4 Day Rwanda Gorilla Trek

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Day 1: Volcanoes National Park

Today you arrive in Rwanda, where we will meet you at Kigali International Airport, and take you to a nearby hotel for welcome drinks and a briefing. After lunch, we travel north to Ruhengeri and the Volcanoes National Park. This two hour drive undulates over Rwanda’s extremely hilly and picturesque countryside, and as you near the end of your journey, you will (weather permitting!) begin to catch glimpses of the Virungas – a chain of 9 impossibly steep and lofty volcanoes straddling the western branch of the Rift Valley from east to west. Each mountain possesses its own unique character and silhouette, but together they form one of the most isolated and visually dramatic ecosystems in the world. A “true island in the sky”, the Virunga National Park (established in 1925) was Africa’s first, and it was granted status as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1979. The park is home to some of the world’s few remaining Mountain Gorillas, which were first studied here in 1959 by George Schaller, and later by Dian Fossey and her colleagues. We check in to our lodge for the night.

Activities and Services

Arrival and Drive to Volcanoes National Park

Day 2: Volcanoes National Park

Today’s activities may be amongst the most exciting and challenging you have undertaken. The Mountain Gorillas in Rwanda are part of a worldwide population of just 720 individuals. The gorillas we are allowed to track belong to either one of seven habituated family groups. For up to five years each, these groups have undergone an extremely delicate process that has gradually brought them to tolerate the presence of humans for a brief period every day and allowed a few privileged visitors to interact with them in the wild. An early breakfast and we’re off to the park headquarters at Kinigi to register and be allocated our gorilla family for today. Once this is done, we set out by vehicle to the start of the tracking point where we meet up with our guides and porters to begin the track. The gorillas are by no means tame, and are completely wild animals. However, experienced guides will accompany us on our tracking, many of whom have been involved in the habituation process themselves. The guides will use their knowledge of the gorillas’ habits and information from the previous day to locate the group’s whereabouts. Because of this, the time taken to track the gorillas varies enormously, from as little as half an hour to as much as 9 hours before one returns to camp. Once the gorillas are located, our group will be allowed a maximum of one hour with them. This is one of the world’s truly memorable experiences – a look into one of these magnificent creature’s eyes brings home the bond that exists between them and us. It also brings home the poignant fact that they are on the edge of extinction, and that our presence here contributes to ensuring their continued survival. The hour is often over all too quickly, and we slowly make our way back to our lodge to recount the day’s adventures.Later on, we have the chance to pay a visit to the picturesque Twin Lakes, or visit the nearby Iby’Iwacu Cultural Village for a display of intore traditional drumming and dancing.

Activities and Services

Day 3: Volcanoes National Park

Today we enjoy the option of a second day of gorilla tracking in Volcanoes National Park. Alternatively we can choose to track the equally rare Golden Monkeys, or enjoy a guided hike to Dian Fossey’s old Gorilla research station, where she is buried to this day.

Day 4: End of Itinerary

Your safari ends with your journey to Kigali. Before transferring to the airport, there maybe time to tour the city and visit the genocide memorial, a moving testimony to this country’s past that it has courageously overcome.

Activities and Services

Depart

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