Uganda Safaris and Tours: Good Hotels and Lodges
Friday, 07.13.2007, 06:14pm (GMT)
Uganda has developed its lodges and hotels into world class. Kampala
for example has 3star, 4star and five star hotels and the serena group
has acquired the Nile hotel and renovated it it a 5 star deluxe
facility at a cost of $18M. Lodges will be found in wildlife areas like
queen Elizabeth.
Semilik Safari Lodge
The lodge has eight double rooms that allow for total comfort.
Guests are also accommodated in large canvas tents with permanent
thatched roofs. The tents have en-suite bathrooms with running water
and private verandas with a breathtaking view. Sofas are piled with
cushions, with ample lounging spaces. The lodge’s resident chef offers
a creative mix referred to as the ‘Best food in Uganda’. Everything is
homemade, from the fresh bread to the soups. The lodge employees are
from the surrounding communities.
Semilik Safari Lodge offers guests interesting activities like
chimpanzee trekking, guided walks and hiking, jungle walks fishing,
bird-watching, spot lit night drives, game drives and visits to local
communities. The lodge is working closely with the Indiana State
University of the US in primate research projects. The cost for double
rooms for foreign non-residents is US $296 and for East African
Nationals US $218.
The mystery of Kabale
Bunyonyi Safari Resort (BSR), located deep in the highlands of
Kabale District, southwestern Uganda, is a secret yet to be discovered.
Located on the shores of Lake Bunyonyi, this unique tranquil place has
spacious, self-contained and spacious cottages right at the waterfront.
Guests can tour the numerous islands on the lake by motorboat.
‘Bunyonyi’ means ‘little birds’ and, indeed, at BSR guests are woken up
every morning by the chirping of numerous birds. Some of the areas
across the lake are famous rare bird species. Lake Bunyonyi is about
900m deep and it winds around numerous hills, creating islands. It has
signs of volcanicity and mystery still surrounds its formation. It is a
bilharzias-free lake and therefore safe for swimming. The area is also
mosquito-free.
BSR have a pad out in the water for guests to sunbathe ands swim in
private. Form there or the balcony, one can occasionally view the
elusive water birds, the otters, as well as the surrounding hills.
Guides will take guests round and give them the historical and cultural
backgrounds of some of the islands. Visitors can also meet the pygmy
tribes. In the evenings, one can enjoy a barbeque dinner with a
campfire by the lakeside.
Lake Bunyonyi is one of the places in Uganda where guests can get
clayfish, BSR’s specialty. The cuisine is mostly African but the chef
is well versed in all continental dishes. Self-catering is also allowed
at a minimal cost for small groups. Bunyonyi Safari Resort extends from
the cottages to a small hilltop overlooking the lake. From this vantage
point, the view of the Lake Bunyonyi, its surrounding islands against a
backdrop of the volcanoes of Muhavura is splendid. The hall on this
hilltop is furnished with a bar, a pool table, darts and other games.
It is ideal for conferences and parties. The surrounding gardens are
well manicured and beautiful.
BSR is offering special full board rates this season of US $40 per
person per day. Visitors should look out for BSR’s new introductory
package of US $110 per person for a two-night weekend that includes
accommodation, meals and transport to and from Kampala, and lake tours.
The minimum number of this tour is 12 people sharing in doubles. This
tour can be combined with gorilla trekking in Bwindi or a visit to Lake
Mburo National Park or Queen Elizabeth National Park at an added cost.
Hotel industry comes of age
The Uganda hospitality industry has evolved rapidly into a dynamic
institution that places the interest of the client above all else. A
visit to Uganda may be marked by stops in the following regions
represented by a number of towns: Jinja, Mukono, Kampala, Entebbe, and
towns within the refreshing tour circuit of western, north-western and
north-eastern Uganda. In all these regions and towns, the hotels meet
international standards and offer value for money.
Kampala, Entebbe and Mukono
Central Uganda boasts the country’s top hotels, with Kampala having
hosted major international and regional conferences. Kampala has a
variety of hotels that cater for different categories of tourists.
Colline Hotel
Colline Hotel is an old establishment in Mukono about 15 kilometres
east of Kampala. The three-star hotel boasts a town-countryside
tropical setting. It is an hour’s drive from Entebbe International
Airport through Kampala along Jinja road. The hotel has more than 100
self-contained rooms, with 24-hour room service, DStv and direct
telephone communication. It caters for transit tourists heading to and
from Kampala.
Mukono’s unique setting in an area with bird life is reinforced by
its high service standards. Colline offers guests unhindered access to
all facilities such as the steam bath and health club. With a large
garden, swimming pool and well-equipped health centre, Colline Hotel is
another home away from home.
The hotel has two restaurants, Maxims and Kob, serving continental,
international, oriental and local cuisine. It has three bars fully
stocked with alcoholic and non-alcoholic beverages. The hotel has a
launders residents’ linen. Cultural troupes perform there regularly,
keeping the guests fully entertained.
Hotel Africana
Hotel Africana overlooks the beautiful Uganda Golf Club’s par 72
Kitante course. The hotel is 40 minute drive from Entebbe and a mere
three-minute drive to the city centre. It has 115 rooms compromising
five suites, 23 deluxe rooms and 87 twin-bedrooms. The rooms are
elaborately furnished to meet client needs. They are individually
air-conditioned, have private baths and showers, telephones,
multi-channel TV, radio and fridges. For children under three years,
accommodation is free of charge while those between three and 12 pay
half the rate of a single room. There are also rooms with connecting
doors for families, and there is a large swimming pool.
Hotel Africana has a well-designed purpose-built, air-conditioned
conference and banquet rooms, complete with modern audio-visual
facilities, to cater for any function. Due to its location, the hotel
offers a suitable venue for workshops of 10 to 250 people and outdoor
functions of up to 1,000 people. The conference rooms are equipped with
a high-speed wireless Internet connection.
Holiday Express Hotel
Located in the heart of Kampala at the junction of Luwum and Dastur
Streets, Holiday Express Hotel allows business tourists to access vital
services such as foreign exchange, downtown shopping and transport in
and out of Kampala. The facilities are designed to meet regional and
international standards. All the 42 rooms are soundproofed to allow
maximum comfort. This eliminates the CBD-related cacophony. The hotel
has a special rate for East African nationals. All the rooms are fitted
with TV with more than 10 channels and a spacious study area. Holiday
Express has hosted business tourists from Kenya, Rwanda, Tanzania,
Burundi and Congo.
Hotel Equatoria
Hotel Equatoria is part of the Imperial Group of Hotels chain – Grand
Imperial, Imperial Botanical Beach Hotel, Imperial Resort Beach and
Hotel Equatorial. It is located in Kampala’s central business district,
about 40 kilometres from Entebbe International Airport. Its strategic
location provides an ideal environment for conferences, meetings,
workshops, parties, recreation and rest. Hotel Equatoria has features
that supplement its quality of service. Recently the hotel added 30
more shops to meet the shopping needs of the guests. Hotel Equatoria
has one of the biggest shopping malls in the country and 89
air-conditioned rooms, 24 of which are executive class, with satellite
television and in-house movies. Security is guaranteed as an electronic
key card system is used. The executive rooms have a sitting area
complete with speed special satellite Internet connections, mini-bars
and direct dialing telephone services.
Grand Imperial Hotel
The Grand Imperial Hotel is one of the first hotels in Uganda built
in the colonial era. It is the only hotel that has been used by every
governor of the colonial era. The 103 rooms, including suites, reflect
the urban elegance and easy southern charm of the city. The hotel, part
of the Imperial Group of Hotels, is centrally located in Kampala, and
is just a 30 minute drive from Entebbe International Airport. All the
rooms have high-speed Internet connection, electronic safes and
mini-bars and direct dialing telephone services. The hotel has a
swimming pool, saunas and Jacuzzi, massage rooms, steam and spa baths,
a shopping mall and a large secure car park. It also offers free
personalized airport service, forex bureau and doctors on call 24
hours.
Imperial Resort Beach Hotel
The five-star Imperial Resort Beach Hotel is situated in Entebbe on
27 acres of landscaped gardens on the shores of Lake Victoria. It is
only a seven-minute drive from Entebbe International Airport, and a 30
minute drive to Kampala. The hotel is the finest convention centre in
Uganda and a global landmark, offering technologically advanced
conference facilities overlooking the lake.
With 191 rooms on six floors, extensive conference and banquet
facilities and restaurants and bars, it is an ideal venue for meetings.
A modern amphitheatre, 1 km private beach stretch along Lake Victoria,
swimming pool and health club are just some of the delights.
Imperial Botanical Beach Hotel
The Imperial Botanical Beach Hotel has hosted a number of key
conferences, including a summit of African leaders and former American
President, Bill Clinton. It has modern well-equipped conference
facilities, high-speed internet connection in all rooms, electronic
safes and mini-bars, direct dialing telephone service, swimming pool,
saunas and Jacuzzi, large secure car parking, free personalized airport
service and a doctor on a 24-hour call.
Speke Resort & Country Lodge
Speke Resort and Country Lodge is a luxurious resort on the shores
of Lake Victoria in Munyonyo, 12km from Kampala. This resort is spread
over 50 acres of pristine land. It hosts leisure travelers, business
and executive groups, weddings and other special travellers, business
and executive groups, weddings and other special events. It is the
epitome of an ultimate resort in the Great Lakes region. The emphasis
is on exclusivity and comfort, with the décor incorporating ethnic
design elements from various African communities.
The resort extends for over 400 metres along the shores of Lake
Victoria. Landscaped gardens with indigenous plants and trees attract
colourful birds and butterflies. Wide and well-lit pathways link the
cottages, apartments and public areas. It includes 10 self-contained
cottages, 20 serviced studio rooms, 11 one-bedroom apartments and 24
two-bedroom apartments with the latest amenities such as telephones,
internet access and satellite TV. It has a large swimming pool, a
restaurant, grocery, bar and an equestrian centre with 29 thoroughbred
horses. There is a jetty where guests can hire speedboats
Mweya Safari Lodge
Mweya safari lodge is located on a peninsula in the heart of the
Queen Elizabeth National Park. It offers sumptuous meals and luxurious
accommodation and there are amazing views from every room, an abundance
of game and birds. Easily accessible by air and road, Mweya Safari
Lodge is the perfect place to start a refreshing experienced of Uganda.
Paraa Safari Lodge
Built in the early 1950s, Paraa offers visitors the dramatic
Murchison Falls and a large variety of bird and animal species. Winston
Churchill walked the 85 kilometres from Masindi to view the falls.
Paraa is sandwiched by Lake Kyoga and Lake Albert in north-western
Uganda and Murchison National Park. During Uganda’s political turmoil,
the lodge collapsed but today the story is different. Guests can access
it from Kampala by road or air
24 hours in Kampala
I had decided to venture into the unknown – Uganda. With only a
sketchy knowledge of the history of the country, I had covered most of
Kenya and my visits to Tanzania were becoming monotonous. Coming all
the way from Mombasa, the thought of flying to Nairobi then to Entebbe
offered a mixed package. On the one hand, I would arrive fast and
embark on my working holiday, but on the other, I would miss invaluable
experiences that my grandchildren would love to hear.
I settled for the long journey by road from Mombasa. The Mombasa to
Nairobi trip was uneventful and by morning, I was on my way to the
Malaba border. Through the Kenyan towns of Nakuru, Eldoret and others,
which I knew like the palm of my hand, we reached the border and
disembarked, passport in hand. I eyed the surroundings curiously. We
completed immigration formalities and set off from Malaba through
Tororo to Kampala. The Owen Falls Dam provided a spectacular view of
the source of the Nile. And Kampala beckoned.
By 6:30pm, the bus arrived in Kampala. Dusk was swiftly giving way
to night and I had not made any accommodation arrangements. I tried to
recollect the names of some of the hotels and approached an all too
willing taxi driver (here they are called ‘special hires’). I addressed
him in English and mentioned the names of the various hotels that came
to mind, three to be precise, but he immediately ruled out two as being
upcountry! So, he took me to the one in town. It was a three-star
hotel. I was caught in the horns of a dilemma. I didn’t wish to appear
as someone with no clue of what I wanted, yet I had this ominous
feeling that the cost would subject my pockets to unwarranted,
self-inflicted shock therapy. I decided to bite the bullet and approach
the receptionist, who appeared rather busy with some clients. I waited.
The wait seemed rather long; I know places in my home city (Mombasa)
where the moment you step in you are literally lavished with service.
I boldly confronted the receptionist and politely asked her to attend
to me. Turning the look of being offended by my perceived interruption,
she promptly read out the room rates. The figures sounded rather odd;
USh 100,000 etc. I settled for the cheapest, which was USh 100,000.
Someone told me the Kenyan Shilling was quite strong regionally so I
need not worry, just spend and be happy. I fished out a wad of notes
and counted USh 100,000 for that night. I was shown the self-contained
room with a sitting area, a TV with numerous channels, among a host of
other things. I settled in the room, took a shower, started counting
the money while reconverting the currency mentally to Kenya Shillings,
and realized that i had spent a whopping KSh 8,000 even before dinner!
I was however determined that the little shock therapy would not
ruin my first evening in Kampala. Furthermore, there was no way I could
dine at the same hotel as that would choke any attempts at sampling
Uganda’s growing economy. I moved to Steers on Kampala Road around the
CBD. There was little difficulty in following the directions to the
fast food joint. They seemed more efficient than the three-star hotel.
It was Friday and I began my nocturnal tour at about 8:45pm. The city
was teeming with not just vehicles, but human traffic too. I got a
‘special hire’ to the ‘happening places’ as the seemingly enlightened
driver called them. He quickly noticed two things: that I was new in
Uganda and that I was from Kenya!
The driver through the city took me to what he rated as a
client-friendly pub in the heart of the city and a couple of other
places after which I thought: “well, i now know Kampala!” I decided to
go it alone and the next 24 hours were a real rollercoaster ride. I
entered what I later was told was a sleazy joint (not my type) and
moved on to what surprised me most – a Kenyan nyama choma joint. There
was a good number of Kenyans and Tusker flowed like water. It felt good
to be ‘home’ again. The joint-hoping craze went on, this time with a
group of homeboys who seemed to disappear in what I considered dark
alleys, only to re-emerge stone drunk! I was told that they had gone to
‘re-charge the Tusker’ with some potent traditional gin by the name
Kasese Kasese.
It was well past midnight. Back home, I would be worried about the
police and robbers but here that did not bother the Friday night crowd.
I met a young woman who said she was a Ugandan university student and
we went to a disco. I do not remember the names of the clubs because we
entered no less than three that night. The mood was real carnival with
folks partying hard. I learnt a lot from the student on why people
seemed so relaxed and at ease with foreigners.
The last disco we entered was playing a floor-closing number. It
was 5:30 in morning. I escorted my guide to a special hire, paid for
her trip back to campus wherever it was, and I took mine to my USh
100,000 hotel room. Later, some homeboys who promised to show me a
‘more affordable’ place lived up to their promise. I moved to an
equally decent hotel within the CBD for less than half the previous
cost!
I spent the afternoon visiting the famous Makerere University,
Entebbe International Airport and its environs, the National Museum,
Ndere Cultural Centre, the palace of the Kabaka of Buganda and the
National Parliament. I went to bed early that Saturday evening because
of the long journey ahead. In any case, the bus was set to leave at
7:00am on Sunday. I arrived back from Kampala with fond memories,
having spent 24 great hours in Kampala. I most likely will go back,
particularly to visit my university friend whom I guess must be about
to graduate.
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