Tanzania





Ruaha National Park

Many seasoned safarigoers rate Ruaha as the most rewarding of all East African game reserves. The country’s second-largest national park, it consists of 10,300 sq km of untrammelled semi-arid bush, and forms the core of the thrice-larger Greater Ruaha Ecosystem, a vast block of protected areas that supports one of the largest elephant populations on the continent
Set in the thinly inhabited heartland of central Tanzania, rugged and remote Ruaha has a mood all of its own, an almost spiritual quality embodied by the spectral baobab trees that stud its parched plains and boulder-strewn slopes. Complementing this evocative wilderness atmosphere, the park also offers some sterling game viewing – not only the ubiquitous elephants, but also an exceptional variety of antelope and other large ungulates, and some excellent big cat viewing.





Vegetation and habitats

Wildlife

Activities

Getting there

Where to stay

Nearby places of interest





Vegetation and habitats








Wildlife







Activities






Getting there







Where to stay






Nearby places of interest


Checklist of conspicuous and noteworthy mammals: lion, leopard, cheetah, side-striped jackal, African wild dog, spotted hyena, striped hyena, banded mongoose, white-tailed mongoose, blue wildebeest, common waterbuck, impala, greater kudu, common eland, sable antelope, roan antelope, bushbuck, common duiker, red duiker, African elephant, African buffalo, common zebra, hippo, warthog, Maasai giraffe, yellow baboon, vervet monkey, rock hyrax.