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Ruaha
National Park covers an area of 10,300 square kilometers,
is the third largest game conservation area after Selous
and Serengeti. Located in south central Tanzania, it
is a remote a wild place which is way off the routes
taken by most visitors to the country receiving a paltry
number of visitors each year.
 
In
consequence Ruaha is considered to be one of the great
"undiscovered" wilderness areas of East Africa,
it is actually at the heart of a much larger ecosystem,
which extends across the Rungwa and Kizigo game conservation
areas (hunting blocks), which totals an area five times
the size, the main feature of the park is the Ruaha
river, which rises in the swamps to the south and sweeps
north and eastward through the park, turning back south
and passing through the Iringa Highlands in deep-cut
gorges to reach the Great Rufiji in the region of the
Beho Beho mountains in the western Selous, it is the
presence of this river which brings life to the broad
valleys that make up the main portion of the park, sustaining
the wildlife through the dry season, along the northern
border of the park runs the Northern Escarpment.
Ruaha
is a wonderful place to visit, which if done correctly
can offer some superb game-viewing. One interesting
little feature down here is the little rope bridge spanning
one of the tributaries of the Ruaha, which when in flood
cuts off Ruaha River Lodge from the airstrip and was
thus installed to make sure that guests could arrive
and depart on schedule. It is a pretty precarious affair.
Across
the centre of the park lies a seemingly endless swathe
of featureless dry scrub, made up of combretum and comifora
bushes ... which you may not have heard of now, but
you will get to know pretty well out here. They are
remarkable for their red flowers and orange seed pods,
which are the largest flying seed pods that we've ever
seen.
The
area immediately around the Jongomeru sand river is
a particulary nice section of mature riverine woodland,
which presumably plays host to a wide variety of game.
Unfortunately everything is so shy down here that it
legs it at the first sight of you.
One
particular highlight in the area is a good hippo pool,
with a few dozen chubby chaps and quite a few good sized
crocs too.
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