
Lake Mburo National Park
Lying in the one part of Uganda covered in
extensive acacia woodland, Mburo has markedly different fauna to other
reserves.
Lake Mburo is the best place in the country to see the gigantic eland
antelope, as well as zebra, topi, impala, and several acacia-associated
birds.
The five lakes within the park attract hippos, crocodiles and a variety
of water birds, while fringing swamps hide secretive papyrus specialists
such as the sitatunga antelope and red, black and yellow papyrus gonalek.
Where to stay
Lake Mburo National Park has 4 tents at Rwonyo park headquarters.
There are also 3 public campsites, all strategically located to
facilitate and enhance scenic viewing and easy access to water. Lake
Mburo dining shelter provides meals on order.
Meals:
Neither the Rest Camp nor hostel stock food, visitors are therefore
advised to carry sufficient food and drinks for the duration of their
stay in the park. The Rest Camp staff can arrange for the cooking.
However other supplementary diet such as chicken and goat meat can be
arranged from the nearby community for visitors who intend to stay
longer.
Getting there:
Road Transport:
Lake Mburo National Park is found in Mbarara district, 3.5 hours drive
from Kampala on Mbarara Kampala highway. Turn left at 13 km (Akageti)
past Lyantonde, which then brings you to Sanga gate. Both junctions have
clearly labeled signposts. It is 13 km from Sanga trading center of
Sanga gate, 5 km from the main road to Nshara gate and about 20 minutes
drive from Rwonyo Park Head Quarters.
WHAT TO DO:
Game Viewing
is the major tourist activity in this Park, it is famous for its
richness in biodiversity. It has about 68 different species of mammals.
The common ones are Zebra, Impala, Buffalo, Topi, and Eland as
herbivores not to leave out the rare slightly of Roan antelope and
leopard, Hyenas and jackals as predictors.
Boat Rides
The presence of Lake Mburo within the park is a blessing worth
mentioning. The lake is rich with a diversity of animal and plant
species which can only be viewed clearly if you take a boat trip. The
crocodiles, hippopotamuses and birds like Pelicans, Black crake, Heron,
cormorant, fish eagle, you may also sight the rare Shoebill Stork and
all these will furnish your visit with pride. The duration of each boat
cruise is negotiable.
Guide walks
The nature trail offers the visitor a chance to admire nature insitu.
Visitors have the opportunity in walk in the circuit at his / her pace
although in company of an armed guide. The trail is interpreted in form
of a brochure in both English and Runyankole.
Salt Lick
A walk to the near by salt is a summary of it all. Strategically located
wooden hide (Observation point) offers a chance to see at least 4
different species of animals at any one time while they lick the salty
soil. Most interesting to note is that this is done without the animal's
conscience. Visitors may also walk to area of their own choice.
Note: Walks inside the park must be in company of an armed park
official.
Rubanga Forest
You can also explore this forest by making arrangements with the Park
Management to have a Ranger accompany you. The Rubanga Forest is very
small but a true forest with a closed canopy in places. A common tree is
Markhamia platycalyx (grey-brown truck with irregular flaky patches,
divided leaves, yellow flowers stripped and spotted with red; brunches
of extremely long (up to 1.3 m podlike fruits). Palms, figs, sapium (a
tall tree whose leaves turn red before falling) and the flame tree
Erythrina abyssinica occur towards the edge of the swamp.
Birding
First-time visitors to Lake Mburo National Park are fascinated by the
variety of large mammals and colorful birds. For many people, birds are
the most interesting to watch. As common species become familiar, you
will begin to notice smaller, less spectacular birds; the real experts
seem to get most excited by 'Little Brown jobs' ('LBJs') which are the
hardest to identify. Although many birds are wild spread, others are
more fussy in their choice of habitat. For example, most of the park's
310 recorded species are 'generalist' and can be seen almost anywhere.
However, they are 5 species of bird, which are found only in the forest,
and 60 specialist water birds. Others prefer short or tall grasslands,
or are found mainly in woodlands.
This Park has Open water birds, Lakeshore and papyrus swamp birds,
Seasonal swamp birds, Woodland birds, Grassland birds and Forest birds.
Birds of the Open Water in this Park include; Pink-backed pelican,
Darter, White pelican, Yellow-billed duck, Long-tailed cormorant, White
winged black tern and Greater cormorant
Lakeshore and papyrus swamp birds
They are over 26 species of lakeshore and papyrus swamp birds recorded
in this Park. Some of them include; Fish eagle, Pied kingfisher, African
finfoot, Great white egret, Night heron.
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