There are many excellent travel destinations in Central Africa, but none more so than Tanzania. Here the wide plains of the Serengeti, the lush pastures of the Ngorongoro Crater, the snow-capped peak of Mount Kilimanjaro and the mythical isle of Zanzibar will entice travellers to return time and again.
The lush Mahogany treed jungle in the north-eastern highlands blankets the foothills of the sheer rock walls of the Great Rift Valley which in turn forms an impressive backdrop to the great lakes of Victoria, Manyara and Tanganyika. The Great Rift is a 3,000-mile geological fault stretching from Syria in Asia to Mozambique in lower East Africa and offers the visitor stunning scenery of Africa's highest mountains and deepest lakes.
To the east, Dar es Salaam, the capital city, serves as gateway to the emerald isles of Zanzibar, surrounded by an atoll of breathtaking coral reefs - a sheer haven for divers. The Zanzibar archipelago was discovered by Arab traders in the 8th century and to this day is still called the "Spice Islands", bathed in heady scents, culture and architecture of a bygone era.
To the west of Kilimanjaro are the Serengeti plains, well-known for their huge concentrations of migratory animals. This mosaic of grassland, swamps, riverine forests and savanna habitats is host to 70 larger mammals, of which more than a million herbivores participate in the circular migration, spurred on by the need for greener pastures. In excess of a million wildebeest (gnu), accompanied by 200,000 zebras congregate on the Southern Serengeti plains during December to March to start "the biggest show on earth". Slowly, but surely they move in a westerly and then a northerly direction, until in June they are confronted by the Mara River, for the well-known river crossing. In the river huge crocodiles lay in wait The large herds stay in the Masai Mara Natural Reserve, until the smell of the new rains in the south draw them back to their breeding grounds in the Serengeti.
The jewel in the crown of the greater Serengeti area is the Ngorongoro
crater. This volcanic caldera has walls of half-a mile deep and
covers a mere 102 square miles and forms a natural enclosure for
many species, including lion. With 25,000 mammals in this enclosure
it undoubtedly makes the Ngorongoro the most densely crowded wildlife
area on the planet. Wildlife viewing and photography in the caldera
is something special, with the crater walls forming a perfect background
to the images of animals and nature alike. Accommodation is outside
the crater and a number of exclusive lodges on its rim offers spectacular
views of the crater floor below.
Away from the popular Serengeti lies the smaller wildlife enclave of Lake Manyara. This area is renowned for its diverse terrain: from the shallow alkaline waters of "the loveliest lake in Africa", home to thousands of pink Flamingos, to groundwater forests, acacia woodlands and open floodplains. The sheer rockwalls of the Great Rift Valley serve as spectacular scenery. A stay in a luxurious tree lodge emulates the behaviour of the tree-climbing lions of the region.
