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KATAVI NATIONAL PARK

Overview

Katavi National Park in Western Tanzania is remote and wild, a destination for the true safari aficionado. The name of the park immortalises a legendary hunter, Katabi, whose spirit is believed to possess a tamarind tree ringed with offerings from locals begging his blessings.

Despite being Tanzania’s third-largest park, Katavi sees relatively few visitors, meaning that those guests who arrive here can look forward to having this huge untouched wilderness to themselves.

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The park’s main features are the watery grass plains to the north, the palm-fringed lake Chada in the south-east, and the Katuma River. Katavi boasts Tanzania’s greatest populations of both crocodile and hippopotamus. Lion and leopard find prey among the huge populations of herbivores at Katavi – impala, eland, topi, zebra and herds of up to 1600 buffalo wander the short grass plains. The rare, honey-coloured puku antelope is one of the park’s richest wildlife viewing rewards.

A kaleidoscope of birds flits across the riverbanks, swamps and palm groves while flotillas of pelican cruise the lakes. Elephant graze waist-deep in the marshlands.

Katavi is best visited in the dry season between May and October, December and February.