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18 Days Kenya and Uganda Adventure Safaris

Day 1: Nairobi- Mt. Kenya
Depart Nairobi in the morning and proceed towards the slopes of Africa's second largest mountain at 5199m - Mt Kenya. Afternoon game drives at Sweetwater's game ranch to see the wildlife including rehabilitated chimpanzees. We spend the night at Mountain Rock Campsite.

Mount Kenya was shaped by volcanic action linked with the creation of the Rift Valley and is thought to be older than Mount Kilimanjaro; geologists believe it previously stretched at least 1500m above its present height of 5199m (17,057ft) The private ranch at Sweetwater's is the only sanctuary for rehabilitation in Kenya of these widely abused chimpanzees with two groups living in an environment as close to their natural habitat as possible. The site is also a dedicated black rhino breeding area

Day 2: Mt Kenya- Samburu

Depart in the morning for Samburu game reserve to arrive there in time for the afternoon game drive in the park. Accommodation in our semi-permanent campsite beautifully set under a canopy of trees or pitch tents on the edge of Uaso Nyiro River (meaning Brown in Samburu language). Cold showers are available which are amazingly refreshing in the hot, dusty climates. Samburu is part of a lava plain that includes a diverse landscape of thorn scrub, red dirt, dried river beds, broken volcanic rock, steep hills, and rocky outcroppings - some large enough to be called mesas. This reserve is becoming one of Kenya's most admired stops after the Mara. The region is home to the uncommon Grevy's zebra with huge fury ears, gerenuk antelope standing on hind legs to feed, Somali ostriches with distinct blue legs and the shy Oryx. Elephant and crocodile are guaranteed sightings and excellent bird watching is available here with numerous varieties of weaverbirds and the martial eagle to be seen. Leopard sighting is also a special feature here.

Day 3: Marsabit
Sometimes waking up to the sounds of splashing elephant in the river we head north again along the Trans-African highway to Marsabit. Marsabit (meaning place of cold) is an astonishingly cool, green and hilly oasis rising high above the dry heat of the surrounding desert lands. The local Rendille people in their bright red outfits, beads and earrings make it a vibrant place. After setting up camp, we visit the lodge inside the National park and so long as the roads are dry we drive to Lake Paradise and Little Lake - an indigenous forest and a desert that come together to create the most compelling landscape on earth. Elephants and greater kudu abound. The dense forest in the park is also home to a variety of birds.

Day 4: Kalacha
We visit Marsabit town and another volcanic crater before making our way back into the desert and lava flows. We camp at Kalacha, a small Gabbra settlement on the edge of the Chalbi Desert. The Gabbra are an Eastern Cushite people related to the Somali-Rendille in their historical origins in the southern Ethiopian highlands about AD 1000. They are pastoralists, particularly attached to their camels.

Day 5: Lake Turkana
We depart early, crossing the Chalbi Desert. Lake Turkana is the largest desert lake in the world and extends for 288 kilometers up to the Ethiopian / Kenyan border and is surrounded by volcanic rock and desert. We arrive at our semi - permanent beach village where we have our traditional Turkana Huts (if still available; if not we pitch tent at an alternative campsite) which make it a perfect place to relax, protected from the scorching sun and heat characteristic of the climate of this remote area.

Day 6: Lake Turkana

The day is spent relaxing and you may visit the local lodge to swim.
Visit the El molo tribe and thereafter enjoy a sunset boat cruise.
Turkana, formerly L. Rudolf is now named after one of the tribes who live on its shores and it is in this area that Richard Leakey uncovered the three million year old fossils of 'Homo Erectus'. This pre historic site is now known as the "Cradle of Mankind". The Lake is also known as the "Jade Sea" because of its remarkable blue - green color. This is a result of algae particles, which shift with changes of the wind and light, so that the water surface shifts from blue to grey to fabulous jade. The lake is home to the largest population of Nile crocodiles in the world.

Day 7: Tuum camel safari
Departing Lake Turkana via the very rocky road out of the Rift Valley we head south to Tuum, situated on the west of Mt. Nyiro which stands to the East of the Suguta Valley. This is a very scenic but rough drive through lava flows to the broken sands on the edge of the Kaisut desert. After a picnic lunch, you get the chance to walk with camels and Samburu guides in these breath-taking landscapes for a few hours to the foothills of Mt. Nyiro where you set camp together with the guides and camels.

The Suguta valley is a huge sector of the Rift Valley between Lake Baringo and Lake Turkana. At the north end, the valley floor is only a few hundred meters above sea level, making it one of the lowest parts of the Rift Valley structure. It is one of the hottest parts of Kenya with deserts, volcanic cones, salt lakes and uneven lava fields.
Mt. Nyiro is encircled by desert but its upper slopes are covered in forest and small spring’s surface lower down to nourish the villages of Tuum and South Horr and numerous other small settlements in the foothills. From the top of Mt. Nyiro to the bottom of the Suguta, the land drops over 2500m in less than 20km. This vicinity is sliced through by bottomless ravines, called luggas; which are regularly dry but become soaked with sudden flash floods after rain.

Day 8: Maralal
After breakfast we have an early morning walk in the cool and spectacular African sunrise for a couple of hours after which we proceed to Maralal where we spend the night. Maralal is the unofficial capital of the Samburu people and has a distinctly frontier feel about it. Near Maralal is one of the most breaths taking scenes in all of Kenya - the Losiolo escarpment, an endless stretch as land drops down to the Suguta valley. Maralal is also home of the Maralal International Camel Derby that happens once a year between July and October and attracts riders and spectators from the four corners of the world

Day 9: Lake Baringo
Heading south we visit Lake Baringo where we spend the night at a campsite sleeping amongst the grazing hippos. L. Baringo is the most Northerly of Kenya's small Rift Valley lakes; creased with papyrus and well developed acacia forest. Hippos, crocodiles and monitor lizards are effortlessly seen from the shore.
Likewise, this is Kenya's bird watching centre with over 1200 different species native to the country and more than 450 sighted here and is thus a bird watcher's haven but beware as this is malaria land.

Day 10: Nairobi
After breakfast we go on an early morning boat ride in search of hippo, crocodile and fish eagle. Drive back to Nairobi after breakfast to arrive in the late afternoon and transfer to JKIA to board your Kampala bound flight.

Day 11: Arrival - Kampala

On arrival at Entebbe Airport, Uganda, met and assisted. Transfer to Kampala hotel for overnight stay on bed and breakfast in readiness for the next day's journey.

Day 12: Kibale Forest National Park
After breakfast drive to Kibale Forest National Park. You will have lunch enroute and get to Fort Portal in the afternoon. Time permitting visit the Tooro Palace, Karambi tombs and the crater lakes at Ndali. Dinner and overnight at Primates lodge/ Ndali lodge/ Ruwenzori view guest house.

Day 13: Chimpanzee Tracking.

After an early morning breakfast you will go to Kanyanchu tourist centre and get briefed by the authority guide before you proceed to track chimpanzees in the forest. Chimpanzees are one of man's closest relations and therefore seeing them is a wonderful adventure. This will take you two to three hours depending on how soon you will be able to see the chimpanzees. The guide will take you through the thick forest and while giving you information about the different tree species in the forest which will make your walk interesting and informative. You will have a chance to see more of the red tailed monkeys, Mangabeys, grey cheeked monkeys and also listen to the sounds of the birds in the forest. You will then return for late breakfast and have your packed lunch then proceed to Queen Elizabeth National Park. Primate’s lodge/ Ndali lodge/ Ruwenzori view guest house.

Day 14: Queen Elizabeth NP
Depart for queen Elizabeth national park located in the foothills of the Mountains of the moon, one of the great mountain ranges of the world. As you continue to the park you may see different animals and birds given that the park has got about 100 mammal species and a remarkable 606 bird species. In the afternoon, you will take a launch trip on the Kazinga Channel renowned of the highest density of hippo’s concentration in Africa. While on the cruise you will see a number of birds as well as animals taking a drink at the lake shores. Dinner and Overnight at Mweya Safari Lodge/Jacana Lodge

Day 15: Primates & the Bat Colony in Kyambura Gorge
After breakfast in the morning, you will go for a nature walk in the Maramagambo Forest to see different tree species, primates, the bat colony and the blue lake. After lunch take a launch cruise on the Kazinga Channel where different animals such as hippos, elephants, buffaloes, and an array of water birds can be seen. Go on the hunt for the tree-climbing lions lounging on old fig trees in the Ishasha region. Dinner and Overnight at Jacana/ Mweya safari lodge /Ishasha Bandas.

Day 16: Bwindi Impenetrable Forest
After breakfast, depart for Bwindi Impenetrable Forest passing either via Ishasha, the home of the tree climbing lion, or take the alternative route through cultivated expanses. This will depend on the road situation. Explore the village and the native communities if time allows. Dinner and overnight at Buhoma homestead / Buhoma Community bandas.

Day 17: Gorilla Safari Bwindi Impenetrable National Park
Take early morning breakfast and proceed to the forest for gorilla tracking. Remember you need jungle boots since gorilla tracking involves walking up steep densely forested hills before finally coming across the endangered gorillas camouflaged in the dense tropical vegetation.

Day 18: Bwindi Impenetrable - Kampala

Return to Kampala with a drop at the airport to board your home bound flight.