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Write a User ReviewOn the Hunt for Tree-Climbing Lions
Typically, lions are not adept at climbing; they are heavy and cumbersome and tend to fall out from the branches even if they try. Most monkeys in Africa know this and will laugh at lions as long as they do so from the safety of the canopy.
However, in the Ishasha sector of QENP, lions spend a significant amount of time lounging in giant fig trees. Some believe they do this to escape the tsetse flies, while others think it’s to stay cool. Regardless, witnessing a large pride of lions in a tree is an unforgettable sight… Or so I am told.
Despite spending three days on vehicle-based game drives, I did not spot a single lion, arboreal or otherwise. But that’s not to say my stay there was fruitless. A boat excursion along the Kazinga Channel provided one of the best safari experiences I’ve ever had. I saw dozens of elephants playing in the water, large
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pods of hippos, and numerous wetland birds, including pelicans. And while not as game-rich as Kenya’s Masai Mara, Queen Elizabeth National Park is still a beautiful safari destination, offering a diverse range of habitats, from rainforest to savannah. It boasts a variety of species, with over 600 birds, as well as numerous primates (including chimps), a plethora of plains game, and leopards and hyenas too. Moreover, many visitors to Ishasha do get to witness those tree-climbing lions.I guess I was just unlucky.
Queen Elizabeth National Park, a Place of Diversity and Scenic Beauty Below the Mountains of the Moon
My favourite area in the park is the remote and little visited Ishasha sector. This place is renowned for tree-climbing lions and, contrary to some other
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parks that have this reputation, finding lions on a tree isn’t that hit and miss here. I’ve regularly found a whole pride of about 8 lions high up one of the comfortable sycamore figs that are common in the area. In fact, during a weeklong visit, I would usually find them leaving the river area mid-morning, where they would have drunk after their kill at night, and heading for one of their favourite trees. These creatures can be as predictable as your tabby house cat!Uganda’s Best
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is the jungle-filled Kyambura Gorge, a beautiful slice of green in the savannah with a habituated chimpanzee community adding some variety to the typical safari experience. Staying inside the park at Mweya or Ishasha puts you in prime wildlife territory, though the lodges atop the Kichwamba Escarpment have inspiring views over the park and out to Lake Edward and the Rwenzori Mountains.Uganda’s Premier Safari Destination
Despite this being Uganda’s most well-known and regularly visited savannah reserve, Queen Elizabeth NP is far from overcrowded. What I like most about it is that it boasts a spectacular array of habitats and landscapes for tourists to appreciate. Boat cruises along the game-rich Kazinga Channel are a perennial favourite with wildlife enthusiasts and birders alike. On a clear day you can see all the way to the Rwenzori Mountains, but there’s no need to travel that far because volcanic features dominate sections within the park. The result is a stunning landscape peppered with crater lakes best appreciated from the air. The Kyambura Gorge on the edge of the national park is also a good place for tracking chimpanzees. But, without doubt, my favourite part of the park is the wild Ishasha sector, famed for its tree-climbing lions, which can regularly be found hanging out in the shady figs along the main road. This is a park with plenty of wildlife and lots to offer the discerning safari aficionado.
Uganda’s Offering of a Typical East African Reserve Supporting Herds of Game
My favourite activity at Queen Elizabeth is the boat ride on the Kazinga Channel. It’s said to contain the world’s largest concentration of hippo, and you can watch thousands of them practically piled on top of each other in the shallows; this is where to get that photo of a hippo yawning. We also saw elephant, buffalo and waterbuck ambling down to the water to cool off, while keeping a wary eye on the many crocs. The water’s edge also attracts thousands of birds, and from our boat I saw malachite kingfishers, fish eagles, and marabou storks that were bigger than the children in the local fishing village. Another attraction is the Uganda kob mating grounds on the Kasenyi and Ishasha Plains. Here, hundreds of male kobs battle it out, locking horns and gnashing teeth, to stubbornly defend their harem. It’s not unusual to see lion preying on the grazing females or arrogant males.
Amazing Diversity
Whilst wildlife numbers don’t compare with the Serengeti or Masai Mara, this is still a very well-stocked park. Ugandan Kob are two a penny, the lions that feast on them are surprisingly easily seen (I think I have seen lions on every day of every visit), and elephants are also very likely to be encountered. Then there’s the hippos. With lots of waterways, pools and lakes, hippos are very common and by taking a boat ride down the Kazinga Channel you’ll be able to marvel at literally hundreds of them, as well as crocodiles
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and a multi-coloured rainbow of water birds.One of the unexpected attractions of this park are the habituated chimpanzees living in the tree-stuffed Kyambura Gorge. Sometimes they emerge onto the surrounding savannah and when they do so they may even walk upright – a look back at our shared ancestry if ever there was one!
Queen Elizabeth is also relatively easy and cheap to visit. So, with so much going for it are there any downsides? Not really in my opinion except that the park does lack that sense of space and wilderness that you can savour in some other East African parks.
Big Cats and Furry Primates
A boat trip along the Kazinga Channel is a great way to enjoy the birdlife flitting along the banks, including kingfishers dive bombing into the water from overhanging tree branches. Along the shoreline one of our group spotted a leopard lazing on a tree branch in the late afternoon.
Another highlight of this park is Kyambura Gorge, a kind of humid, forested lost world where a community of chimps swing from tree to tree with abandon. Although you have a better chance of seeing chimps in Budongo or Kibale, this location is much more atmospheric. We stumbled across a family of chimps within 15 minutes of entering the gorge – the furry primates swung around us in the forest
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and even came down for a closer look near the river.This is a very fine national park with a diversity of experiences, activities, wildlife and adventure.