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Showing posts from November, 2023

Slices of adventure hail from the Eastern part of Uganda.

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  We have cautiously driven ourselves to contribute to sustainable travel experiences throughout 2023. From programs in Agriculture, Life on water and travel, young people are out their straining through the hustles of traditional societal expectations to increase household incomes in rural communities. This is not a smooth road for a young company, however narrowing down fellow like-minded groups of travelers has pushed us to continue hitting the road. On this morning, three ambitious gentlemen set out to tell stories from their previous travel adventures. Our hosts  Mulima Adventures  in the North-West of Mt Elgon had already set out the entire plan of the day. From a hike to the top of the world’s most “romantic falls”, abseiling with a team of professional guides and later immerse us into a community walk to an apiary project, set to increase farm returns for small holder farmers in Kapchorwa. If you are familiar with ‘We find love in the strangest places”, I stumbled o

Gorillas rule this part of the world.

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From where I come from, my home country Uganda. The East receives the beauty of the sun and then spreads it in abundancy to the North, South and finally meets the backs of long horned herds of cattle in the Western part of The pearl of Africa. The west is a natural habitat for a large percent of Uganda’s wildlife species. With rare, endangered, and almost extinct wildlife that can only be seen in the East African Savannah lands, tropical rain forests and wetlands of Uganda. The most iconic of these species are the endangered mountain Gorillas. Gorillas conquered impenetrable rain forests shared amongst three East African community countries; Uganda, Rwanda then crossed over to the Democratic Republic of Congo. Other Gorilla species of the world can be found in the extreme part of Equatorial Africa. But whenever you think about “Mountain Gorillas”, the conquered lands of East Africa await. Nationals in the three countries have continuously been recognized amongst the most welcoming

Will it be a Tilapia or Nile perch catch while canoeing on Lake Victoria?

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Once upon a time, 200 fresh water fish species feasted to the benefits of being birthed in Africa's largest fresh water Lake.   Today, fingerings and flies shy away from the eyes every time you walk towards the shores of Lake Victoria. When you reverse your movement backwards, they play spy and return closer to shallow parts of the shores. Native fish mongers can estimate how old one is from the height of each as they swim back into deeper parts of the Lake. Most landing and docking sites are busy with motorized small boats moving supplies and people from the mainland to distant Islands on this African Great Lake. However, when the shores are calm with less human activity, the juvenile creatures are drawn to the shores, maybe they know that at that stage they cannot be turned into human food.   Imagine a lake with over 30 million human dependents across Uganda, Kenya plus Tanzania. Aquatic and wildlife habitats not to mention tourist activities within the great lakes basin. All t