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Tanzania

Shorebird on Grasmere Lake
Wherever you are, a visit to a national park rarely disappoints. From Yellowstone in the US to South Africa’s Kruger and from Uluru in Australia to our own Lake District, some of the planet’s most striking landscapes, along with resident flora and fauna, are preserved as jewels in their nation’s crowns. Send us your tips on enjoying the world's best national parks, particularly the ones we've yet to cover.
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    Tarangire National Park

    Posted by Coomy 7 December 2007

    One of the lesser-known parks in Tanzania (dwarfed in size by the Masai Mara and Ngorongoro crater parks), Tarangire is thronged with wildlife towards the end of the dry season. Elephants flock here in their hundreds, and in one day there expect to see lions, leopard, buffalo, fish eagles, dik-dik, mongoose, zebra, wildebeest. The works, in short.

    About two hours west of Arusha. Book with one of Arusha's myriad operators and leave as early as you can the next morning to get the best of the morning. Take in nearby Lake Manyara if you need to see a hippo. www.tanzaniaparks.com/tarangire.htm

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    Arusha Park

    Posted by bladeaway 2 November 2007

    Little visited and close by, Arusha Park is scenic with great views of (and includes) Mt Meru, and has its own crater, forests and lakes, some laden with salts. There are giraffe, buffalo, colobus, flamingo and lots of birds, and a few hippo left in what was once their biggest home in Tanzania. Quiet and peaceful compared to the main parks.

    A few miles east of Arusha on the Moshi road, lots of local safari operators will do a full or half day, or you can climb Meru on a 3 day tough trek

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