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Serengeti National Park
Background Information
A
million wildebeest... each one
driven by the same ancient
rhythm, fulfilling its
instinctive role in the
inescapable cycle of life: a
frenzied three-week bout of
territorial conquests and
mating; survival of the fittest
as 40km (25 mile) long columns
plunge through
crocodile-infested waters on the
annual exodus north;
replenishing the species in a
brief population explosion that
produces more than 8,000 calves
daily before the 1,000 km (600
mile) pilgrimage begins again.
Tanzania's oldest and most
popular national park, the
Serengeti is famed for its
annual migration, when some six
million hooves pound the open
plains, as more than 200,000
zebra and 300,000 Thomson's
gazelle join the wildebeest’s
trek for fresh grazing. Yet even
when the migration is quiet, the
Serengeti offers arguably the
most scintillating game-viewing
in Africa: great herds of
buffalo, smaller groups of
elephant and giraffe, and
thousands upon thousands of
eland, topi, kongoni, impala and
Grant’s gazelle.
The
spectacle of predator versus
prey dominates Tanzania’s
greatest park. Golden-maned lion
prides feast on the abundance of
plain grazers. Solitary leopards
haunt the acacia trees lining
the Seronera River, while a high
density of cheetahs prowls the
southeastern plains. Almost
uniquely, all three African
jackal species occur here,
alongside the spotted hyena and
a host of more elusive small
predators, ranging from the
insectivorous aardwolf to the
beautiful serval cat.
But
there is more to Serengeti than
large mammals. Gaudy agama
lizards and rock hyraxes scuffle
around the surfaces of the
park’s isolated granite koppies.
A full 100 varieties of dung
beetle have been recorded, as
have 500-plus bird species,
ranging from the outsized
ostrich and bizarre secretary
bird of the open grassland, to
the black eagles that soar
effortlessly above the Lobo
Hills.
As
enduring as the game-viewing is
the liberating sense of space
that characterises the Serengeti
Plains, stretching across
sunburnt savannah to a
shimmering golden horizon at the
end of the earth. Yet, after the
rains, this golden expanse of
grass is transformed into an
endless green carpet flecked
with wildflowers. And there are
also wooded hills and towering
termite mounds, rivers lined
with fig trees and acacia
woodland stained orange by dust.
Popular the Serengeti might be,
but it remains so vast that you
may be the only human audience
when a pride of lions
masterminds a siege, focussed
unswervingly on its next meal.
About Serengeti
Size: 14,763 sq km (5,700 sq
miles).
Location: 335km (208 miles) from
Arusha, stretching north to
Kenya and bordering Lake
Victoria to the west.
How
To Get There
Scheduled and charter flights
from Arusha, Lake Manyara and
Mwanza.
Drive from Arusha, Lake Manyara,
Tarangire or Ngorongoro Crater.
Activities
Hot
air balloon safaris, Maasai rock
paintings and musical rocks.
Visit neighbouring Ngorongoro
Crater, Olduvai Gorge, Ol Doinyo
Lengai volcano and Lake Natron's
flamingos.
When to go
To
follow the wildebeest migration,
December-July. To see predators,
June-October
Accommodation
Four lodges, four luxury tented
camps and camp sites scattered
through the park;
one
luxury camp, a lodge and two
tented camps just outside.
NOTE:
The
route and timing of the
wildebeest migration is
unpredictable. Allow at least
three days to be assured of
seeing them on your visit -
longer if you want to see the
main predators as well.
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