Queen Elizabeth National Park in western Uganda is the country’s most ecologically diverse national park — encompassing savanna, forest, wetland, and alkaline lakes across 1,978 sq km on the Albertine Rift floor between the Rwenzori Mountains and the Congo border. The park’s headline attraction is the Ishasha sector (the southern section, on the Tanzania border) and its population of lions that habitually rest in the canopy of large fig trees — an unusual behaviour documented at Ishasha and at Lake Manyara in Tanzania but found in very few other African lion populations. Beyond the tree-climbing lions, QENP contains: the Kazinga Channel (an 80 km natural channel connecting Lakes Edward and George, with one of Africa’s highest hippo and crocodile densities), the Kyambura Gorge (a deeply incised forested gorge containing habituated chimpanzees), and 10 primate species (the most in any Uganda national park). This guide covers Queen Elizabeth in full for 2025.
Ishasha Sector: Tree-Climbing Lions
The Ishasha sector (50 km south of the main Mweya Peninsula on a rough park road) is where Uganda’s famous tree-climbing lion prides are most reliably found. The lions (the Ishasha population has approximately 40–50 individuals in 4–5 prides) habitually rest in the crowns of large fig trees (Ficus sycomorus, growing 10–15 metres tall with spreading, climbable canopies) during the midday heat — an unusual behaviour that may have originated as an adaptation to the heavy buffalo herds and biting insects at ground level in the Ishasha grasslands, or possibly learned from a founding individual and transmitted culturally through the prides. Finding the tree-climbing lions: the most reliable method is asking the park rangers at Ishasha Camp who monitor daily pride positions — lion positions are typically known by 07:00. The standard tree-climbing lion encounter involves approaching a large fig tree and finding 4–10 lions distributed through the canopy at heights of 3–12 metres, some sleeping in the fork of major branches, others watching the vehicle with complete indifference. Photography: late afternoon (16:00–18:00) with warm light on the fig canopy and lions active as the temperature drops.
Kazinga Channel Boat Cruise
The Kazinga Channel (the 80 km natural waterway connecting Lake George to Lake Edward, running through the park’s centre) is Uganda’s most wildlife-rich waterway — the channel’s shoreline at peak dry season (December–February and June–August) concentrates: hippo (one of Africa’s largest hippo populations — estimates of 4,000–6,000 individuals in the channel and adjacent lakes), Nile crocodile, African buffalo (herds of 200–400 individuals using the channel banks as drinking points), elephant, and an extraordinary waterbird diversity including: African skimmer, Goliath heron, yellow-billed stork, Malachite kingfisher, and African jacana. The daily UWA launch cruise (3 hours, departing from Mweya Peninsula at 09:00 and 14:00): USD $30 per person. The 2-hour afternoon cruise (14:00 departure) provides the best wildlife density as the temperature drops and animals move to the water’s edge. Hippo are at their most visible in the channel shallows during the morning cruise (they spend the hot midday hours partially submerged in the deepest channel sections). This cruise is often described by repeat Uganda visitors as superior to the Murchison Falls river cruise for wildlife density.
Kyambura Gorge: The Underground Forest Chimps
The Kyambura Gorge (a 100-metre-deep incision in the QENP savanna floor, created by the Kyambura River and containing a ribbon of riverine forest along the river course below the gorge rim) is one of Uganda’s most atmospheric wildlife locations — the descent into the gorge on a narrow trail produces an immediate transition from open, dry savanna to dense, moist riverine forest in 20 metres of vertical descent. The habituated chimp community (approximately 15–20 individuals) in the Kyambura Gorge is smaller and harder to find than the Kibale or Bwindi communities but provides a unique encounter context — chimps glimpsed through the gorge’s dense understorey in the dramatic 100-metre-deep canyon setting, with the savanna visible 100 metres above on both canyon walls. Permit: USD $50 per person (significantly cheaper than Kibale at USD $250). Sighting reliability: approximately 60–70%. The Kyambura Gorge also provides the best leopard potential in QENP — the gorge’s rocky walls and dense vegetation create classic leopard habitat, and leopard are occasionally seen resting on ledges above the river.
Entry Fees and Accommodation 2025
- Park entry: USD $40 per person per day
- Mweya Safari Lodge: USD $250–350/night per person full-board. On the Mweya Peninsula between the Kazinga Channel and Lake Edward, outstanding location with wildlife visible from rooms. QENP’s flagship lodge.
- Ishasha Wilderness Camp: USD $180–250/night per person full-board. 8 tents in the Ishasha sector, closest accommodation to tree-climbing lion territory. The best Ishasha base.
- Jacana Safari Lodge: USD $120–180/night per person full-board. Eastern sector, on the Kyambura River, good chimp base.