Rwanda - the Land of a Thousand Hills
All you need to know about Gorilla Trekking in Rwanda
How to get there:
International flights into the capital city of Kigali, where we recommend at least one nights’ stay.
From here, a private guide will transfer you to your accommodation near the Volcanoes National Park. This journey takes between 2,5 and 3 hours, but this is a spectacular drive, and you will find out why Rwanda is called the Land of a Thousand Hills.
Trekking experience:
We recommend 1 or 2 nights in Kigali and 2 or 3 nights for trekking in Volcanoes National Park. The offering in Rwanda is sophisticated with good road infrastructure – with beautiful natural scenery and day-to-day life.
On your Trekking Day you will be transferred to the Park Headquarters, where you will don gloves and gaiters. These are highly recommended to protect you from the vegetation – stinging nettles are pretty painful without these! You will carry a small backpack with a packed lunch and water – absolutely essential for your trek.
The Park rangers will assign you to a group of 6 trekkers and to a Gorilla Family. You will then be guided by an experienced tracker up the slopes of the extinct Volcano, through the African redwoods and bamboo, vines, and dense vegetation to the area where the gorilla family you were assigned to, is located.
You will be allowed one hour with the gorilla family, to ensure minimum human impact on these wild creatures. We highly recommend a second gorilla trek, as you are so overwhelmed by the face-to-face encounter and so busy taking photos, that you really need another trek just to sit and watch the incredible family interactions.
The terrain is less steep and the vegetation less dense here than in neighbouring Uganda. The extensive road network also means that you may be able to drive to the start of the trailhead and cut down on required trekking time as a result (depending on which family you are assigned to).
The trek can be anything between 3 to 6 hours, depending on the weather conditions, the groups’ fitness levels, and the proximity of your assigned gorilla family. Hiking is at altitude through thick forested slopes, which involves crouching and stepping over thick bushes.
Definitely book a porter for the trek. Whilst you are guided by a tracker to where the gorilla family is located, a porter is a life-line, who will assist you over or under difficult patches.
We recommend altitude medication if you suffer from altitude sickness.
Wearing of a mask is mandatory.
If you are sick (any flu symptoms), you will not be able to trek.
Cost:
USD1 500 per person per gorilla trek which goes directly strengthen conservation efforts and contribute more to the development of communities living around the Volcanoes National Park. Rigorous conservation efforts in recent years have been successful in contributing to a steady rise in the population of mountain gorillas and today there are just over 1000 individuals in the wild.
Other things to do and see:
Whilst staying at your gorilla trekking lodge there may be a number of additional activities, such as hiking to Dian Fossey’s Grave, visiting a cultural village and market, planting a tree and a visit to the Twin Lakes.
Chimpanzees and Black and White Colobus Monkeys can be trekked in their natural habitat in the Nyungwe Forests, Golden Monkeys in Volcanoes National Park ($100 for a trekking permit), and unique wildlife safaris in Akagera National Park. Coming soon, for a more relaxed pace, spend a few days on a Houseboat at Lake Kivu, one of the most beautiful of the central African Lakes.