Mahale Mountains National Park
Mahale Mountains, like its
northerly neighbour Gombe Stream, is home to some of Africa’s
last remaining wild chimpanzees: a population of roughly 800,
habituated to human visitors by a Japanese research project
founded in the 1960s. Tracking the chimps of Mahale is a magical
experience. The guide's eyes pick out last night's nests -
shadowy clumps high in a gallery of trees crowding the sky.
Scraps of half-eaten fruit and fresh dung become valuable clues,
leading deeper into the forest. Butterflies flit in the dappled
sunlight.

Then suddenly you are in their midst: preening each other's
glossy coats in concentrated huddles, squabbling noisily, or
bounding into the trees to swing effortlessly between the vines.
The area is also known as Nkungwe, after the park's largest
mountain, held sacred by the local Tongwe people, and at 2,460
metres (8,069 ft) the highest of the six prominent points that
make up the Mahale Range.
And while chimpanzees are the star attraction, the slopes
support a diverse forest fauna, including readily observed
troops of red colobus, red-tailed and blue monkeys, and a
kaleidoscopic array of colourful forest birds.
You can trace the Tongwe people's ancient pilgrimage to the
mountain spirits, hiking through the montane rainforest belt –
home to an endemic race of Angola colobus monkey - to high
grassy ridges chequered with alpine bamboo. Then bathe in the
impossibly clear waters of the world’s longest, second-deepest
and least-polluted freshwater lake – harbouring an estimated
1,000 fish species - before returning as you came, by boat.