Rwanda’s Gishwati-Mukura National Park — gazetted in 2016 as Rwanda’s fourth national park, combining two previously separate forest fragments (Gishwati Forest, 1,450 ha in the north, and Mukura Forest, 1,722 ha in the south, separated by 65 km of farmland) — represents one of Africa’s most significant recent conservation recovery stories. The Gishwati forest was almost entirely cleared for agriculture between 1990 and 2002 (reducing from 25,000 ha to fewer than 600 ha) during the post-genocide period when population displacement drove unsustainable forest encroachment. The Gishwati Mukura Forest Reserve Project (2009 onwards) and subsequent gazettement as a national park reversed the clearance, replanting and protecting the forest through community agreements and eco-tourism revenue. In 2024, the park received its first international Biosphere Reserve recognition from UNESCO. This guide covers Gishwati-Mukura for 2025 visitors.

Chimpanzee Trekking

The Gishwati Forest section of the park has a habituated chimpanzee community (approximately 20–25 individuals as of 2025 — a small community compared to Nyungwe Forest’s 500+ chimps, but fully habituated and reliably encountered by trekkers). Gishwati chimpanzee trekking permits: RWF 30,000 per person (approximately USD $23), making them significantly cheaper than Rwanda Gorilla Habituation Experience permits and substantially cheaper than Uganda Kibale chimp permits (USD $250). The Gishwati trek: 1–3 hours finding, then 1 hour with the community. The small community size means encounters are intimate — the 8-person limit means a very low human-to-chimp ratio. Booking: through Rwanda Development Board (rdb.rw) or any Kigali-based tour operator. Same-day booking is often possible outside peak season, which contrasts sharply with Rwanda’s gorilla permit market.

Other Wildlife: Colobus, Golden Monkey, Forest Birds

The Gishwati-Mukura forests harbour several additional primate species and a rich forest bird list: black-and-white colobus (Colobus guereza, troops of 8–15 individuals visible from the forest edges and internal trail network), L’Hoest’s monkey (Allochrocebus lhoesti), and in the higher elevation sections of both forest blocks, a small population of golden monkey (Cercopithecus kandti — the same species as the Volcanoes NP golden monkey trekking experience, available here for much less than the Volcanoes NP permit cost). The forest bird list (270+ species) includes: Grauer’s rush warbler, Rwenzori batis, and several Albertine Rift endemic species found in few other accessible forests. The birdwatching circuit in Gishwati (2–3 hours with a specialised bird guide) covers the forest edge, stream valleys, and interior trail network where the forest interior species are concentrated.

Getting There and Logistics

Gishwati Forest (northern section): 130 km from Kigali, 2.5–3 hours via Musanze. The park headquarters for the Gishwati section are near Rutsiro district, accessible on the paved road west of Musanze. Mukura Forest (southern section): 120 km from Kigali, 2.5 hours via Karongi (Lake Kivu shore road). The two sections are 65 km apart and generally visited separately rather than as a single combined day. Accommodation near Gishwati: basic guesthouses in the Kinigi/Musanze area (also used for Volcanoes NP visitors, 30 km from Gishwati), USD $20–50/night. The park currently lacks dedicated luxury accommodation — Gishwati-Mukura attracts budget and mid-range visitors and birding specialists rather than the high-end market that flows to Volcanoes NP and Nyungwe Forest Lodge.

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