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With tented camps along the banks of the Rufiji River, motor boat trips are offered
as a method of seeing hippos, crocodiles, and aquatic birds.
The game drives provide great opportunity to see herbivore, predators and diverse
birds. The vast majority of Tanzania's elephant herd live in one remote stretch of safari
wilderness - the Selous Game Reserve. Stigler's Gorge is one of the
park's most striking features. This gaping chasm channels the frothing
confluence of the Great Ruaha and Rufiji Rivers. After this bottleneck, the Rufiji
swells through the park down to the Indian Ocean
forming a series of small lakes that serve as an important source of
water for the multitude of the plains game. The hinterland around Lake
Tagalala and Beho Beho is some of the most picturesque in area.
Some distance from Lake Tagalala, whose shape and size is in a constant state of flux,
hidden in a ravine surrounded by lush vegetation, are the Maji Moto
hot springs. In this fascinating area, waterbuck, southern reed-buck
and bushbuck are common. During the dry season, rare sable antelope,
lion and greater kudu frequent the Lake. Lined with Barassus palms,
the muddy Rufiji is the Selous Game Reserve's main artery.
During the dry season between June and October the river banks explode in a spectacular
flood of the plains animals quenching their thirst all under the
opportunistic eye of crocodile. The reserve is home to over 350
species of birdlife.
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