Thursday, May 26, 2016



The things to do in Tanzania are very similar to those in Kenya with a special twist.  The Lion King made the Serengeti National Park famous and it also happens to be one of the best places where you can find an African Safari.  What you can find in Tanzania that you can’t find anywhere else in Eastern Africa is the beauty of Zanzibar.

You can find unspoiled beaches along the mainland and even find incredible diving opportunities on the island of Zanzibar.  Many people also don’t know that you can find two of the oldest stone age sites in the world right in Tanzania.

I was able to explore the entire country while living overseas in Kenya & Ethiopia and have great information inside my travel guides section .  Here are the best things to do in Tanzania:


Entrance to Maasai Mara National Reserve
African Safari

There are only two places in the world where you can witness the unique great migration of wildebeests, Kenya & Tanzania.  Tanzania is one of the countries that is known for wildlife and being able to see “The Big 5” while on safari.  Definitely a must do in Tanzania.

National Parks

There are tons of parks in the country to visit.  I was riding a bicycle in a park near the city of Arusha and as I was riding there wild buffaloes and elephants just walking around me.  After you go on an official safari in the Sserengeti definitely check out the other national parks.


Blowing bubbles while scuba diving
Zanzibar & Scuba Diving

The tourist attractions in Tanzania usually start with a safari and end with Zanzibar.  There aren’t too many places in the world like this island just off the coast where you can find incredible diving opportunities and Africa’s version of the Caribbean.  Look for the historic area called Stone Town for those of you that want a little history.

Beaches

Aside from Zanzibar, Tanzania has great unspoiled beaches on its mainland to explore.  Many of the beaches haven’t been explored by many tourists either.

Trekking Mt Kilimanjaro

When visiting Eastern Africa most tourists go on an African Safari which is almost always followed by a trek to the highest mountain in Africa.  Most people say this isn’t a hard trek but watch your toes, a high percentage of people come back with a broken toe!

Volunteering in Tanzania

Tanzania is still a developing country that has many volunteering opportunities.  I wasn’t able to get any volunteering opportunities in the country but I was able to get involved in Kenya.  There are plenty of programs to learn about, stay updated by checking out my travel tips as I will be updating the site with detailed info about how to get started.  I share a lot about giving back on this travel blog so I always try to share different ways that people can do that.


Stone Age Site in Tanzania
Stone Age Sites

I like to visit places that most people don’t travel to, if I were to tell you that there are stone age sites in Tanzania that are up to 30,000 years old no one would believe me.  Most people think that Africa is only about seeing animals and Tanzania surely breaks that mold by having two of these sites available.

Lake Victoria

The gorgeous region of Lake Victoria is not only accessible via Uganda.  Lake Victoria is the largest lake in Africa and the 2nd freshwater lake in the world.  It hold s unique ecosystem where many different types of animals can be seen and you can even swim and have a relaxing weekend here as well.

Ngorongoro Crater

The crater is the largest intact volcanic caldera in the world and happens to be the home of the highest density of large game in Africa.  You can find “The Big 5” and is one of the best places in Tanzania to go on safari.

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Wednesday, May 25, 2016





Posted May 19, 2012 by Aviation, Tourism and Conservation news MWANZA THE (ALMOST) UNDISCOVERED CITY ON LAKE VICTORIA


(Mwanza, Tanzanias Lake Victoria lake side city / source: ExoticExpeditionsTanzania.com)
Even for East Africans, Mwanza has an exotic ring to its name and more often than not, geography classes at school notwithstanding, some would place Tanzanias lake side city somewhere else, on Lake Tanganyika perhaps or not even inside Tanzania. Thankfully, the pilots of the airlines flying there know their bearings and they safely deliver their passengers to the Tanzanian shores of Lake Victoria and to a city which is now a growing springboard for tourists too, intent to explore the lake islands and even the famous Serengeti, only two hours drive away.
But first things first. Mwanza was founded in 1892 and this year celebrates its 120th anniversary, no mean achievement for a city in East Africa, when Nairobi was only founded in 1899, i.e. 7 years later. With a total population, again unbeknown to many, of over 2 million inhabitants, this makes it Tanzanias second city after Dar es Salaam, not the political capital Dodoma, or the East African safari capital Arusha, but Mwanza claiming that honour.

(Mwanzas city centre and suburbs)
Main economic activities are, no surprise here, the fishing and processing industry Eastern and Central Africas largest fish market, Kirumba is found in the city and of course the mainstay of it all due to the good soils and favourable climate agriculture, but mining has become an important factor in the wider region around Mwanza, where with the airport a key link to the outside world exists. Mwanza is also a major transport transit point for the railway, connecting the Indian Ocean port of Dar es Salaam via Mwanza by rail ferry to Port Bell outside Kampala, which brings employment and money into the community. And finally tourism, at last, seems to be catching up too after the lake zone complained about not getting a fair share of attention by the countrys tourism marketers, inspite of some world class attractions within hours of landing in Mwanza.
It is the latter we shall focus on, leaving descriptions and explanations of the other economic mainstream activities to the business journals while letting our imagination roam across the lake to the various islands and as far as the Serengeti National Park, less than two hours drive from the city.
A sight closely associated with Mwanza if not a feature of the city, off shore in the lake are found the so called Bismarck Rocks, named after the most famous German Chancellor in the days prior to the World Wars, who served his Kaiser at a time when the notorious Berlin Conference, which divided Africa and Africans into colonial possessions, created boundaries over which modern African countries today still are in dispute. And there goes some pre-independence history. 100 years ago Tanganyika, as the mainland then was called, indeed was colony of Imperial Germany, only ceded to the British after the German navy was decisively engaged and destroyed at both the Rufiji River delta with the Koenigsberg and on Lake Tanganyika with the Graf von Goetzen, history lessons sure to re-emerge again in future articles about Tanzania and neighbouring Kenya.

(Bismarck rocks, a major feature off the Mwanza shoreline)
But these rock formations are not just found off shore but also scattered around on land, huge boulders of rocks, a sight incidentally also found in the Serengeti where these rock outcrops, which look as if they have just escaped the earth, are called Kopjes. Much myth and much history are attributed to some of those rocks by the African tribes which lived on the lake shores for time immemorial, since this part of Eastern Africa was long proven to be the cradle of mankind from which modern man evolved.

(A view across Mwanza municipality from the surrounding hills)
Some of them seem precariously shaky, as if put together by children of giants playing as with pebbles, and are much photographed of course as evidence that truly one has been to Mwanza. Local guides will be happy to take visitors to such locations, proud to show them around, as Richard Komanya did amidst a constant flow of information and details, about the city, her people and the great many things he feels every visitor should do when coming to Mwanza and the places there are to visit, no, MUST be visited.

(Do not come near me during a storm)
He works at LakeZoneDesire, a tourist company with an office on airport road just a few minutes from the terminal, where not only bookings can be made for excursions, tours, for self drive and chauffer drive car hire and hotels but where visitors find a free WiFi environment in their newly constructed tourist information centre where a quick roam on the net will reveal a wide variety of things to do and place to go to, after choosing Mwanza as a destination.
Fishing for tilapia or the giant Nile Perch on the lake tick. A visit to Saanane Island National Park, half an hour from Mwanza by boat into the lake tick. A trip to the Ukerere Island to see the Dancing Rocks, where only men are allowed to visit tick. The Bukora Sukuma Museum where dancers often perform with pythons writhing in their hands and which shows what life was in long gone days tick. Or the big one, a trip into the Grumeti sector of the Serengeti, just two hours drive from Mwanza, one of the worlds most renowned names in wildlife conservation, that too Richard Komanya and LakeZoneDesires will arrange at short notice, either as a classic camping safari or staying in one of the top of the pops lodges and tented camps, Grumeti Singita has established in that part of the Serengeti tick.
Hotels of various standards are now found aplenty in and around Mwanza, from simple, affordable guest houses to the more fancied four star hotels or beach resorts. The 4 star New Mwanza Hotel, or the Ryans Bay Hotel, also rated as a four star or the Tilapia Hotel which has sister properties in the park are ready to welcome guests but then so are a number of other places details of which can be found at the LakeZoneDesire offices, suiting anyones budget and fancies. While in Mwanza, I personally would recommend a place directly at the lake of course, after all the main geographical feature of the city and there is magic in the sunsets across the water, which extends from horizon to horizon. Restaurants have sprung up all over the city now, admittedly not as ethnically varied as say in Nairobi, but worth eating out nevertheless. Pizzas at the Pizzeria Restaurant, Indian curries and dishes at the New Mwanza Hotel, Zainabus Caf for those classic African dishes along Postal Road or vegetarian fare at Bint Maringo, and of course guests in hotels and the lake resorts have a choice of snacks, a la carte dishes and buffets, popular for lunch and on weekends for dinner.

(The Tilapia Hotel right at the lake shores)
And there are more history lessons in store, as the remnant of the Hangmans Tree are now a treasured site, but in the colonial days the scene where the rulers hanged condemned prisoners and criminals, as we know today often for the minutest of crimes. But it is part of history nevertheless of course and a monument for visitors to see and stand in contemplation. A number of other sites too are still found in Mwanza of those long gone days a hundred and more years ago, like Dr. Kochs residence which allows for sweeping views across the city of Mwanza from the hills, and all these landmarks are at Richards fingertips when asked about them.
And there is the memorial to see and pay respect to of the victims of the MV Bukoba sinking a few years ago, when hundreds drowned as the vessel went down, also now part of the Mwanza history as the marine disaster took place within sight of the city of Mwanza..


(Treasured remnant of the Hangmans Tree site of executions during the German colonial days)
Mwanza for sure does not have the magnetic pull of a Mombasa or a Dar es Salaam, but it goes to show that there are hidden treasures found in Eastern Africa. Any city with more than 2 million inhabitants in our region is BIG and that means business opportunities wait to be explored, investments to be made. As Tanzania is a member of the East African Community travel by East Africans is easy and for expatriates simple, though requiring a 50 US Dollar Visa fee on entry, even if they are residents in a neighbouring country or, as the case with me, enjoy Residency for Life. The business community in Mwanza, the hotels, resorts and the tour operators are keen to see regional visitors come over and connect with Tanzania and they hope that plenty of visitors will make the trip in the future, for both business and leisure. In fact, the option still exists to use the lake ferries and cross from Port Bell to Mwanza port by lake, while air connections route via Nairobi or soon it was learned via Kigali from within the region. Said Mr. Asif Jawad, the owner of www.lakezonedesires.com, who was extremely helpful in the research for this article and who is passionate about opening the Mwanza area up for more tourists: Mwanza is ready to welcome visitors coming to explore our part of Tanzania which has so much to offer and still receives so few visitors. There is so much to do, so many opportunities in our city for business and for leisure, let people come and see for themselves.
What else now is left, oh yes, go visit your nearest travel agent or book your flight to Mwanza online with the airline of our choice and contact LakeZoneDesires before arrival to be sure of a meet and greet service, transfer to a hotel of your choice and plenty of excursions and safaris to chose from

WELCOME TO YACWDO

Second year students at Saint Augustine University Of Tanzania taking Bachelor of Science in Tourism and Hospitality Management (BScT), In 2014 we Came into the detection of the problem of lacking of Tourism knowledge into the Tanzania Society which tend to let down the exposition of tourism attraction of our Country hence. Then the Students decided to volunteer on providing tourism education to our fellow youth, to promote our attractions and to emphasize on protection of our beauty nature.

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Vision & Mission

Our vision for Tanzania is to have a society where community economic and social development is fortified by tourist sector.

YACWDO mission is to promote tourism in the country through community awareness creation, sensitization and harmonization especially to students for the growth of the sector and prosperity on mankind.

CONTACT US

Head Office & Address Malimbe Village P.O.BOX 307, Nyamagana District, Mwanza Region Tel +255 768415 273, Email: yacwdo2016@gmail.com

About YACWDO

The Youth Awakening for Cultural and Wildlife Tourism Development Organization (YACWDO) is the unique non-government youth organization in Tanzania. We operate primarily to educate and promote Tourism development, resource Management, and Environmental Conservation, that seek to address the importance of Young generation in engaging in Tourism Activities by Visiting, Protecting and Advertising our Natural Resources found in Tanzania.

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