Tanzania
Morogoro Rural

Discover travel destinations of travelers writing a travel journal on FindPenguins.
Travelers at this place
    • Day 10

      Jours à Arusha

      January 16 in Tanzania ⋅ ☁️ 32 °C

      Après avoir annulé mon voyage au lac Natron, je suis restée quelques jours dans la ville touristique du Nord de la Tanzanie, Arusha. Je suis arrivée dans une auberge de jeunesse où j’étais la seule cliente, il y avait à ce moment-là une coupure d’électricité générale donc pendant deux jours je n’ai pas eu d’eau chaude (j’en avais déjà pas eu lors de mon dernier jour de safari et dans mon précédent hébergement) alors qu’à cause de la pluie diluvienne il faisait froid, et surtout pas pu recharger mes appareils électroniques donc je ne pouvais rien faire. La responsable de l’auberge m’a mise en contact avec quelqu’un qu’elle connaissait pour refaire un safari d’une journée vu que j’étais frustrée par ma précédente expérience. Je suis donc par la suite restée avec la famille de cette personne qu’elle connaissait, j’ai rencontré chez eux deux autres voyageurs solo, mais il y a eu énormément de pertes de temps inutiles. C’est malheureusement ça aussi l’Afrique, tout prend une éternité même pour des choses qui ne sont pas utiles.Read more

    • Day 26

      Mikumi Nationalpark - 2. Tag

      August 24, 2023 in Tanzania ⋅ ☀️ 22 °C

      Gestern habe ich mich spontan zu einem weiteren Tag im Nationalpark entschieden, um noch mehr Löwen oder Leoparden zu sehen. Bakiri, der Fahrer und Guide, versuchte es mit Löwengeräuschen von YouTube und einer Minibox und war davon überzeugt, dass die Löwen aus ihrem Versteck kommen. Das hat leider nicht geklappt, aber vier Löwen konnten wir zumindest aus der Distanz sehen. Mit den ganzen Baobab-Bäumen und Serengeti-ähnlichen Landschaft war ich auch ohne Leopard zufrieden.
      Dann ging es wieder zurück nach Dar es Salaam. Aus geplanten 4-5h wurden 7,5h bei „komfortablen“ Sitzen aufgrund eines Achsschadens und einer Zwangspause.
      Read more

    • Day 19

      Direction Morogoro

      January 25 in Tanzania ⋅ ☁️ 26 °C

      Direction Morogoro, au centre de la Tanzanie. Encore un bus tôt le matin, trajet de 9h au lieu de 4h… à l’approche de Morogoro les montagnes disparaissent d’un coup et laissent place à un énorme orage, il se met à pleuvoir des cordes, même dans le bus. Heureusement, une fois arrivée à la maison d’hôte franco-tanzanienne la vue s’est dégagée et j’ai pu profiter de la vue absolument magnifique.Read more

    • Day 24

      Wie in Mexiko?

      August 22, 2023 in Tanzania ⋅ ☀️ 30 °C

      Da nun erst einmal Warten angesagt war, ging es nochmal in einen Nationalpark. Bis dahin wurde erst hart der Preis verhandelt und ich saß sieben Stunden im Bus nach Mikumi. Kurz vor Morogoro sah die Landschaft mit den ganzen Agaven dann plötzlich aus wie in Mexiko.Read more

    • Day 85

      Traffic jam in the mountains

      July 30, 2023 in Tanzania ⋅ ⛅ 23 °C

      We were on the road early again, heading for Makumi National Park near Morogoro. The park was established in 1964 and is the fourth largest in Tanzania, with an area of 3,230 square kilometres.

      We were making good progress, but then we got stuck on a mountain road for the best part of a couple of hours! A lorry had overturned on the single-track road, and nothing could get past! When we eventually could move, the queue of trucks coming in the opposite direction stretched for miles!! They were definitely going to be stuck there all day.Read more

    • Day 86

      Driving to Dar-es-Salaam

      July 31, 2023 in Tanzania

      Today, we had an eight-hour drive to a campsite just outside Dar-es-Salaam. We would be camping in the grounds of a hotel, so Mark and I had already decided to upgrade. We needed to re-pack all our stuff ready to leave the truck for the last time tomorrow. We figured this would be easier in a hotel room, rather than in our tent.

      The drive was uneventful. We stopped for fuel at one point and there were a number of food stalls on the forecourt. Henry bought delicious chicken skewers for us all. I bought a freshly-cooked salted roti, which was incredibly tasty!
      Read more

    • Day 41

      Day 41: Going South (Mikumi)

      March 14, 2019 in Tanzania ⋅ ⛅ 27 °C

      So we have left the busy town of Dar es Salaam and spent the day in the truck to go further south and closer to our next country, Malawi 🇲🇼

      The traffic jam in Dar es Salaam was awful so the drive took a very long time. In the late afternoon we finally arrived at the next destination: Mikumi National Park. A beautiful lodge where everyone had their own little cottage.

      Like Serengeti, this national park as well as the lodge property are not fenced ... so guess what happened? Yes, I have been visited by four-legged creatures again. Two water buffalos having dinner right in front of my house 🐂.

      It’s probably just a coincidence. But I feel blessed that on this trip the wild animals always came very close to ME ... I love wild life and maybe this is just the law of attraction at its best 🤷🏼‍♀️🙏✨
      Read more

    • Day 84

      Selous Game Reserve 1

      July 23, 2016 in Tanzania ⋅ ☀️ 31 °C

      Ranking AAA (atemberaubend, aufregend, anstrengend)
      Natürlich hätten wir auch in einem Buschflugzeug das Selous Game Reserve bequem anfliegen können, aber dies entspräche nicht unserem Reisestil. Zu einer abenteuerlichen Safari gehört die holprige Anreise per Jeep einfach dazu, um nach sechs Stunden Anreise wie James Bonds Martini "gut geschüttelt" in seiner Safari-Lodge anzukommen und mit einem kühlen Bier seine trockene, staubige Kehle zu kühlen. Mag gut sein, dass wir in zehn Jahren ganz anders darüber denken...;-) Nach den tollen Tierbegegnungen im Ruaha Nationalpark waren die Erwartungen gemischt. War eine Steigerung noch möglich oder würden wir nur noch gelangweilt von einer Giraffe zu nächsten fahren? Wir erlebten dann aber tolle Flusslandschaften mit grossen Herden verschiedenster Tiere, welche ihren Durst gefährlich nahe an gefrässigen Krokodilen stillten.Read more

    • Day 83

      Morogoro

      July 22, 2016 in Tanzania ⋅ ⛅ 24 °C

      Den Strassenvekehr in Tansania würden wir nicht als "mörderisch" bezeichnen, so wie es in unserem Reiseführer beschrieben wird und uns vor Reiseantritt recht Angst eingeflösst hat. Dennoch haben bereits mehrere frisch verunfallte Lastwagen gesehen. Einer "klebte" gestern in den Bergen an einer Felswand, einen weiteren sahen wir heute seitlich gekippt im Strassengraben liegen. Vielleicht wurden die Fahrer ja durch die herrliche Landschaft abgelenkt? Weite Steppen wechseln sich mit hohe Bergen ab und die in Malawi eher spärlich vorhandenen, bis mehrere tausend Jahre alten, dickbauchigen Baobab Bäume kommen hier in dichten Wäldern vor. Die Strecke zwischen Iringa und Morogoro führt durch den Mikumi Nationalpark, sodass wir aus dem Busfenster diverse Tiere wie Zebras, Giraffen, Warzenschweine etc. sichteten. Grandios dieses Land! Den Fotoapperat haben wir dennoch in der Tasche gelassen.Read more

    • Day 34

      Bush camp 1 to Bush camp 2, Tanzania

      December 28, 2019 in Tanzania ⋅ 🌧 21 °C

      I got up at 4.30am for another very early start and packed up my tent which was painful as the urchin spine in my ankle continued to give me regular spasms of pain when I moved. We had a quick breakfast and boarded the truck for the long drive to our next bush camp. The pink and orange brightening sky heralded the arrival of the hot African sun. We quickly passed into Mikumi national park where the main road goes right through with differing fines if wild animals are knocked down, up to $15000 for knocking down an elephant or giraffe. It was an absolutely beautiful park with lush grasses and all kinds of different trees filling the landscape. We also saw lots of animals with many giraffe near the roadside. We saw wildebeest, kudu, zebra, eland, impala, gazelle and a jackal. We even saw some large elephants amongst the trees in the distance. It was lovely to see wild animals again and I reflected how these animals once roamed all over Africa and are now much more contained in the parklands as the human population grows ever larger. After buying some capattis by the roadside to add to our meagre breakfast we ventured up into a mountain range under darkening skies. There was a large orange muddy river running through the mountain range which we followed for many miles. It reminded me more of Amazon rivers with trees thickly covering the steep sides of the mountains. As we descended the other side of the mountain the valley sides began to be populated with baobab trees, the famous 'upside down' tree with a very thick base to hold water during the dry season with thinner, bulbous branches. As the mountain range gave way to an open, wide plain and the baobab trees grew larger, the land was more cultivated and populated with humble, mud brick dwellings. At the end of the plain, we entered an area of unusual geology where all the hills seemed composed of large rounded boulders which protruded from the landscape - this geology continued for mile after mile, through villages and along a boulder strewn muddy river. I was so tired from the early starts to our journeys that I managed to put my head back and fall asleep on the truck for the first time of the entire trip - it was only for five minutes but it felt like some kind of achievement that I hoped to be able to repeat in the future. We ploughed on towards our destination through stormy clouds and some rain. Often, the driver, was pulled over three times by the police for no good reason and was expected to pay a bribe before being allowed to carry on - corruption is a serious issue with the road police in Tanzania and the company even have to budget for this. We passed through quite a heavily farmed area with huge flat plains leading beyond, all the way to distant mountains. We then entered a national park of volcanoes and wilder tree scapes which is where we left the road and wild camped in the bush. It was a lovely spot among the trees with hills and mountains all around us. We all had a pasta meal with less insects this time and retired early to our tents as it started to rain. As I tried to settle down to sleep having managed to turn my ankle in a way that sent shooting pains from the embedded urchin spines like razor blades down my feet, the rain began to fall very heavily and lightning filled the tent with white light. There followed an elemental thunderstorm with great lightning flashes followed by earth shaking thunder that rolled around the surrounding mountains like an echo chamber for the gods. Some of the strikes came very close to our campsite with one great, air splitting crack falling simultaneously with an intense flash that must have hit very nearby. I lay listening and watching my tent light up with that mixture of exhilaration and trepidation I always get with thunderstorms but with the extra frisson of feeling exposed and vulnerable in a tent with a metal frame. My tent coped very well with the intense rainfall that came with the storm, and as the rain abated I was able to fall asleep in the cooled, wet night air.Read more

    You might also know this place by the following names:

    Morogoro Rural

    Join us:

    FindPenguins for iOSFindPenguins for Android