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February 20, 2015

Small wonders on Rubondo Island

*** Important ***
From 1 March 2015 this website will not be live anymore.
With the launch of our new Asilia Blog all future blog articles about Rubondo Island can be found there.
We invite you to our new Asilia Blog here >

By Akil Halai

Rubondo Island on Lake Victoria is not only fascinating for its Nile perch fishing, its introduced population of chimps or its beautiful birdlife. It has a wide range of smaller animals that you don’t see on a normal safari.

Off the beaten track

Few tourists and guests are actually privileged to have visited the island because the island’s attractions are more low-key and esoteric than the often-visited savannah safari parks. This is changing dramatically nowadays, as visitors seek out more unusual experiences. They have already seen the big and ‘usual’ wildlife, and now crave something different. In this case unique places such as Rubondo are now coming into the picture, offering spectacular and unique wildlife experiences.

Small wonders

On my recent trip to Rubondo Island Camp, I had a chance to tick off some animals I had waited for a long time to see. Watching the behaviour of these creatures was fascinating, and so much worth the time I spent.

IMG_8044

The road from the park headquarters to the swampy Mlaga Bay every evening had a high concentration of colourful butterflies and Serrated Hinged Terrapins, especially after rain in the mornings.

Friar Charaxes1

The Serrated Hinged Terrapins (Pelusios sinuatus) are a species of turtle in the Pelomedusidae family. They are only found in lakes and rivers in tropical East Africa. I spent many evenings watching them bask in mud banks and puddles on the roads made by wheel tracks. I was even lucky to see a clever one on the back of a hippo! They usually eat water snails, soft-weed and insects. The female terrapins are larger than the males with a carapace of up to 55cm long, and males can be distinguished from the females by their longer tails. For defence, the hinged plastron closes to protect the head and forelimbs, and the terrapin also secretes a foul odour when threatened.

turtle

We saw the evidence of many female terrapins having laid their eggs in puddles – they usually lay from seven up to twenty-two eggs. The laying season is from October to January, and cute hatchlings appear from March to April. On Rubondo Island there were so many, we had to actually zigzag on the track to make sure we didn’t drive over any terrapin or its eggs!

It is the small wonders like this that make Rubondo such a rewarding place for me to visit.

Akil

Visit the Rubondo Island Camp website for more information about the camp and the island.

To come and stay on Rubondo, contact your trusted travel agent or send an enquiry.

About Akil

Akil Tanzanian-born Akil Halai is the Field Operations Coordinator for Asilia Tanzania. A birding enthusiast of note, he endeavours to observe as many avian species as possible upon his travels through Africa.

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*** Important ***
From 1 March 2015 this website will not be live anymore.
With the launch of our new Asilia Blog all future blog articles about Rubondo Island can be found there.
We invite you to our new Asilia Blog here >

By Akil Halai

Rubondo Island on Lake Victoria is not only fascinating for its Nile perch fishing, its introduced population of chimps or its beautiful birdlife. It has a wide range of smaller animals that you don’t see on a normal safari.

Off the beaten track

Few tourists and guests are actually privileged to have visited the island because the island’s attractions are more low-key and esoteric than the often-visited savannah safari parks. This is changing dramatically nowadays, as visitors seek out more unusual experiences. They have already seen the big and ‘usual’ wildlife, and now crave something different. In this case unique places such as Rubondo are now coming into the picture, offering spectacular and unique wildlife experiences.

Small wonders

On my recent trip to Rubondo Island Camp, I had a chance to tick off some animals I had waited for a long time to see. Watching the behaviour of these creatures was fascinating, and so much worth the time I spent.

IMG_8044

The road from the park headquarters to the swampy Mlaga Bay every evening had a high concentration of colourful butterflies and Serrated Hinged Terrapins, especially after rain in the mornings.

Friar Charaxes1

The Serrated Hinged Terrapins (Pelusios sinuatus) are a species of turtle in the Pelomedusidae family. They are only found in lakes and rivers in tropical East Africa. I spent many evenings watching them bask in mud banks and puddles on the roads made by wheel tracks. I was even lucky to see a clever one on the back of a hippo! They usually eat water snails, soft-weed and insects. The female terrapins are larger than the males with a carapace of up to 55cm long, and males can be distinguished from the females by their longer tails. For defence, the hinged plastron closes to protect the head and forelimbs, and the terrapin also secretes a foul odour when threatened.

turtle

We saw the evidence of many female terrapins having laid their eggs in puddles – they usually lay from seven up to twenty-two eggs. The laying season is from October to January, and cute hatchlings appear from March to April. On Rubondo Island there were so many, we had to actually zigzag on the track to make sure we didn’t drive over any terrapin or its eggs!

It is the small wonders like this that make Rubondo such a rewarding place for me to visit.

Akil

Visit the Rubondo Island Camp website for more information about the camp and the island.

To come and stay on Rubondo, contact your trusted travel agent or send an enquiry.

About Akil

Akil Tanzanian-born Akil Halai is the Field Operations Coordinator for Asilia Tanzania. A birding enthusiast of note, he endeavours to observe as many avian species as possible upon his travels through Africa.

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