Kitulo National Park
Kitulo National Park
Local people refer to the Kitulo Plateau as Bustani ya Mungu – The Garden of God – while botanists have dubbed it the Serengeti of Flowers, host to ‘one of the great floral spectacles of the world’. And Kitulo is indeed a rare botanical marvel, home to a full 350 species of vascular plants, including 45 varieties of terrestrial orchids, which erupt into a riotous wildflower display of breathtaking scale and diversity during the main rainy season of late November to April. Perched at around 2,600 meters (8,500 ft) between the rugged peaks of the Kipengere, Poroto, and Livingstone Mountains, the well-watered volcanic soils of Kitulo support the largest and most important mountain grassland community in Tanzania.
But Kitulo – a botanist and hiker’s paradise – is also highly alluring to birdwatchers. Tanzania’s only population of the rare Denham’s bustard is resident, alongside a breeding colony of the endangered blue swallow and such range-restricted species as Mountain Marsh Widow, Njombe Cisticola, and Kipengere Seedeater.
Endemic species of butterflies, Chameleon, Lizards, and Frogs further enhance the biological wealth of this unique God’s Garden. One of the most important watersheds for the Great Ruaha River, Kitulo is well known for its floral significance – not only a multitude of orchids but also the stunning yellow-orange red-hot poker and a variety of aloes, protea, geraniums, giant lobelias, lilies, and aster daisies, of which more than 30 species are endemic to southern Tanzania. The big game is sparsely represented, although a few. Hardy mountain reedbuck and eland still roam on the open grasslands.