Lake Manyara National Park (325 sq km on the floor of the Great Rift Valley, 130 km west of Arusha) is one of northern Tanzania’s most underrated parks — frequently treated as a one-night transit stop between Arusha and the Ngorongoro Crater, when it deserves considerably more attention. Lake Manyara has two headline attractions that distinguish it from the broader Serengeti circuit: tree-climbing lions (the Manyara lion population, like the Ishasha lions in Uganda, habitually rests in the canopy of large fig and acacia trees — the reason, debated in wildlife literature, may be related to insect-avoidance or the microclimate advantages of the tree canopy at Manyara’s hot valley-floor altitude) and the extraordinary backdrop of the Rift Valley escarpment that rises 600 metres directly behind the park’s acacia groundwater forest, providing photography compositions available nowhere else in East Africa. This guide covers Lake Manyara for 2025.

The Tree-Climbing Lions

Manyara’s tree-climbing lion population is smaller and less reliably seen than the Ishasha lions in Uganda (where multiple prides of 10–20 individuals habitually tree-climb) — the Manyara lions (estimated 30–40 individuals in the park ecosystem) use the tree-climbing behaviour seasonally and intermittently rather than as a fixed daily routine. The best conditions for finding tree-climbing lions at Manyara: the hot season (December–February and June–August), when heat drives the lions to the fig tree canopy for the microclimate advantage of the breeze at height; and the early morning and late afternoon, when lions rest before active periods. Finding Manyara’s tree-climbing lions: the park’s TANAPA rangers receive daily lion position reports from the research team (Manyara has a long-term lion monitoring programme) — ask at the gate or your lodge for the current position of the tree-climbing groups. The Acacia Tortilis woodland in the park’s central section has the highest tree-climbing frequency.

Lake Manyara: Flamingo and Waterbirds

Lake Manyara is a shallow alkaline lake (the name derives from the Maasai word for the euphorbia plant that grows on its southern shore) that supports large flamingo concentrations (particularly lesser flamingo — up to 400,000 individuals in peak conditions, creating the classic pink-tinged lake surface visible from the Rift Valley escarpment viewpoints above the town). Flamingo concentrations at Manyara are less predictable than at Lakes Nakuru and Bogoria in Kenya — the alkaline algae bloom (the flamingos’ primary food) shifts between Rift Valley lakes seasonally, and some years Manyara’s flamingo population is reduced while other lakes host the main concentration. Other waterbirds: yellow-billed stork, African spoonbill, grey crowned crane, saddle-billed stork, and Goliath heron are all reliably present at the lake margins year-round. The lake shore circuit road in the park’s southern section provides excellent waterbird viewing — 3 hours on the circuit in good bird season produces 50+ waterbird species.

The Groundwater Forest

The northern section of Lake Manyara NP is covered in groundwater forest — a dense, gallery forest maintained by the constant water table from the Rift Valley escarpment seeps rather than direct rainfall. This forest (entering the park from the main Manyara Gate and turning right into the northern forest road) is one of Tanzania’s finest elephant habitats — Manyara’s elephant population (approximately 400 individuals) uses the groundwater forest intensively, and encounters of large forest-elephant groups at close range beneath the tall forest canopy are one of the most atmospheric wildlife experiences in the northern circuit. The forest road also has olive baboon troops (some groups very habituated to vehicles), vervet monkey, and the park’s resident leopard (the forest provides excellent cover and prey — leopard sightings occur along the forest boundary roads).

Entry and Accommodation 2025

  • Entry fee (non-resident): USD $53/person/day (TANAPA, 2025)
  • Distance from Arusha: 130 km, 2 hours via Makuyuni
  • Lake Manyara Serena Safari Lodge: USD $200–280/night per person full-board. On the Rift Valley escarpment above the park, extraordinary view over the lake and Rift Valley floor.
  • Chem Chem Lodge: USD $400–600/night per person all-inclusive. In a private wildlife area adjacent to Manyara, walking safari access.

Leave a Reply