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Ngorongoro Crater Accommodation

Ngorongoro Serena Safari Lodge

The Ngorongoro Serena Safari Lodge is built into the rim of this dormant volcano – the plant and ivy-covered native stone blending masterfully with its surroundings.
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Ngorongoro Sopa Lodge

Spread out along the uppermost rim of the Ngorongoro World Heritage site, Ngorongoro Sopa Lodge offers breathtaking views of the crater floor far below.

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Ngorongoro Crater Lodge

perched on the edge of the ancient crater rim and is a return to the noble elegance of the travelling colonials.

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Ngorongoro Wildlife Lodge (Tahi)

Listed by UNESCO as a world heritage site, the incomparable Ngorongoro Crater is the world’s largest ‘caldera’. Dominated by cliffs standing some 600 metres high and presenting a sheer drop down to a wide open space of some 264 sq km, the crater is one of the most amazing sights of wildlife to be seen anywhere.

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Plantation Lodge

Plantation Lodge is surrounded by coffee plantations and the famous ‘Green hills of Africa’ that Hemingway found so inspiring. 1 hour’s drive from the Ngorongoro crater. Replete with charm and comfort the 16 rooms are situated in expansive, well-kept gardens.

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Ngorongoro Farm House

The Ngorongoro Farm House is a new feature on our Wilderness Walking Safari and Serengeti Luxury Camping Safari. Located in the Ngorongoro Highlands, the farm is only minutes from the Ngorongoro Crater entrance gate.

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Ngorongoro Crater Overview

The Ngorongoro Crater is a natural amphitheatre created about 2 million years ago when the cone of a volcano collapsed into itself, leaving a 100 square mile (259km˛) caldron-like cavity. This caldera, protected by a circular unbroken 2,000-foot high rim (610-metres), contains everything necessary for Africa's wildlife to exist and thrive.

Tanzania's oldest and most popular national park, the Serengeti is famed for its annual migration, when some six million hooves pound the open plains, as more than 200,000 zebra and 300,000 Thomson's gazelle join the wildebeest’s trek for fresh grazing. Yet even when the migration is quiet, the Serengeti offers arguably the most scintillating game-viewing in Africa: great herds of buffalo, smaller groups of elephant and giraffe, and thousands upon thousands of eland, topi, kongoni, impala and Grant’s gazelle.

Ngorongoro is on Tanzania's 'northern safari circuit', and receives a good number of visitors who stay in lodges around the crater. Game viewing vehicles descend the steep crater wall every morning and spend the day on grass plains that are teeming with animals. However, the dark of night belongs to the animals, and all vehicles must leave the crater floor well before sunset.

But there is more to Serengeti than large mammals. Gaudy agama lizards and rock hyraxes scuffle around the surfaces of the park’s isolated granite koppies. A full 100 varieties of dung beetle have been recorded, as have 500-plus bird species, ranging from the outsized ostrich and bizarre secretary bird of the open grassland, to the black eagles that soar effortlessly above the Lobo Hills.

Early man also flourished around here at Olduvai Gorge, not far from the Ngorongoro Crater. This is known because in 1960, Mary Leakey discovered a 1.75 million-year-old Homo habilis (nicknamed 'The Handyman' for his tool making skills), who represents man’s first step on the ladder of human evolution.

The Maasai are the current human inhabitants and are at liberty to live within the sprawling 2,500 square mile (6,480km˛) conservation area around the crater. The Maasai never cultivate land as they consider it demeaning. Instead they graze cattle, which hold a god-like status in Maasai culture, and in return the cows provide almost everything necessary to live; meat, skin, milk, dung for the walls and floor of their huts

Animals and Birds

The Crater is inhabited by about 30,000 animals, of which half are zebra and wildebeest. This is the perfect situation for predators and spotted hyenas and lions lord over this domain. There are also some leopards, cheetahs and three species of jackals. Tanzania's few remaining black rhino are regularly sighted in the crater, as are large herds of buffalo.

In the lake on the crater floor and in the Ngoitokitok swamps, reside plenty of hippos who remain partially submerged during the day and graze on grass at night. Although the area sustains a huge variety of species, not all live down in the crater. Some are better adapted to roaming the extensive conservation area surrounding the caldera.

Elephant herds are noticeably absent from the crater floor because the cows and calves tend to prefer the forested highlands. They sometimes appear at the crater rim but only rarely venture down into the grasslands. Only mature bull elephants roam the crater floor carrying around some massive tusks. Also absent from the crater are impala, topi and oryx who reside more on the eastern Serengeti plains, but Grant's and Thompson's gazelles appear in the crater in good numbers. Giraffes are also missing from the crater as they favour the umbrella acacia and wait-a-bit thorn trees found higher up. The salt-whitened shores of Lake Magadi are turned a pastel pink from thousands of flamingoes sifting algae and shrimps from this soda lake. The lake also attracts a myriad other water birds including avocets, plovers and black-winged stilts whose long beaks probe the soft mud.

Seasons

As the rim of the crater is 333 feet (2,235m) above sea level it is cooler at the top than down on the crater floor, where it can get extremely hot.
Rainy Season: Short rains are November and December when it gets hot and humid, and the long rains are from March to May.
Dry Season: typically it is dry from June to October and it can get quite cold during these months on the rim of the crater.

Ngorongoro Specialties

  • Plains teeming with grazing animals
  • Dark maned lions
  • Clans of spotted hyena
  • Black rhino

Facts

The Ngorongoro Conservation Area varies in altitude from 3,315-11,628 feet (1,020-3,578m) above sea level

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