Chimps Tracking Adventures and Where To View Chimps in Africa
Eastern and Central Africa are home to the best places in the world to track chimps no doubt about that. Discover the best chimps tracking adventure spots across Uganda, Rwanda and Tanzania.
Chimpanzees are in decline across their range: in parts of Africa they’re clinging on by their fingertips. But well-managed eco-tourism has the power to help protect the forests that are crucial to their survival.
What are chimps?
There are four subpopulations of the chimpanzee – the western chimp, the Nigeria-Cameroon chimp, the central chimp, and the eastern chimp. Chimpanzees are one of our closest relatives, sharing about 98 percent of their genes with us. They have thickset bodies with short legs, opposable thumbs, no tails, and long arms that are 1.5 times their height that extends beyond their knees. Much of their body is covered with long black hair, but the face, ears, fingers, and toes are bare.
The taxonomical genus Pan (often referred to as chimpanzees or chimps) consists of two extant species: the common chimpanzee and the bonobo. Together with humans, gorillas, and orangutans they are part of the family Hominidae (the great apes). Native to sub-Saharan Africa, common chimpanzees and bonobos are currently both found in the Congo jungle, while only the common chimpanzee is also found further north in West Africa. Both species are listed as endangered on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species, and in 2017 the Convention on Migratory Species selected the common chimpanzee for special protection.
The Albertine Rift, where East Africa meets the jungles of the Congo, is an excellent spot for a primate-watching adventure. Truly vast in its biodiversity, it harbours most of Africa’s chimps as well as more endemic wildlife species than any other eco-region on the continent. Uganda is arguably the pick of the lot, due to its prime habitats not only for chimps but for mountain gorillas, golden monkeys and other primates. But it’s not the only option, as travellers to these regions will discover.
Where to View Chimps
1: Kibale Forest National Park,
Kibale is the world’s busiest chimping location. Accommodation is plentiful and the terrain is mostly flat and easy, with little undergrowth. One-hour sightings can feel crowded, with groups taking turns, but it’s also possible to book a full-day Habituation Experience year-round.
This may yield sightings that, though less predictable, are lengthier and quieter. There’s a chance that you may meet elephants in the park, too, which can be unnerving, but you’ll be with an armed guide who can fire a warning shot if necessary.
2: Budongo Forest Reserve, Kaniyo Pabidi
Located near Lake Albert and deep within the Murchison Falls Conservation Area, this superb reserve has over 700 chimps and a rustic eco-lodge with links to a research station. The terrain is fairly flat and tourists can either set out for a half-day, watching a habituated group for an hour, or during low season (January–June and October–December) they can spend an entire day in the forest. It’s an excellent experience, even though the canopy is denser than Kibale, making photography more challenging.
3: Queen Elizabeth National Park, Kyambura Gorge
Kyambura is a deep, forested gash in a grassy plain with a beautiful riverside path at its foot. Its small community of chimps have a heartbreaking story: isolated from the main Maramagambo forest by an overgrown village and grasslands where predators such as lions and hyenas lurk, they’re already showing signs of inbreeding. You have the option of booking a guided walk in the gorge during your stay, and even if you only catch a glimpse of the chimps, the walk itself is glorious.
4: Mahale Mountains National Park
At 1,613 sq km, Mahale is the largest accessible habitat in the Rift, and visitors see just a fraction of it. Greystoke Mahale is the best lodge; its guides know the chimps’ life histories and have a knack for storytelling. Mahale’s park rangers are impressive, too, ensuring nobody overstays their hour and insisting on masks to avoid the spreading of infections to the primates. While tracking expeditions can be long and hot, the idyllic lakeside setting on Lake Tanganyika helps make the experience extremely special.
5: Gombe Stream National Park
The park where Dr Jane Goodall conducted her ground-breaking chimpanzee studies in the 1960s is still an important research centre. Even though the focus here is more on science than tourism, good sightings are almost certain if you have the stamina for a challenging trek. Park rangers act as guides and there’s the option of no-frills accommodation in the national park rest house close to the research centre.
6: Nyungwe National Park, Cyamudongo Forest
The canopy walk in Nyungwe National Park has fine views (Shutterstock) Best for: Montane rainforest scenery Tragically small at 4 sq km, Cyamudongo is adrift in a sea of tea plantations, eucalyptus groves and smallholdings. Amazingly, though, around 40 chimps survive here at high altitude (over 2,000m). With its steep, slippery paths and thick vegetation, this is a trek only for the fit, but for the chance to see this bird-rich habitat, dripping with orchids and ferns, it’s more than worth it.
7: Rwanda, Burundi and DR Congo
Chimps tracking Adventure destinations in the making include two forests in Rwanda: Gisovu, which is part of Nyungwe, and Gishwati, a regeneration zone close to Volcanoes National Park. Their small communities of chimps are not yet fully habituated, but may become so in the years to come. The new Gishwati-Mukura National Park will also officially open to tourists in 2019. The pioneering Tongo Forest project in DR Congo’s Virunga National Park is marooned by civil unrest, with the park off-limits to visitors until 2019. But if peace returns and plans to exploit its oil reserves are averted, this could once again be a superb place to see chimps and gorillas. Lastly, Burundi’s Kibira National Park, the southern extension of Nyungwe, is rich in fruit and flowers, good for chimps and birds. The FCO currently advise against all travel here, but future chimp safaris could provide marginalised Batwa communities with much-needed revenue.
Kibale Forest, where you find the gorillas.
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