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Tarangire Balloon Safari

Northern Tanzania Safaris
Ngorongoro
Crater
Area
Serengeti
National Park
Lk.Manyara
National Park
Tarangire
National Park
Arusha
National Park
Lk.Natron
Lk.Eyasi
Southern Tanzania Safaris
Selous Game Reserve
Ruaha
National Park
Mikumi National Park
Udzungwa Mountains
Saadani National Park
Kilombero
Valley
Luguru
Mountains
Western Tanzania Safaris
Katavi
National Park
Gombe Stream
National Park
Mahale Mountain
N. Park
Kigoma town
Lk.Tanganyika
Lk.Rukwa
Lk.Malawi / Nyasa
Don't
Forget
Tanzania Cultural Tourism
Tanzania Cities and Towns
Coastal Regions Tours
Northern Tanzania safaris
Tanzania Safari Programs
Western Tanzania
Safaris
Southern TanzaniaSafariMap
Indian Islands from Tanzania
Zanzibar
Island,
Mafia
Island,
Pemba
Island
WESTERN CORRIDOR:
This follows the path of the Grumeti River up towards
Lake Victoria. This region provides superb wildlife
viewing action when the migration crosses the crocodile
infested waters of the Grumeti; at this point camps such
as the CCA Grumeti River or Kirawira come into their
own.
THE NORTHERN REACHES:
The Northern reaches of the Serengeti remain
fantastically quiet and unvisited, due to their relative
inaccessibility. Previously inaccessible swathes of
National Park at Wogakuria, close to the Masai Mara
border, have been opened up by flying safari options
staying at superb permanent tented camps such as Sayari
Accommodations
Facilities in Serengeti National Park.
Ikoma Safari
Camp
- A permanent
luxury tented camp in Serengeti Ikoma
region in Tanzania.
Seronera
Lodge
-
A artfully constructed round a rocky outcrop
from glass and wood elements,,,,,,
Sopa
Lodge from
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Serengeti Sopa Lodge offers magnificent
views over the acacia-dotted grass plains.
Spacious rooms,,,,
Mbalageti
Tented
-
The lodge comprises tented chalets and a
central building built from natural
materials,,,
Serena lodge
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Set high on a hill with views across the
savannah. The design of the lodge is based on a
traditional African village,,,,
Kirawira Tent Camp
-
Kirawira,
situated on a hilltop overlooking the vast
plains of the Serengeti offers you a
luxurious safari experience,,,,,
Guruneti
Tented
-
Grumeti River
Camp has some exciting activities on offer,
including game drives in open-air vehicles,,,,
Mbuzi Mawe
-
Mbuzi Mawe Camp
lies at the heart of the Serengeti Park,
providing easy access to the prime wildlife
spots of Lobo,,,,
Migration Camp
-
The Serengeti
is rich in game throughout
the year and provides the stage for the
world's largest animal migration,,,
Kijeresh
Tented
-
Kijereshi Tented Camp offers a total of 12
Tents set in an area of green Lush plains
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SERENGETI MIGRATION
Among the many resources and beauties found and seen
in the Serengeti Ecosystem: rich animal and plant
diversity, unexposed gold and mineral mines, superb
sunsets on smooth landscapes, the number one wonder
on the list in the Serengeti is the great wildebeest
migration. The understanding on how and why the
migration occurs is very complex; there are no
definite and guaranteed conclusions to pin point a
trigger(s) that starts the migration. The migration
has formed its own culture in the Serengeti, with
the wildebeest doing what they are doing for the
last two million years. Nothing is a constant: not
the rains, not the grass nor the timings of the
migration. The migration starts when the wildebeest
feel that the time has arrived. During the annual
pilgrimage, that circumambulates the whole ecosystem
starting from the South (Kusini) to the Western
Corridor (Magharibi), curving back and heading North
to Kenya (Kaskazini) and returning back through the
Eastern Serengeti (Mashariki) back to the South,
over a million wildebeest begin their journey, who
will gallop over 1800 miles and consume over three
million kilos of grass.
The whole migration is masterfully planned by
nature, with most times the migration being led by
the Burchells Zebra who relish the tall grasses,
making it easier for the wildebeest with their
sunken heads to chomp on the shorter grass. The
remainder of short grass benefits the Thomson's
(also called Tomi's) and Grant gazelles that trail
the magical spectacle of the wildlife procession.
Details About
Serengeti's Annual Wildebeest Migration
The complexity involved in the visitor focused
research led by Bush Routes Adventures and our
guides to create a layman yet detailed documentation
for the Serengeti National Park, an incredible task,
which involved talking to personnel at all corners
of the Serengeti ecosystem. Our documentation
project entailed visiting all the sections of the
Serengeti National Park where the Wildebeest, Zebras
and Gazelles moved through. The details of the
wildlife pilgrimage were needed to create an
accurate awareness on the philosophy of the
Serengeti. The below details follow chronologically:
Southeastern Serengeti:
Lake Ndutu Area
The south-eastern section of the Serengeti bordering
Ngorongoro Conservation Area is
"the place to be" during December to March. The
wildebeest pilgrimage actually come to life and
concludes circumambulation in this region. During
the December to March months, the wildebeest calve
extravagantly, which creates a grand true to life
lesson in nature science. Access to this region will
be either from the border of Ngorongoro
Conservation, which leads down to the Lake Ndutu or
from within the Serengeti National Park. Visitors
staying near the Lake Ndutu area are so blessed by
the gift of wildlife that many visitors when staying
at Ndutu Safari Lodge normally opt to pull a chair
on their porch, grab a pair of binoculars and
perform game watching from the comforts of their
accommodation all day. Superb uncommon animals are
seen with ease in this region apart from the famous
big name ones. Our visit to Lake Ndutu gave us the
opportunity to see, among others, the shy Steinbock
gazelle, and cautious and beautiful Serval cat.
Visitors can spend a good amount of time just game
watching, grasping the behaviors of these and many
other beautiful creatures.
Lake Ndutu from a visitor's perspective also
harnesses the environment and the wildlife in the
following manner: the rains fills up the seasonal
lake, which brings the flamingoes and other
beautiful birds to the lake. The lake also welcomes
the calving wildebeest and other wildebeests that
put a show to perform entertaining behavioral
rituals on the lake; the wildebeest's presence is an
encouraging call for the territorial predators like
the lions to show up and take charge. Again, for
Bush Routes Adventures visitors the thrill of
participating in these activities is once in a
lifetime experience.
Southwestern Serengeti:
Lake Magadi, Niaroboro Hills, Simba and Moru Kopjes
Area If you drive out from the Lake Ndutu area
trekking the wildebeest as they continue their
yearlong journey, the next stage would be the area
cushioned by Lake Magadi, Niaroboro Hills, Simba and
Moru Kopjes. We recommend visiting this area from
April through end of May. The terrain of this area
is hilly with perfectly positioned Kopjes. (The word
Kopjes better pronounced Kop-ees than Kop-hes, is a
Dutch word meaning "Rocky Outcrops" or "Hill Mounds
of Rock". For those coming from a British education
system would relate to the term called "Inselbergs",
from their physical geography classes; kopjes were
formed from ash deposits from years of volcanic
activity. If the history behind the Kopjes were not
revealed, the Kopjes of the Serengeti would be lying
around like nothing happened.
The Kopjes of Serengeti plains promote the food web
chain. They create the perfect lookout for predators
like lions. The female lion, responsible for
hunting, perches herself on the hill awaiting the
snorting and galloping of the wildebeest, who take
no notice of the watchful hunter until alerted by
the sharp and watchful Zebras. With the sighting of
a predator during their game drive, Bush Routes
Adventures guests park and turn off their vehicle
engine and start a daylong watch that normally turns
out to be their event of a lifetime.
Western Serengeti
Corridor: Grumeti River Crossing
By the time the month of June arrives, the migration
of the wildebeests, zebras and antelopes should be
in the western corridor or should be arriving in the
days ahead. The western Serengeti corridor is named
as such because of the Serengeti National Park
"horizontal thumbs up" shaped boundary, and the how
the migratory wildlife seems to squeeze through and
turn around later heading northwards. The park
boundaries go as far as Lake Victoria; the park is
accessible from north-western Tanzania region from
Mwanza town. If one has not noticed it by now, there
is change in the vegetation: from plains grass to
mixture of acacia woodland and savannah plains
grass. The additional wildlife viewing opportunities
also brings a different perspective as you have the
chance to view crocodiles, more hippos, and leopards
lurking around on the acacia trees near riverbeds of
the Grumeti, which flows into Lake Victoria.
- Two interesting scientific questions have yet to
be answered about Western Serengeti
Corridor:
One, wildebeests migrating from the south stop and
mix with "resident wildebeest of the western
corridor" and do not join the current migration.
Question is why?
Two, If the migration's primary trigger and motive
is the search for water and greener grass, then at
the depth of the migration in the western corridor,
why do the wildebeest not continue onwards to Lake
Victoria, which has ample of fresh water, but
instead perform a complete turn around and continue
their journey northwards crossing plains and rivers
and facing gruesome challenges posed by predators?
Central Serengeti:
Seronera
Seronera, heart of the Serengeti, is at the center
of almost all safari program accommodations. This is
where many visitors first arrive through by air at
the Seronera airstrip or drive by road through route
B144. From a wildlife perspective, our specialist
safari guides also refer to Seronera as the no miss
zone. Why?
First, because Seronera is all plains - hundreds of
acres of flat land that our highly trained guiders
can spot distant wildlife without a pair of
binoculars.
Second, because Seronera's plains create incredible
sundowners; one can actually see a whole bright
orange ball just drop in front of one's eye.
Third, Seronera River and Ngare Nyanyuki are one of
the main water sources for the central and eastern
part of the Serengeti, which bring together a lot of
wildlife. Last but not least, Seronera provides an
all-year game drive, and also allows visitors
accessibility to the South, West and North of the
Serengeti National Park.
Many of Bush Routes Adventures's guests visiting the
Serengeti get stunned to see burnt grass on the
Seronera plains, often relating it to the wild
forest fires, started naturally or otherwise, in
regions like California. The fires often seen in the
Serengeti are called "Early Season Burning Fires"
started intentionally by Serengeti Park authorities,
and are supposed to work in the following manner:
During the end of the rains in May, the Serengeti
Park personnel set fires to the grass inside the
park boundaries to prepare for the dry month; the
shortened burnt grass reduces the impact of a fire
stemming from outside the park coming into the park,
if such an unfortunate incident were to happen. One
has to note the Serengeti National Park authorities
do not have control of what happens beyond the park
boundaries.
Northern Serengeti: Lobo
Area
As the migration takes a turn around after the
months of July heading northwards, it passes an area
in the Serengeti referred to as Lobo. Staying at
Lobo Lodge is a great opportunity to take a break
and perform wildlife watching from the fantastic
panoramic viewing points. Lobo remains what it is
now as it was when we visited the first time in
1982: animals walking in and out of the area in
numbers, and ability to see untamed giraffes less
than 5 meters from the balcony of your room. Heading
further on Lobo leads you close to Kliens Gate area,
next to Loliondo Game Control. The vegetation
changes to plains and woodlands; the landscapes
elevate to display spectacular views of the
Serengeti National Park and its ecosystem. If one is
fortunate to be in the northern sector, staying at
Kliens Camp, then migration of the wildebeest is
literally at the bottom of the hill.
Masai Mara National
Reserve: Journey into Kenya and Back
During the months of late August to end of October,
the migration ought to be in Kenya or should be
heading there. During the migration when the
wildlife is crossing 2 different countries, many
visitors undertake a dual visit to Tanzania and
Kenya. The wildebeest crossing over the Mara River
is a highlight for many who want to see them emerge
victorious, when they make it across the river;
other visitors take a different view and wait for
the opportunity for nature to define its own rules,
like the following incident: performing game
watching on the Mara River gave one of our customers
the opportunity to see a crocodile from the shallow
brown river spring up and grab a hold of the
wildebeest; in the process of the struggle, a
lioness enters the river bed from the bush and
attempts to successfully snatch the wildebeest right
from the crocodiles mouth. Simply Incredible!
The migration spends the rest of the months on the
Kenyan plains until end of October when they begin
the journey back to Tanzania's Serengeti National
Park and reaching the Lake Ndutu area by December to
start the process all over again. At this time, the
baked brown grass has turned green from the short
rains, which act as a catalyst for the wildebeests
to feed and regenerate their large number of herds
lost on the way. And the migration cycle continues!
SEE ALL SAFARI
DESTINATIONS ON THE SOUTHERN TANZANIA
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CONTACT ADDRESS
HEAD OFFICE DAR E
S SALAAM.
ZANZIBAR HOTEL P.O. BOX 12594.
TEL/FAX: +255 22 2133793, Mobile:
+255 788 221 650
ARUSHA BRANCH OFFICE. KALOLENI
AREA OPPOSITE , PRIMIEM HOUSE
BOX 14477 ARUSHA, Mobile: +255
713 350 601, TEL. +255 767 350 601
admin@bushroutes.com
or
reservations@bushroutes.com
Bush Routes
Adventures Copyrights 2009, All rights reserved. Revised,
01/25/2012
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