Tarangire National Park 1

During recent school holidays, we took the kids on surprise trips. The boys with Mr Mechanic, the girls with me. We didn’t tell them where we were going and we packed their bags for them, so they really had no clue about their adventures!

I took the girls to Tarangire National Park for a 3 day, 2 night safari.
I wish we could have gone for longer, but I had some serious ‘Mom Guilt’, about leaving the baby at home with Mr Mechanic (an experienced and capable father). Mom Guilt does not accept reason or logic, it just makes you feel bad.
The girls and I had an amazing time and made lasting memories (and the baby was fine) so Mom Guilt can just shut up.

day 1

Our driver met us around 10 am at our home in Karatu.
While most safaris leave early (anywhere from 5 am -7 am), I hate hectic mornings and asked for a late departure.
Also, our home in Karatu is closer to Tarangire than Arusha, so we didn’t have a long drive to reach the park.

After about thirty minutes on the road I told the girls where we were going:
There were squeals.
Cheers.
Jumping up and down in the seats.
Basically, all the noises elated 6-9 year olds make, times three.

We arrived at the park and had an early lunch at the picnic site and mostly avoided the annoying monkeys… but my 6 year old kept offering them her sandwich…then we washed up and headed on our first game drive.

Tarangire National Park is known for giant baobab trees and elephants. The constant water source from the Tarangire River means that during dry season, many animals move here for sufficient water.
On our first day we saw lots of waterbuck, gazelles, zebra, giraffe and of course, elephants. Also, smaller creatures like mongoose, warthogs, guinea fowl and a host of spectacular birds.

favorite animals of the day

I absolutely adore giraffe – they are majestic and elegant. And elephants? How can you not catch your breath and have respect in the presence of an elephant?
Sungura (my 10 yr old) loved the white-ringed waterbuck, with their long horns and distinctive ring around their backside. She pointed them out every time we saw one getting a drink or wandering through the trees.

My 7 yr old’s favorite animal was the giraffe, at first she got so excited every time she saw them she nearly scared them away, but towards the end of the day she was calm enough to take some photos (50 + blurry images !) of the long-necks with my camera.

My littlest appreciates the humble warthog: she went into giggles every time she saw one running through the grass, its tail erect.

There was never a dull moment and my girls were very focused with their binoculars. They asked lots of questions from our guide and were interested in learning about all the animals in the park.

We all enjoyed the drive, but my little one started dozing off around 4 pm and the 7 yr old wanted to get out of the vehicle already and stretch her legs.
We agreed our day was finished and headed to our lodge.

As we headed out, we passed an area with many tse tse flies, which were very annoying and kept biting us.
It is nature, after all and we have to accept the wild, even the insect aspects, along with the beauty.
**Not to worry! Flies in this location do not carry dengue fever.**

Our accommodations were a surprise, even for me. Mr Mechanic said he arranged for us to stay ‘in some tents’. He failed to specify it was a fabulous tented lodge!
We spent two nights at Sangaiwe Tented Lodge, just outside of Sangaiwe Gate, one of the entrances/exits to Tarangire National Park. Meaning that we didn’t have far to go to reach our lodging, or to get back to the park the next morning.

The lodge is beautiful and has an incredible view. We stayed in a family tent with 2 single beds and a queen size bed, a walk-in shower and wide front porch.

I had asked that we stay at a place with a swimming pool, and boy did Mr Mechanic deliver! It was a cute, very clean pool, and shallow – perfect for our girls who are still learning to swim.
After hours driving through Tarangire National Park, it was refreshing to splash in the pool before evening set in.

Dinner was served from 7 pm, which gave us time to shower and dress up, then catch a lovely sunset.
The meal was fabulous and we completely stuffed ourselves.
We were led back to our tent by lantern light (so romantic!) and settled into our comfortable beds laden with too many pillows for the night.
We were very cozy under our big duvets, in our poster-beds, draped with netting. I nearly forgot I was in a tent!

By all accounts, it was a wonderful first day of safari.

Read about Day 2

essentials for your first visit

It’s your first trip to Tanzania and you have only 12 days. It seemed a very long time when you were requesting the vacation days from work, but now seems much too short to visit the Serengeti, see Ngorongoro Crater, hike to the top of a mountain, attend a beach party and tour Stonetown, Zanzibar.

It’s okay. Tanzania is a big, adventure-filled country and 2 weeks just doesn’t do it justice. Accept it and plan to return again (and again).

For whatever length of time you are here on your first visit, this is a list of essential things all travelers to Tanzania should experience. If you can accomplish these 5 things, then consider it a good visit:

Learn a Little Swahili

Eat Ugali

Drink Tea/Coffee

See a Sunrise/Sunset

Enjoy Unique Tanzania

Learn a Little Swahili

Knowing how to greet someone in their own language is always appreciated. Even if you’re only touring a few days make your host/driver/guide/etc very happy by learning to say “Jambo!” or even better “Shikamoo”.

Jambo ———————-Hello

Shikamoo —————-Respectful greeting for someone older than yourself

Asante ———————-Thank you

Kwa Heri —————–Good Bye

Choo (Ch-oh) ————-Toilet

Maji —————-Water

Eat Ugali

Ugali is a traditional food of Tanzania. While every tribe within Tanzania has their own cultural food, ugali is a dish for all Tanzanians.
Ugali is considered a ‘porridge’, or a boiled grain, so think of it as similar to oatmeal or polenta. On its own it has very little flavor, and is more of a carbohydrate to soak up a sauce or stew.
Check out this post to learn more about ugali.

There are a few Tanzanian dishes that pair really well with ugali and I couldn’t imagine eating them without it:

  • Kiti Moto. This is roasted pork, not often available at your hotel. You might need to ask your guide to take you to a specific roast pork joint to try it, but believe me, it will be worth it! Imagine thick-cut, roasted salty pork chunks with a peppery sauce. The texture and taste of ugali pairs perfectly.
  • Nyama Choma. Tanzanian-style barbecue, again with salt and hot peppers to spice it up. Ugali matches perfectly with the hearty goat meat or ginger-garlic rubbed beef. Again, ask a local for the best nyama choma place in town and wander away from the hotel.
  • Steamed fish. You will need a friend (or two) to help you finish a whole foil-wrapped fish, and the ugali will be helpful to sop up the delicious sauce. If you are visiting the Tanzanian coast, make that a fish in coconut sauce and lick your fingers.

Drink Coffee and Tea

Both. Try Both.
That’s not coffee or tea, that’s very deliberately coffee and tea.
If you don’t have a chance to visit a coffee plantation and see the process from beans-to-brew ending with a freshly roasted, ground and brewed-to-perfection cup of coffee, then I’m sorry – you’re missing out on a great experience!
The next best thing is to have a cup at just about any cafe. Nothing that’s been shipped across the ocean and stored for 1+ months can even come close to the taste.
And if you’re in Zanzibar – make that a Zanzibar coffee. If you thought ginger, cloves and cardamom were not a spice mixture for coffee, you’re in for a pleasant surprise.
Even if you’re not regularly a coffee drinker, since you are in a beautiful country that grows their own beans, try a cup just for fun.
See my favorite coffee spots in Arusha here.

And if you DO have time for that coffee tour, try one of these places:
Arusha Coffee Lodge
Kahawa Fair Trade Coffee

I wasn’t much of a hot tea drinker before Tanzania. This American woman liked her too-sweet iced tea. But Tanzania has turned me into a (hot) tea drinker.
Think beyond the basic tea bag – they flavor it up here.
Try some freshly brewed cinnamon tea on a chilly morning.
Or a tea flavored with natural lemongrass (I prefer mine with some milk).
Maybe a soul-warming masala tea (again with the milk).
Or lemon and local honey.
Mr Mechanic likes ginger tea to wake him up in the morning, and I have never regretted adding fresh cardamom pods to my tea.
This is definitely not the limit to tea – there are plenty more options! Just try some tea while you’re in Tanzania.

See a Sunrise / Sunset

I promise you, the early hour will be worth it. Force yourself out of that warm bed and watch the sunrise.
Your future self will thank you for waking up early to grab these incredible shots, perhaps with Mount Kilimanjaro in the distance, or the back-lit acacia trees of the Serengeti. Wherever you are, the landscape at sunrise is just *that* much more fantastic.
But if your’e in Zanzibar, make those sunset pics. You need photographs of the sun sinking into the ocean, reflecting against the waves.
Perhaps from a rooftop in Stonetown with a sundowner in your hand? …hey, it’s your vacation, I’m just giving suggestions…

Don’t forget to set aside your camera for a minute or two and savor the beauty without looking through a lens. Bask in the moment, whether sunrise or sunset, and smile that you’re in Tanzania watching the sun start or close another day.

Enjoy Unique Tanzania

comparison is the thief of joy

Theodore Roosevelt

Comparing Tanzania to another African, or even East African country is setting you up for disappointment in some aspect. Appreciate Tanzania for what it is. Don’t compare it against Kenya or Zimbabwe or another country. Tanzania has its flaws, areas for improvement (Roads? Highways? I thoroughly agree!). But if you compare Tanzania against other travels, previous trips or neighboring countries, you will rob yourself of this present experience.

Eat some fresh pineapple, have a local Tanzanian beer and consider some of the stand-out things that are unique to Tanzania:
– Kilimanjaro, the highest mountain in Africa
– The active volcano Ol Donyo Lengai, you can summit and check out that live lava (it last erupted 2013)
– Zanzibar:
—-with sea turtles and 100+ yrs old tortoises
—-Kizimkazi where you can swim with dolphins in the wild
—-Jozani Forest for the unique Red Colobus Monkey
—-Stonetown, crawling with history at every corner
– Tanzanite, the gem found only in Tanzania and that is 1,000 times more rare than diamonds
– The endangered Black Rhino
– Annual Serengeti Migration (which, you can watch aerially from a hot air balloon)
– Local Kikoy, Kitenge, Batik, and Khanga materials for your crafting and fashion pleasure
– More varieties of banana than you ever knew existed, including red bananas
Lake Tanganika, the second largest and deepest fresh water lake in the world
Gombe National Park, where you can learn about primates just like Jane Goodall (and it is not accessible by road, you have to reach it by boat)
Udzunga Mountains National Park that has no roads and must be hiked through, with unique species of monkey found only in the park and an estimated 25% of all plants that are endemic, as well

And that’s just to name a few of Tanzania’s features.

Embrace Tanzania for all that it is and enjoy your experience to the fullest!