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Gombe Stream National Park

The is a park or wildlife reserve

Gombe Stream National Park is a relatively small area (52km²) but an incredibly important wilderness which is particularly rich in primate species. It was given the status of National Park in 1968 mainly to protect the resident chimpanzee population.

Other primates found here include olive baboons, blue monkeys, red-tailed monkeys, red colobus monkeys and vervet monkeys. Dr Jane Goodall is the British scientist who began the study of the chimpanzees here in 1960 under the sponsorship of Louis Leakey, making this the longest running study of any wild animal population in the world. A visit to Gombe gives you a unique opportunity to get a view into the lives of our closest living animal relative in the wild.

Highlights

  • One of the best place to see chimpanzees.
  • Remote and little-visited.
  • Home of the unique scientific study of chimpanzees by Jane Goodall.
  • Beautiful lakeside setting.

Situation

Gombe Stream is a forest reserve set on the shores of Lake Tanganyika in the West of Tanzania.

Activities

Chimp tracking, Forest walks, Snorkelling

Health

This is a malarial area.

Best times to go

It is best to avoid the main rainy season (April and May).

Getting there

The best way to get to Gombe Stream is with a shared charter to Kigoma. These run five times a week. From Kigoma you then take a ferry to the park which is between 1-2 hours depending on the weather.

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