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Showing posts from May, 2020
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Are you still spending your leisure time in stressful format? Time is gone!   Slope/climb depending on your geographical location to Africa where your stressful moments will be left long way in the magical cruising water in the pearl of Africa. Give a chance to Ugandan great national parks to carryout boat cruise. Do you need a launch or group boat trip? Then tap on Kazinga channel in Queen Elizabeth National park, on Lake Victoria and on the River Nile in Murchison National park. The three mentioned parks are never disappointing instead expect the best beyond your imagination during the sail on this breath taking cruising water. Queen Elizabeth National Park (QENP) Which of the 3 parks is your first choice, I chose Kazinga channel in Queen Elizabeth National park (QENP), the most visited park in Uganda. It is located in the Western Region of Uganda, spanning the districts of Kasese, Kamwenge, Rubirizi, and Rukungiri. The park was founded in 1952 as Kazinga National P
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Lesser Flamingos. The Lesser flamingo is the smallest of all flamingos, but has the largest number of population. It is among the unique bird species explored by birders on safari in Uganda . Lake Munyanyange attracts birds that migrate from as far as Kenya and Canada among other countries. Birds including; Lesser Flamingos, the White Browed Robbin Chats, Black Headed Gonoleks, Long Tailed Starlings, African Hoopoes, Winding, Zitting, and Desert Cisticolas. Lake Munyanyange is a small seasonal shallow crater lake located to the North East of Katwe town. The lake is an important habitat for migratory birds and has one of the largest concentrations of the lesser black-backed gulls, Larus fuscus and other waders. These birds are Palearctic migrants arriving in October and departing in April. Thousands of these birds roost at the lake. Because it’s safe for them as at one stage of the year it turns muddy and that makes it difficult for wild animals to wade through the
Though we are  being affected by covid-19 we therefore remind our travelers that there's hope after to explore more about Africa’s pearl amidst the pretty attractive lakes with magical histories. LAKE VICTORIA Lake Victoria is the Largest Lake in the whole of Africa, the world’s largest tropical Lake and second largest lake in the whole world next to Lake Superior found in North America. Lake Victoria occupies a shallow depression in Africa. It has a maximum depth of between 80 and 84 metres and an average depth of 40 metres. Its catchment area covers 169,858 square kilometres. The lake has a shoreline of 7,142 kilometres with islands constituting 3.7 percent of this length. Historically, the Lake was renamed Lake Victoria by an Explorer John Speke after the Queen of England but many years before the coming of the Explorer, the natives in the area used to call it Lake Nalubaale or Nyanza. The lake is shared by three countries; Uganda shares 45%, Kenya 6%/and Tanzania with