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Rwanda's Wild Side: Gorilla Trekking Offers Luxury, Survival Tips & Pioneering Safaris

Published 3 weeks ago2 minute read
Precious Eseaye
Precious Eseaye
Rwanda's Wild Side: Gorilla Trekking Offers Luxury, Survival Tips & Pioneering Safaris

Gorilla trekking in the native habitats of Sub-Saharan Africa, specifically Rwanda and Uganda, offers a spellbinding spectacle that attracts approximately 50,000 visitors annually, a number that continues to rise despite steep permit costs. While silverback gorillas are often perceived as foreboding beasts, observations in their natural environment reveal them to be majestic yet gentle creatures, with juveniles displaying innocent curiosity and adults exuding a zen aura. Beyond the awe-inspiring experience of encountering these Earth's largest living primates, including chimpanzees and critically endangered golden monkeys, the surge in tourism presents a continual risk of over-tourism and often denies local communities and ecosystems the generated revenue.

Addressing this critical challenge, Praveen Moman, a native Ugandan, hotelier, and activist, founded Volcanoes Safaris in 2000 as the first international safari company to operate in Rwanda. Five years later, it became the only safari company to sign the United Nations Kinshasa Declaration on Saving the Great Apes. By 2009, Moman established a non-profit trust dedicated to conservation and enriching the livelihoods of surrounding villages. Volcanoes Safaris embodies the belief that responsible tourism can drive positive change. Their lodges, including the legendary Virunga Lodge and Kyambura Gorge Lodge, are built by local labor paid above-market rates, utilize locally sourced materials, and incorporate eco-friendly technologies like water recapture. Through the Volcanoes Safaris Partnership Trust, infrastructure in remote villages bordering conservation lands has been improved with water tanks, better roads, and solar energy sources, alongside rewilding wetlands and ensuring primate safety. The company's pioneering approach to five-star luxury gorilla trekking, exemplified by Virunga Lodge, has allowed it to develop an expert, exclusively local workforce. This model demonstrates that supporting communities and protecting wildlife can be achieved simultaneously, as evidenced by the increase in the isolated chimpanzee community at Kyambura Gorge from 15 to 33 since the lodge's opening in 2009. The latest addition, Kibale Lodge, reinforces this ethos by partnering with the Jane Goodall Institute for primate safety and the Rwenzori Sculpture Foundation to support local artisans, all while providing luxurious amenities such as plush king-size bedding, stone-ringed fireplaces, and butler service.

Another exemplary conservation and hospitality company, Wilderness, opened the Bisate Reserve in Rwanda, complementing its existing Bisate Lodge. The Bisate Reserve was developed to extend and enhance the positive impact of its predecessor, focusing on reforestation, restoration of natural habitat, employment, and community upliftment. The design emphasizes the

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