Mountain Gorillas

Uganda is a great destination hosting a large population of the mountain gorillas. These great apes are well protected in two national parks; Bwindi Impenetrable National Park and Mgahinga National Park.

Within Bwindi Impenetrable National Park, there are 23 habituated gorilla groups and a total of 184 gorilla permits are issued each day by the Uganda Wildlife Authority (UWA). You can easily apply for one through us and we will make sure that you get it booked as soon as possible. Currently gorilla permits costs USD800 per person for Uganda.

Things to Know About Gorillas

The gorillas have comparable DNA to humans and are therefore are prone to illness. Diseases as simple as common colds can easily wipe out an entire faction. Park visitors must keep a bare minimum distance of seven meters from the animals at all times, and visits are limited to one hour in the company of one of three habituated families.

Due to the restrictions, the future of this decisively endangered creature looks bright especially after decades of illegal deforestation and poaching, the number of gorillas at Bwindi has stuck at around 340, and for the first time in years, it is very slowly on the rise.

But gorilla tracking is no leisurely walk in the park. It can take anywhere up to 10 hours to find the elusive creatures in the dense undergrowth. Guides lead trekkers up precipitous verges and across rivers and old pangas are used to create paths through Bwindi. It is the perfect place to live out a childhood Tarzan fantasy, with vast sheathes of trees, vines, branches and bushes surrounding trekkers as they penetrate deep into the rain forest.

Treks begin with an early morning safety briefing. Depending on gorilla movements, you can spend a morning anywhere within the park’s 331sqkm forest. The highlight of you visit is to look into the pensive eyes of the silverback, the head of the gorilla family.

Seeing a wild gorilla only a few metre away feels like there is confusion in the trees or a violent shake in the canopy above your head. Then there may be a bang and a clatter, or a snapped branch and dark shapes plummeting into a clearing in front of you. One should expect their adrenaline levels to rocket and, in the warm, thin air, you will realize that cowering in front of an oncoming silverback is not something you could ever get used to.