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The Rufiji River, with its lagoons, sandbanks
and lakes, and the surrounding forests and woodlands that make up
the Selous Game Reserve create a very unique and unusual safari
environment.
The vast area contained within the
reserve boundaries accounts for 5% of the land mass of Tanzania,
and yet all options for tourists are high quality, low-impact lodges
that provide a high standard of accommodation. (Please see below).
Covering almost 50,000 square km,
an area greater than Switzerland, the Selous Game Reserve is one
of the largest areas set aside for wildlife preservation anywhere
in the world, although only a small northern portion is allocated
for photographic tourism.
Selous Safaris; walking and
boating, and flycamping
The freedom to take walking and boating
safaris within the conservation area means that guiding standards
are also especially good and can extend to include excellent options
to fly-camp overnight in the bush. It all depends on the preference
of our clients. Click Here
for more details
Photographing the Selous
This is an area that naturally appeals
to a photographic lens, as the waterways and plains reflect all
the changing colours of the sun and attract numerous fine-feathered
water birds and raptors.
Selous Wildlife
The spectrum of wildlife here is diverse,
all the more interesting because its southern location attracts
a unique combination of East and Southern African wildlife, both
resident and migratory, and particularly a curious and colourful
assortment of over 440 known species of birds.
The intricate waterways and tributaries
of the Rufiji River Delta attract a healthy population of elephant,
and are packed full of grunting hippopotami and yawning crocodile
that lumber ominously into the water at the first sound of a boat.
The banks attract different sized herds of plains game depending
on the season, as herds disperse after the rains and then regroup
when the water sources concentrate and they are forced to venture
into the open to drink, so risking predator attacks with the protection
of the crowd.
Selous Scenery
The scenery is pleasantly varied,
with unusually green grasses and tangles of vegetation, and inspires
a film depleting string of photographic moments with each turn in
the path. The river routes are characterised by legions of tall
Borassus Palms along the banks that grow up to 25m tall, and leave
a tall headless totem when the water courses change direction and
they become too thirsty to survive.
The same demise is thought to explain
the spooky silhouettes of ancient leadwood trees that remain preserved
intact when they die after up to two millennia of life, leaving
a skeletal perch for songbirds and raptors.
The Selous conserves a surprisingly
colourful African landscape, and the white forms of the leadwoods
are in stark contrast to the surrounding vibrancy of well-watered
greens and a ranging palette of sandy terracottas that reflect the
moods of the sun on the waters.
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