Experiential Tourism at Queen Elizabeth National Park

Experiential Tourism at Queen Elizabeth National Park

Experiential Tourism at Queen Elizabeth National Park, Queen Elizabeth National Park beyond adventures adds experiential tourism to its menu. The experiential adventures are available for guests wishing to encounter some of the species and comprehend more about them. This kind of adventure experience slated for lions, Leopard, and mongoose, and only done at Queen Elizabeth National Park.

Experiential tourism a non-profit exercise dedicated to the research, conservation, and monitoring of lions, which is immensely lessening. Aimed at anticipating a study on how the cumulating pressure on the predator’s inhabitants doesn’t affect their existence. Here, visitors actively participate in monitoring some of the animals in the wilderness.

Experiential tourism comes with the use of more advanced technology (locator devices) to find these mammals without fail. Visitors able to work with researchers to learn about the group’s habituation calls, dynamics, behaviors, composition, and monial Tourism started in 2016. The experiential activity cuts across tracking lions and mongoose, hippo censuses, and bird counting. Below, we deeply explain each of the experiences

Lion Tracking Experiential

The lion tracking experience is a guaranteed lion encounter; it’s where visitors spend much of their time studying the creatures. Lion tracking at Queen Elizabeth is spearheaded by the Uganda Carnivore Program (UCP). The program assigns researchers to lead the tracking encounters. Lion Experiential tracking activities  apply to both leopards and lions and only done at Queen Elizabeth National Park.

Researchers from UCP, together with a team from the Uganda Wildlife Authority, joined a group of interested guests using UWA safari vehicles. The number of trackers  limited because the adventure continues with a drive-of-track. The lion tracking experience is more of a study tour, trackers spend much of the time following a troop and studying their behaviors and lifestyle. Predator experiential in Queen Elizabeth National Park cost USD220 for foreign trackers.

Furthermore, Lion tracking is available at the leopard village. The village is one of the communities in Queen Elizabeth Park where “UCP” operates experiential tourism. Here, trackers can get an in-depth understanding of how locals coexist with wildlife.

So, while seated with researchers in their vehicles, using locator devices on some lions, you will drive on and off track until you encounter a pride. The tracking is done once a day and can take about one to three hours. Along the way, the number of lions can grow as multiple lions join the initial group.  However, Kasenyi the norhern sector is the main lion tracking sector at Queen Elizabeth National Park.

Mongoose Tracking

The tracking is done around the Mweya Peninsula, whose section supports about 400 banded mongoose. The banded mongoose tracking and research program is managed by the universities of Cambridge, Exeter, and Zurich. The tracking entirely involves exploring the banded mongooses, their habits, and tracking photos.

The banded mongoose are small mammals with gigantic appetites and complex social and communication systems that enthrall guests. On the on-foot walk adventure, a limited group of four trackers joins a team of experienced guides and researchers. Mongoose tracking is entirely a learning space about the creatures, their communal behaviors, and everything concerning them.

As guests are enjoying the thrilling experience, they are making a valuable contribution to a longstanding research project, as the data collected will be used by the researchers at the Banded Mongoose Research Project. This supports the ongoing research and conservation at Mweya. Sessions last between 1-3 hours, and tracking is possible at 7 a.m. or 5 p.m.; however, morning sessions tend to be more active and are more likely to last longer.

Hippo Census

The hippo census is perfectly done in the morning, starting at 8:00 a.m. Hippos spend long nights feeding, and at 8:00 am, they rush back to the water as the sun becomes hot. For the Hippo census, you need a pair of binoculars, a data recorder, a good camera, etc. This is largely an exceptional experience involving you counting hippos in the water bodies of Queen Elizabeth National Park, Kazinga Channel, Kyasanduka Crater Lake, Lake Edward, and Lake George.

 

 

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