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Acacia savanna park · Uganda

Lake Mburo National Park

A small, accessible acacia park of zebra and antelope — and the rare chance to walk among the game.
Getting there
~3–4 hr drive from Kampala/Entebbe, on the road to the southwest
Best for
Zebra, eland and antelope, walking and boat safaris, an easy stopover
The land
Acacia savanna, wetland and small lakes in the southwest
Good to know
Small and convenient — a natural break on the way to the gorillas
What it is
Lake Mburo is the small, friendly park on the gorilla road — and one of the few where you can safari on foot.
Compact and easily reached, Lake Mburo sits conveniently on the long road between Kampala and the southwestern gorilla parks, which makes it a natural and rewarding stopover. Its acacia savanna, wetlands and lakes hold large herds of zebra, impala, eland and topi, plus buffalo, hippo and a rich bird list — and, historically lacking elephant and lion, it is one of the few Ugandan parks where you can safely explore on foot, on horseback or by boat as well as by vehicle. It is gentle, scenic and a fine introduction or interlude.
PhotoZebra and impala grazing acacia savanna at Lake Mburo.
The reason to come

Safari on foot

With no resident lions or elephants for most of its history, Lake Mburo allows walking, horseback and boat safaris that bigger parks cannot — the rare chance to be on the ground among zebra, eland and antelope, reading tracks and birds at walking pace. It is a different, more intimate kind of safari.

The zebra and antelope

Big herds of zebra, impala, eland and topi on the acacia plains — the park's signature game.

Walking and horseback

On-foot and horseback safaris among the plains game — unusual in Uganda and genuinely special.

The boat

A launch trip on Lake Mburo for hippo, crocodile and waterbirds — the wetland side of the park.

Worth knowing

Lake Mburo is small and lacks the big-cat drama of the larger parks — its appeal is accessibility, the plains game and the walking and boat safaris that make it more hands-on.

Small and hands-on

Why the stopover earns its place.

Lake Mburo is easy to dismiss as just a break on the long drive southwest — but the walking, horseback and boat safaris make it more involving than many bigger parks. It is the place to get out of the vehicle and onto the ground, a welcome change of pace on a gorilla-focused trip.
PhotoA boat trip among hippos on Lake Mburo.
When to come — honestly

Best when it's dry.

June – September
Best
The long dry season — game concentrates near water, tracks are good and walking is comfortable. Prime months.
December – February
Best
The short dry season, again strong for game and easy for walking and the boat, warm and dry.
March – May & October – November
Good
The green seasons — lush and good for birding, quieter, with some heavier rain and softer ground.
Lake Mburo's game and walking are at their best in the dry seasons, when animals gather near the wetlands. The green seasons are lush and excellent for birds, with muddier tracks. The boat runs year-round.
Cattle country

Wildlife among the Ankole

Lake Mburo lies in the heart of Ankole cattle country, and the park has long shared — and sometimes contested — its land and water with the famous long-horned Ankole herds and the pastoralists who keep them. The boundary between park and ranch is a lived reality here.

Its history includes being de-gazetted and restored, and its lack of elephants and lions for much of that time is partly why walking safaris developed — though wildlife dynamics here continue to shift.

We use Lake Mburo as the hands-on stopover it is — the walking, horseback and boat safaris — breaking the long drive to the gorillas with something more active.

Beyond the obvious

Three ways to read Lake Mburo.

PhotoWalking safari

Walking safari

On-foot among the zebra and antelope — a rare Ugandan chance to safari on the ground.

PhotoHorseback safari

Horseback safari

Riding out among the plains game for a different vantage entirely.

PhotoThe boat

The boat

A launch trip for hippo, crocodile and waterbirds on the lake.

Why Wild Voyager

We plan Uganda around the permits.

Gorilla and chimp permits are issued in small daily numbers and sell out months ahead — the scarce thing that makes or breaks a Uganda trip. In Lake Mburo National Park that means using the walking, horseback and boat safaris to make the gorilla-road stopover genuinely worthwhile.

We hold your permits, not a middleman

We secure the gorilla, chimp and park permits directly and early — the scarce thing everything else hangs on — so your trek is locked in, not left to chance.

We base you in the right place

Lake Mburo is compact and sits right on the southwestern route, so it slots in cleanly. We base you by the lake and use the walking, horseback and boat options to make the stop count rather than just a bed for the night.

We guide for wildlife, not a checklist

Our guides and the park rangers work the forest and the plains for real encounters — they would rather earn you one great sighting than rush a list.

Journeys

Trips through Lake Mburo National Park

Wildlife you may see
Elephants Lion Primates

Break the gorilla road
with a walking safari.

Lake Mburo turns the long drive southwest into a hands-on stop — zebra, antelope and safari on foot. We slot it into the route to the gorillas.

Plan a Uganda trip

Field notes, now and then.

Where to go · When to go · Wildlife in season

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