Some Useful Tanzania safari sights to view

A large number of people go to Tanzania to observe the Great Migration, which takes place almost year-round there. The migration of over a million wildebeest, joined by hundreds of thousands of gazelles, zebra, and eland, to Kenya's Masai Mara in search of greener pastures, starts in the southern Serengeti in December and continues until the end of January. During the months of July to October, the wildebeest are at their most ferocious, plunging over the Mara and Grumeti Rivers in the north, evading waiting crocs and the predators who patrol the banks.

While a safari packages Tanzania includes the thundering of wildebeest hooves, there is much more to it than that. The Serengeti is home to a diverse range of animals of all kinds and sizes, and the surrounding Ngorongoro Crater is a haven for the Big Five, which may be seen at any time of year. An even more remarkable feature of the geography of the north is a series of lakes cut into the landscape by the Rift Valley. Flamingos, more than 300 kinds of migrating birds, hippos, water buffalo, and a large number of leopards may all be found in Lake Manyara, for example. The incomprehensibly enormous parks in the south, on the other hand, attract just a handful of people, despite the abundance of wildlife, which includes endangered African wild dogs and Tanzania's largest population of elephants in Selous National Park, among other places.

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