It’s a five-to-six-hour trip from Tanzania’s commercial city of Dar es Salaam, which is 230km and 300km away.
Visitors can access the park at Matemere Gate in Morogoro, or through Matembwe Gate in Kisaki, a small town with a variety of amenities. The Nyerere National Park is adjacent to many infrastructures and transportation services, and it is quickly becoming a popular stop on Tanzania safari tours.
You will be able to participate in the greatest range of Nyerere National Park Safari activities in the country, including water safaris and standard game drives, in this enormous area. There are also walking safaris and legendary fly camping adventures to enjoy here.
Visitors to the park can also see large herds of elephants attentively eyeing tourists and cars with great attention.
In the park, we saw wild dogs, antelope herds, elephants, lions, and impalas, all of which kept their distance from our car. The vast plains of Nyerere National Park are adorned with golden grass, savannah woods, riverine marshes, and lakes. With its brownish waters flowing into the Indian Ocean, Tanzania’s longest river, the Rufiji, runs through the park. River Rufiji adds to the park’s charm and is a must-see for honeymoon holidays in Tanzania.
Nyerere National Park Accommodation facilities include Serena Mivumo River Lodge, Selous Serena Camp, Mbuyu Safari Camp, BehoBeho Camp, Stiegler’s Gorge Camp, Rufiji River Camp and Sand Rivers. The sheer volume of game in the NyerereNational Park is just outstanding! You must add this place into your list of Tanzania Safari Tours destinations to enjoy the adventure and activities that the park provides.
The Rufiji River is Tanzania’s most crocodile-infested inland watercourse. Buffaloes, elephants, Thomson gazelles, and giraffes can all be found feeding in the same area.
According to park wardens, the park contains the highest number of hippos and buffaloes of any wildlife park in Africa, aside from elephants. Manze, Siwandu, Mzizimia, and Tagalala are some of the lakes in the park. The enormous Ruaha and Rufiji Rivers form a broad inland delta in the northeast. Hippos, crocodiles, and Carmine bee-eaters frequent the tangle of seasonal canals backed by grassy plains, dunes, steep banks, and borassus palm trees.