Mikumi National Park
Forming the northern border of Africa’s biggest game reserve the vast Selous – Mikumi is one of the most popular of Tanzania’s national parks, the most accessible part of a 75,000 square kilometre (about 47,000 square miles) wilderness that stretches almost to the shores of the Indian Ocean. The main feature of the park is the Mikumi flood plain, along with the mountain ranges that border the park on two sides. Open grasslands dominate in the flood plain, eventually merging with the miombo woodland covering the lower hills.
Here, lions survey their kingdom, sometimes from a perch high in the trees to keep their feet dry when the rains soak the plain’s sticky black soil. Many other animals retreat to the miombo woodlands in the wet season, where observation towers above the treeline offer panoramic views of the plain laid out below, home to formidable herds of buffalo. Mikumi’s elephants are more compact than the rest of their Tanzanian cousins, but still a lot bigger than any Land Rover. The rains swell the park’s bird population to more than 300 species as Eurasian migrants seek refuge in Mikumi, joining resident stars like the lilac breasted roller.
The park’s road network provide visitors with a variety of easy game drives. Hippo inhabit pool 5 km north of the main entrance and zebra, giraffe, hartebeest and wildebeest abound.
Size
3230 sq km (about 2000 sq miles) for Mikumi park, but it forms a part of the Selous ecosystem, the world’s largest game reserve
Getting there
By Private Safari Vehicle, Udzungwa, Ruaha or (dry season only by road from ) Selous; charter flight from Dar es Salaam, Arusha or Selous.
What to do
Combine with a visit to nearby Udzungwa, the Selous Game Reserve or continue on the Ruaha, Walking, Game Viewing.
Accommodation
Two lodges
One luxury tented camp with plans for a second
3 camp sites
Guest houses in Mikumi town on the park border