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Selous Game Reserve
Selous Game Reserve covers over 50,000
square kilometers, it is the largest game reserve in
Africa, There are over 51,200 elephant, 109,000 buffalo
and big herds of other large and small animals found
in Africa, most importantly, some wild dog the Selous
is another park with all this hyperbole which is desperately
unsold. Selous is one of those places that calls you
back, one of Africa's great parks for sure we also think
is one of the most subtle. Selous Game Reserve is the
place where people enjoy dosing off to the sound of
a fish eagle as much as they do chasing around the bush
in search of big game, the winding Rufiji River, sunset
over the Beho Beho mountains is what makes Selous a
special place, especially when you compare it with the
typical race around the Northern Parks of Tanzania.
Unlike most of the other major safari
parks of Tanzania, Selous is at low altitude. Being
near to the coast, this means that the climate of the
area is similar to that prevailing in coastal circuit,
which is to say that it is a typical tropical climate,
hot and humid all year round. In Selous there are over
789,000 major mammals, 40% of the total in Tanzania
and perhaps 9% of the total world Elephant population.
Most of these elephant spend their time
in the inaccessible swamps which occupy the majority
of the park, but there are usually plenty in the game-viewing
areas to the North as well as 2500 - 3500 lion, there
are also wildcat, servalcat, caracal and leopard, there
are also so many giraffe in some areas, additionally
the rivers play host to large populations of hippo and
crocodile, as well as an elusive population of dugong
down in the Rufiji delta
Selous Game Reserve was first set aside
as a wildlife reserve as early as 1905, the park takes
its name from renowned hunter and soldier Frederick
Courtney Selous. In 1982 the Selous Game Reserve was
designated a World Heritage Site. One of the most attractive
aspects of the Selous is the incredible diversity of
the environments within its ecosystem, miombo woodland
(deciduous hardwoodland), open grassland, rocky acacia
clad hills, palm woodland, seasonally flooded sand rivers
and swamps, lakes and riverine forest. The miombo woodland,
second in biodiversity only to the rainforest, contains
a plethora of wonderful hardwood tree families such
as brachystegia, julbernadia, isoberlina, pterocarpus
(bloodwood), dalbergia (blackwood), combretum (leadwood)
in fact most of the 2,149 species of trees and plants
that are found in the reserve .
It is at its absolute best in the 'green
season' (December to June); all the trees have new leaves
and flowers; all the grasses and shrubs are luscious
and in bloom, and consequently almost every flower,
animal and bird that it is possible to see in the Selous
is there in abundance as such the reserve is ecologically
one of the most important habitats in Africa,
The fact that Selous remains a game reserve
rather than a national park is one of the main reasons
that walking safari is still permitted. This is fantastic
news, because to approach animals on foot is a completely
different experience than doing it in a vehicle. A lot
more scary for one, but very rarely dangerous so long
as you do what your guide says at all times. Don't necessarily
expect to see a great variety of large game whilst out
on a walk, you usually don't cover enough ground for
that, but enjoy the detail of the flora and fauna, whilst
bearing in mind there might be a huge bull elephant
around the next corner. The park is pretty seasonal,
although as we always say, "there is no bad time
to be in the bush.
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