At 19km wide and
with a surface of 264 sq km, Ngorongoro is one of the largest unbroken calderas
in the world that isn’t a lake. Its steep, unbroken walls soar 400m to 610m and
provide the setting for an incredible natural drama as prey and predators graze
and stalk their way around the open grasslands, swamps and acacia woodland on
the crater floor. It's such an impressive sight that, other vehicles aside,
you'll wonder whether you've descended into a wildlife paradise.
There are plenty
of hippos around the lovely Ngoitoktok Springs picnic site and Lake Magadi
attracts flocks of flamingos to its shallows in the rainy season. Lereal Forest
(which has a less appealing picnic site, and is the starting point for the
Lereal or Lerai Ascent Road) is good for elephants, of which there are around
200 to 300 in the crater. Predators include around 600 spotted hyena, 55 lions
(at last count) and both golden and black-backed jackals. These predators are
sustained by large numbers of resident herbivores, with wildebeest, zebras,
buffaloes and Grant's gazelles the most common. Less commonly seen are elands,
warthogs, hartebeests, bushbucks, waterbucks and Bohor's reedbucks. Around 20%
of the wildebeest and zebras migrate annually between the crater and the
Serengeti. Another huge drawcard is the chance to see the critically endangered
black rhino – around 30 inhabit the crater floor, and they're most often seen
between the Lereal Forest and the Lemala ascent-descent road.
The reason for
all of this abundance is the presence of water, both from the permanent springs
that sustain the swamps and permanent streams and rivers fed by run off from
the crater rim forests.
The main route
into the crater is the Seneto descent road, which enters the crater on its
western side. To come out, use the Lerai ascent road, which starts south of
Lake Magadi and leads to the rim near headquarters. The Lemala road is on the northeastern
side of the crater near Ngorongoro Sopa Lodge and used for both ascent and
descent.
The gates open at
6am and close for descent at 4pm; all vehicles must be out of the crater before
6pm. Officially, you're only allowed to stay down in the crater for a maximum
of six hours, but this is rarely enforced – when we drove out of the crater on
the Lerai ascent road, there was no one checking the vehicles. Self-drivers are
supposed to hire a park ranger (US$20 per vehicle) for the crater where the descent
begins, but are sometimes let in without one.
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