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See What Makes Tanzania Top of The Charts

Tanzania contains many large and ecologically significant wildlife safari parks, including the famous Ngorongoro Crater, Serengeti National Park in the north, and Selous Game Reserve and Mikumi National Park in the south. Gombe National Park in the west is known as the site of Dr. Jane Goodall's studies of chimpanzee behavior.

Tanzania is mountainous in the north-east, where Mount Kilimanjaro, Africa's highest peak, is situated. Your Tanzania travel would be incomplete without seeing it. To the north and west are the Great Lakes of Lake Victoria (Africa's largest lake) and Lake Tanganyika (Africa's deepest lake, known for its unique species of fish). Central Tanzania comprises a large plateau, with plains and arable land. The eastern shore is hot and humid, with the island of Zanzibar lying just offshore. Simply the best place for a safari.

Kilimanjaro National Park

Highest Peak in Africa

Kilimanjaro National Park
Tanzania game parks image: Mountain Kilimanjaro from a distance.

Kilimanjaro. The name itself is a mystery wreathed in clouds. It might mean Mountain of Light, Mountain of Greatness or Mountain of Caravans. Or it might not. The local people, the Wachagga, don't even have a name for the whole massif, only Kipoo (now known as Kibo) for the familiar snowy peak that stands imperious, overseer of the continent, the summit of Africa.

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Serengeti National Park

Lions Busiest Hunting Ground

Serengeti National Park
Tanzania game parks image: A lion at the park.

A million wildebeest... each one driven by the same ancient rhythm, fulfilling its instinctive role in the inescapable cycle of life: a frenzied three-week bout of territorial conquests and mating; survival of the fittest as 40km (25 mile) long columns plunge through crocodile-infested waters on the annual exodus north; replenishing the species in a brief population explosion that produces more than 8,000 calves daily before the 1,000 km (600 mile) pilgrimage begins again.

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Mahale National Park

Home for Wild Chimpanzees

Mahale National Park
Tanzania game parks image: A family of chimpazees.

Set deep in the heart of the African interior, inaccessible by road and only 100km (60 miles) south of where Stanley uttered that immortal greeting “Doctor Livingstone, I presume”, is a scene reminiscent of an Indian Ocean island beach idyll.

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Tarangire National Park

Thirsty Nomads' Home

Tarangire National Park
Tanzania game parks image: An impala.

Day after day of cloudless skies. The fierce sun sucks the moisture from the landscape, baking the earth a dusty red, the withered grass as brittle as straw. The Tarangire River has shrivelled to a shadow of its wet season self. But it is choked with wildlife. Thirsty nomads have wandered hundreds of parched kilometres knowing that here, always, there is water.

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Ruaha National Park

Untrammelled Wilderness

Ruaha National Park
Tanzania game parks image: Zebras relaxing.

The game viewing starts the moment the plane touches down. A giraffe races beside the airstrip, all legs and neck, yet oddly elegant in its awkwardness. A line of zebras parades across the runway in the giraffe's wake.

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Arusha National Park

A Multi-faceted Jewel

Arusha National Park
Tanzania game park image: Giraffes marching.

The closest national park to Arusha town – northern Tanzania’s safari capital – Arusha National Park is a multi-faceted jewel, often overlooked by safarigoers, despite offering the opportunity to explore a beguiling diversity of habitats within a few hours.

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Udzungwa Mountains National Park

The Amazing Eastern Arc Mountains

Udzungwa Mountains National Park
Tanzania game parks image: Udzungwa Mountains waterfall.

Brooding and primeval, the forests of Udzungwa seem positively enchanted: a verdant refuge of sunshine-dappled glades enclosed by 30-metre (100 foot) high trees, their buttresses layered with fungi, lichens, mosses and ferns.

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Rubondo National Park

Tucked in the World's 2nd Largest Lake

Rubondo National Park
Tanzania game parks image: An elephant passing by for a quick drink.

A pair of fish eagles guards the gentle bay, their distinctive black, white and chestnut feather pattern gleaming boldly in the morning sun. Suddenly, the birds toss back their heads in a piercing, evocative duet. On the sandbank below, a well-fed monster of a crocodile snaps to life, startled from its nap. It stampedes through the crunchy undergrowth, crashing into the water in front of the boat, invisible except for a pair of sentry-post eyes that peek menacingly above the surface to monitor our movements.

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Katavi National Park

The True Wilderness

Katavi National Park
Tanzania game parks image: A hippopotamus.

Isolated, untrammelled and seldom visited, Katavi is a true wilderness, providing the few intrepid souls who make it there with a thrilling taste of Africa as it must have been a century ago. Tanzania's third largest national park, it lies in the remote southwest of the country, within a truncated arm of the Rift Valley that terminates in the shallow, brooding expanse of Lake Rukwa.

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