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He wide distances of Ruaha National Park have
a drama and atmosphere quite unlike any other Tanzanian park. Covering
12,950sq km, Ruaha is the second largest National Park in Tanzania
after the Serengeti.
It is an ancient place; its hilly
distances are punctuated with distended elephant-battered girths
of massive baobabs that live for a thousand years, and the combination
of ochre-red earth, pale russet grasses and parched paths of wide
sand rivers fulfill images of ancient African landscapes.
Remote and Unspoilt
The fantastically unspoilt reaches
of Ruaha are a result of its location, requiring an expensive flight
or a long drive to reach it. Despite recent new alternatives for
staying here, Ruaha remains underdeveloped with major tracts still
largely inaccessible.
Ruaha Wildlife
The joy of Ruaha is that there are
hardly any people there at all, but plenty of heavy duty wildlife
lays claim to its hilly savannah and bush. Ruaha has one of the
greatest populations of elephant in any African park, and the dry
open hillsides encourage antelope and buffalo to gather into large
herds. This terrain is particularly good for seeing predators, especially
lion and potentially leopard, as well as packs of African hunting
dog and numerous giraffe and zebra.
Ruaha is the only east African park
with both Greater and Lesser Kudu, and sable and roan antelopes
and, like the Selous, has an unusual combination of East and Southern
African wildlife and birds.
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