
heads in a piercing, evocative duet. On the sandbank below,
a well-fed monster of a crocodile snaps to life, startled
from its nap. It stampedes through the crunchy undergrowth,
crashing into the water in front of the boat, invisible
except for a pair of sentry-post eyes that peek menacingly
above the surface to monitor our movements.
Rubondo Island is tucked in the southwest corner of Lake
Victoria, the world's second-largest lake, an inland sea
sprawling between Tanzania, Uganda and Kenya. With nine
smaller islands under its wing, Rubondo protects precious
fish breeding grounds.
Tasty tilapia form the staple diet of the yellow-spotted
otters that frolic in the island's rocky coves, while
rapacious Nile perch, some weighing more than 100kg, tempt
recreational game fishermen seeking world record catches.
Rubondo is more than a water wonderland. Deserted sandy
beaches nestle against a cloak of virgin forest, where
dappled bushbuck move fleet yet silent through a maze
of tamarinds, wild palms, and sycamore figs strung with
a cage of trailing taproots.
The shaggy-coated aquatic sitatunga, elsewhere the most
elusive of antelopes, is remarkably easily observed, not
only in the papyrus swamps it normally inhabits, but also
in the forest interior.
Birds are everywhere. 
Flocks of African grey parrots released onto the
island after they were confiscated from illegal exporters
screech in comic discord as they flap furiously
between the trees.
The azure brilliance of a malachite kingfisher perched
low on the reeds competes with the glamorous, flowing
tail of a paradise flycatcher as it flits through the
lakeshore forest. Herons, storks and spoonbills proliferate
in the swampy lake fringes, supplemented by thousands
of Eurasian migrants during the northern winter.
Wild jasmine, 40 different orchids and a smorgasbord of
sweet, indefinable smells emanate from the forest.
Ninety percent of the park is humid forest; the remainder
ranges from open grassland to lakeside papyrus beds.
A number of indigenous mammal species - hippo, vervet
monkey, genet and mongoose - share their protected habitat
with introduced species such as chimpanzee, black-and-white
colobus, elephant and giraffe, all of which benefit from
Rubondo's inaccessibility.
About Rubondo Island National Park
Size: 240 sq km (93 sq miles).
Location: Northwest Tanzania, 150 km (95 miles) west of
Mwanza.
Getting there
Scheduled flights from Arusha, Lake Manyara, Serengeti
and Mwanza in peak season, charter flights only in low
season.
By road from Mwanza and then boat transfer. Contact the
Park for transport details.
What to do
Walking safaris, boat excursions, sport fishing, chimpanzee
treks, plans for canoe trips.
When to go
Dry season, June-August. Wildflowers and butterflies
Wet season November-March. December- February best for
migratory birds.
Accommodation
One luxury tented camp, park bandas and campsite.
Images on courtesy of Tanapa |