Average Expert Rating
Rating Breakdown
Write a User ReviewAberdare: Forest Kingdom
It’s hard not to fall in love with Aberdare, so different is it from any other park in Kenya. It occupies the mountainous green heartland of the country, and offers a wildlife experience all its own. Although you can see wildlife elsewhere in the park, the real Aberdare special is nursing a drink in your lodge while overlooking a waterhole and never quite knowing which animals will turn up to drink. An elephant family? A wary antelope? Even a leopard if you’re lucky. The history here adds further intrigue to the experience – Queen Elizabeth II was here when she found out that her father had died and that she was to become queen, and before that, the Mau Mau made the Aberdares their own as they fought for independence from Great Britain. Overall it’s a special place with just the right mix of wildlife, scenery and a fascinating human backstory.
Life in the Treetops
Aberdare NP offers two very different types of travel experience. For most people, a visit basically amounts to an overnight stay at one of two so-called ‘tree hotels’ that lie on the massif’s forested eastern footslopes. These upmarket lodges are hide-like constructions where all rooms face a water hole and all wildlife viewing is done from the hotel. Treetops, the older of these, was founded in 1932 and it attained global fame in 1952 as the place where Princess Elizabeth was staying when she unknowingly became the Queen of England upon the death of her father George VI. Royal connections aside, a newer hotel called The Ark is
Read more
the better bet for wildlife viewing: buffalo and elephant make an appearance most nights, rhino and leopard are more occasional, and you might also see black-and-white colobus monkey, genet, Harvey’s red duiker and alluring forest birds including Hartlaub’s turaco.For more adventurous travelers, the upper slopes of Aberdare NP can be explored on an extensive network of good murram roads that ideally require a 4x4 vehicle. A great option is to traverse the park when traveling between Lake Naivasha and more northerly attractions such as the Laikipia Conservancy or Samburu National Reserve. Relatively few people use this route, so it has a strong off-the-beaten-track appeal. It is also very beautiful, climbing through extensive forests and swathes of bamboo to a more sparsely vegetated Afro-alpine moorland dotted with craggy peaks and beautiful waterfalls. This route is more about scenery than wildlife viewing, which is rather hit and miss, but you stand a fair chance of seeing elephant, buffalo and a variety of monkey and antelope species.
The Easiest Wildlife Watching in Kenya
The scenery is truly wondrous at this sky-high park, where East Africa’s savannahs are left far behind and temperatures plummet. Instead you’ll find valleys carved between soaring forested peaks, waterfalls, thick bamboo forests and moorlands all shrouded in misty drizzle.
There are only two upmarket lodges situated within the park, both designed for package tourists. But the experience they offer is something special. I stayed at The Ark, a 4-storey lodge perched on a forested bluff where guests peer out of windows, or off balconies, at a floodlit waterhole and surrounding grasslands to view elephant, buffalo, waterbuck, bushbuck, giant forest hog, and, if lucky, black rhino. If that all gets a bit much you can retire to your room where a series of buzzers lets you know when something interesting is outside!
These lodges have a very packaged feel but if you like sipping a glass of red by the open fire while watching elephants play around in mud baths just outside, then this is the experience for you.