Rwanda is small, green and steep — a thousand hills folded into a country you can cross in a day — and it has become one of the most rewarding and accessible wildlife destinations in Africa.
Its headline is the mountain gorilla. In Volcanoes National Park, on the Rwandan flank of the Virunga volcanoes, you track gorilla families on foot through bamboo and montane forest — the same forests where Dian Fossey worked. The permits are premium-priced and strictly limited, which keeps numbers low and the experience uncrowded. Golden monkeys share the same slopes.
Beyond the volcanoes, Nyungwe is one of Africa’s oldest montane rainforests, with chimpanzees, huge troops of colobus monkeys, a canopy walkway and a long list of Albertine Rift birds. Akagera, in the east, is the savanna counterpoint — lion and black rhino reintroduced, the Big Five restored, in one of the continent’s great conservation turnarounds. Lake Kivu, on the Rift, is where a trip slows down.
Rwanda is the easy, polished way into gorilla country: short transfers, good roads, a safe and clean capital, and a high-end positioning that the gorilla permit price reinforces. It is also a real conservation success story, which is part of what you are supporting by going.
As in Uganda, the permits are the constraint. We plan around them first, then build the route — volcanoes, forest, savanna and lake — to match.
Private, tailor-made journeys across Rwanda, designed around you and timed around the wildlife.
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