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Expert Reviews of Toro National Park (5 Reviews)

Toro Operators Toro National Park
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3.0000 / 5 3 /5
2.4000 / 5 3.6000 / 5 4.0000 / 5 4.4000 / 5

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4 star 1 / 1 1
3 star 3 / 1 3
2 star 1 / 1 1
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Away From the Main Tourist Circuit, the Devil’s in the Detail

4 / 5 4 /5
3 / 5 4 / 5 4 / 5 4 / 5
Large game sightings aren’t as common here as in other protected areas – nor were they in the 1920s when the area was popular with European hunters – but suffice to say I have been charged by both forest and savannah elephants in Toro! Dwarf crocodiles have recently been sighted by guide friends. A nocturnal game drive in Toro opened my eyes to the importance of having an expert guide. On my own, I would have seen very little; with our local experts at the wheel, we pulled over next to a big puddle to retrieve terrapins from its muddy depths. A few metres on, the spotlight picked up evidence of scat; further inspection told us that we had disturbed a leopard eating a baboon. The reserve’s 400-plus bird species kept our bird-monitoring team happy for days.

The northern boundary of the 543km2 Toro National Park is Lake Albert, a reliable place to jump in a boat in search of the shoebill. (Just close your eyes when you drive through the rather grotty fishing
Read more village of Ntoroko.)

If you want to get away from it all, Toro is that place. Set in the middle of the park, the high-end Semliki Safari Lodge tented camp is the only place worth staying. Not only is it a great location, the owners have two decades’ experience collaborating on conservation initiatives.

Expect to hear your ears pop as you zigzag down the Kijura Escarpment, the only road in/out of Toro.

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