Entebbe — the peninsula city on Lake Victoria’s northern shore, 37 km southwest of Kampala and the location of Uganda’s only international airport — is a genuinely pleasant transition point between international travel and the Uganda safari interior that most visitors overlook in their rush to the western circuit parks. Unlike Kampala (chaotic, congested, energetic), Entebbe has the character of a prosperous lakeside town: wide, tree-shaded streets, the famous Botanical Garden on the lake shore, access to excellent lake swimming and boat trips to Ngamba Island Chimpanzee Sanctuary, a collection of upmarket lake-view hotels, and the Uganda Wildlife Education Centre (UWEC — the national zoo and wildlife rescue centre that houses many of Uganda’s commonly rehabilitated wildlife species). This guide covers the Entebbe experience for the arrivals/departure day that most Uganda safari itineraries build in at either end.
The Botanical Garden
The Entebbe Botanical Garden (2 km from the airport, directly on the Lake Victoria shoreline — entry UGX 20,000/person, approximately USD $5.50) is a 40-hectare lakeside garden established in 1901 by the colonial administration as a research station for East African plants. The garden’s wildlife: the botanical garden’s old fig trees and lake-margin vegetation support a significant community of grey-cheeked mangabey and red-tailed monkey (both wild and fully unhabituated, foraging in the garden canopy), plus a resident chimpanzee group that was used for the original filming of the Tarzan television series in the 1950s (the “Entebbe chimps” are a point of local pride, though the resident chimps today are descended from the original). The garden’s bird list (300+ species) benefits from the varied habitat — the lake shore (African fish eagle, pied kingfisher, great cormorant), the garden interior (African paradise flycatcher, black-and-white casqued hornbill), and the boundary forest edge (various sunbirds and warblers). The garden walk takes 90 minutes at a relaxed pace with a guide (USD $5–10 for a garden guide).
Ngamba Island Chimpanzee Sanctuary
Ngamba Island Chimpanzee Sanctuary (45 minutes by boat from Entebbe — transfers provided by the Chimpanzee Trust from the Imperial Botanical Beach Hotel jetty, departing 08:30 and 14:00 daily) provides the Entebbe day-visitor’s most substantial wildlife encounter: 49 confiscated or orphaned chimpanzees living on a 100-acre forested island in Lake Victoria, fed twice daily by the sanctuary staff and observable from the feeding platform on the island’s lakeshore. The daily visit: arrival, briefing, and 90 minutes of chimpanzee viewing at the feeding platform (the chimps approach the platform for fruit at 11:00 and 15:00 — the proximity of fully-grown adult chimpanzees at 5–10 metres, visible in the open, is an extraordinary encounter). Cost: USD $80/person (standard day visit including boat transfer). Overnight volunteer stays: USD $200/night, including participation in the morning chimp care routine.
Lake Victoria Swimming and Hotels
- Lake Victoria swimming: The Entebbe peninsula has several designated lake swimming areas — the Entebbe Beach (municipal beach, UGX 5,000 entry) and the hotel pools at the Lake Victoria Serena Hotel and Cassia Lodge are the most used. The lake at Entebbe is bilharzia-free at the main swimming beaches (the urban runoff point is avoided — swim only at designated areas).
- Lake Victoria Serena: USD $200–300/night. The town’s finest hotel, lake view rooms, large pool, good restaurant — the standard transit hotel for organised Uganda safaris.
- Boma Guest House: USD $80–120/night. Boutique guesthouse in a garden setting, good value, popular with repeat Uganda visitors.
- Lake Vic Casino: For the evening of the arrivals day — Entebbe’s only casino, adjacent to the lake shore, with a decent restaurant.