Thursday, May 13, 2010

Arusha Town - Tanzania

This attractive little town is situated in a beautiful, mountainous region. It nestles at the foot of Mount Meru and offers fantastic views of the towering Mount Kilimanjaro (Africa's highest mountain).
Arusha is a popular destination and, as a result, there are numerous restaurants, bars and markets to browse. It is also a pleasant place to spend a few relaxing days before embarking on a safari or attempting to scale Kilimanjaro

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

Dance With Maasai - Tanzania

How far can you jump up!

Maasai Tanzania


The Maasai are an indigenous African ethnic group of semi-nomadic people located in Kenya and northern Tanzania. Due to their distinctive customs and dress and residence near the many game parks of East Africa, they are among the most well-known African ethnic groups internationally. They speak Maa, a Nilo-Saharan language related to Dinka, Nuer, Turkana and Songhai, and are also educated in the official languages of Kenya and Tanzania: Swahili and English. The Maasai population has been variously estimated as 377,089 from the 1989 Census or as 453,000 language speakers in Kenya in 1994 and 430,000 in Tanzania in 1993[2] with a total estimated as "approaching 900,000" Estimates of the respective Maasai populations in both countries are complicated by the remote locations of many villages, and their semi-nomadic nature. Although the Tanzanian and Kenyan governments have instituted programs to encourage the Maasai to abandon their traditional semi-nomadic lifestyle, the people have clung to their age-old customs

Monday, May 10, 2010

Life underwater in Lake Tanganyika

Lern more, what is in the Lake Tanganyika.

Lake Tanganyika - Tanzania

Among the chain of lakes on the bottom of the Western Great Rift Valley, Lake Tanganyika is outstanding for its extraordinary north-south extension (670 km) and depth (1,470 m). It is the second largest of African lakes, the second deepest (next to L. Baikal) and the longest lake of the world. Its very ancient origin, only rivalled by such old lakes as Baikal, and a long period of isolation resulted in the evolution of a great number of indigenous organisms, including brilliantly colored cichlid fishes, well-known gastropods with the appearance of marine snails, and so on. Of the 214 species of native fishes in the lake, 176 are endemic; the number of endemic genera amounts to 30 in cichlids and 8 in non- cichlid fishes.


The surrounding areas are mostly mountainous with poorly developed coastal plains except on part of the east side. Especially on the western coast, steep side-walls of the Great Rift Valley reaching 2,000 m in relative height form the shoreline. The sole effluent river, the Lukuga, starts from the middle part of western coast and flows westward to join the Zaire River draining into the Atlantic.



Agriculture, livestock raising and the processing of these products as well as the mining (tin, copper, coal, etc.) are the main industries in the drainage basin of L. Tanganyika. Fishery products, the "Tanganyika sardine" (Stolothrissa tanganikae, Herring Family) in particular, are also important for local economy. Well-developed regular ship lines connect Kigoma (Tanzania), Kalemie (Zaire) and other coastal towns as essential part of the inland traffic system of east Africa.
Do you want know more about Lake Tanganyika, click here!

Monday, May 3, 2010

Mikumi National Park - Tanzania

Mikumi National Park is the fourth largest national park in Tanzania covering about 3,230 sq km. Mikumi ecosystem is part of a much larger Selous Game Reserve ecosystem divided by Uluguru mountains range. Mikumi national park is one of the easiest accessible parks in the southern circuit simply because it is transected by the tarmac highway between Tanzania and Zambia. The Mkata floodplain and it's variety of wildlife to the north east of this magnificent park makes it a smaller version of famous Serengeti plain.

Among the inhabitants of Mikumi are lions, zebra, wildebeest, impala, buffalo, giraffes, elephants, warthog leopards and many other species as well as more that 400 species of birds.

Mikumi is allocated about 283 km west of Dar es Salaam, north of Selous, and en route to Ruaha, Udzungwa and Katavi. The park can be visited form June to March.

While visiting Mikumi national park, you can do game drive and if possible you could connect your trip with other parks like Selous, Ruaha or Udzungwa.
Do you want more? Click here!