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Arusha National Park
The
closest national park to Arusha
town – northern Tanzania’s
safari capital – Arusha National
Park is a multi-faceted jewel,
often overlooked by safarigoers,
despite offering the opportunity
to explore a beguiling diversity
of habitats within a few hours.
The
entrance gate leads into shadowy
montane forest inhabited by
inquisitive blue monkeys and
colourful turacos and trogons –
the only place on the northern
safari circuit where the
acrobatic black-and-white
colobus monkey is easily seen.
In the midst of the forest
stands the spectacular Ngurdoto
Crater, whose steep, rocky
cliffs enclose a wide marshy
floor dotted with herds of
buffalo and warthog.
Further north, rolling grassy
hills enclose the tranquil
beauty of the Momela Lakes, each
one a different hue of green or
blue. Their shallows sometimes
tinged pink with thousands of
flamingos, the lakes support a
rich selection of resident and
migrant waterfowl, and shaggy
waterbucks display their large
lyre-shaped horns on the watery
fringes. Giraffes glide across
the grassy hills, between
grazing zebra herds, while pairs
of wide-eyed dik-dik dart into
scrubby bush like overgrown
hares on spindly legs.
Although elephants are uncommon
in Arusha National Park, and
lions absent altogether,
leopards and spotted hyenas may
be seen slinking around in the
early morning and late
afternoon. It is also at dusk
and dawn that the veil of cloud
on the eastern horizon is most
likely to clear, revealing the
majestic snow-capped peaks of
Kilimanjaro, only 50km (30
miles) distant.
But
it is Kilimanjaro’s unassuming
cousin, Mount Meru - the fifth
highest in Africa at 4,566
metres (14,990 feet) – that
dominates the park’s horizon.
Its peaks and eastern footslopes
protected within the national
park, Meru offers unparalleled
views of its famous neighbour,
while also forming a rewarding
hiking destination in its own
right.
Passing first through wooded
savannah where buffalos and
giraffes are frequently
encountered, the ascent of Meru
leads into forests aflame with
red-hot pokers and dripping with
Spanish moss, before reaching
high open heath spiked with
giant lobelias. Everlasting
flowers cling to the alpine
desert, as delicately-hoofed
klipspringers mark the hike’s
progress. Astride the craggy
summit, Kilimanjaro stands
unveiled, blushing in the
sunrise.
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