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Walking with animals in Tanzania

Head to a less visited corner of Tanzania for a safari with a difference

March 10, 2019 16:22
Giraffe with trees
5 min read

Striding softly into the pink dawn in a remote corner of Africa, we feel like the only people alive on a sleeping continent — but we are not alone. Up on a verge, just feet away, a young bull elephant is chomping on a bush, ears faintly flapping but thankfully more interested in breakfast than a handful of random humans.

“We just need to stay out of his personal space,” whispers our guide and host, armed with a rifle he has never had to use, as we tiptoe softly away across the red earth toward the river bed.

We are getting up close and personal with the animals in Ruaha National Park, one of Tanzania’s most remote reserves. The main event is a walking safari, which in a place so rich in wildlife means following in the footprints of zebra, big cats and hyenas as well as pachyderms.

We walk among baboons chattering crossly to each other — “They’re complaining about the leopards,” our guide reveals — and young impalas skipping across our path. Nearby, giraffes lollop lazily across our eyeline munching on acacia trees. Who knew the mothers form creches to keep their babies safe while they forage, or that the markings of each is as unique as a human fingerprint?

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