Water crossing technique for East Africa safari is one of the most critical 4×4 skills to master before undertaking any circuit that includes seasonal rivers, flooded park approach tracks, or Murchison Falls / Ruaha river ford crossings — because a failed water crossing (water entering the engine or electrical system) can immobilise the vehicle in the middle of a riverbed in remote terrain with no mobile signal. The water crossing technique East Africa safari procedure involves a systematic check before attempting any river or flooded track crossing, regardless of how shallow it appears from the vehicle. This guide provides the complete water crossing technique for 2027/2028 East Africa self-drive visitors.
Pre-Crossing Check: The 5-Step Procedure
- Step 1 — Crocodile check: Before exiting the vehicle to check a water crossing depth, scan the crossing and both banks for crocodile. Any East Africa water crossing that is slow-moving, over 30cm deep, or connected to a larger water body should be treated as potentially containing crocodile. If crocodile are present or cannot be excluded, do not wade the crossing on foot — use a long stick from inside the door frame to gauge depth.
- Step 2 — Depth check: Wade across (when safe) with a stick, checking the maximum depth. Mark the deepest point. Land Cruiser 76 wading depth: 700mm (70cm). Prado 150 wading depth: 700mm. Hilux wading depth: 500mm (50cm). If maximum depth exceeds the vehicle’s stated wading depth, do not cross.
- Step 3 — Bottom surface check: Is the riverbed sandy (generally firm), rocky (traction risk), or muddy (potential entry point for axle-deep burial)? Sandy bottoms are the safest; soft mud bottoms are the highest risk.
- Step 4 — Current speed: Fast-moving water at even 30cm depth exerts significant lateral force on a vehicle. Avoid crossing flooded rivers with fast current — wait for the flow to reduce.
- Step 5 — Exit point: Identify the exit point before entering. If the exit bank is muddy or steep, solve the exit before committing to the crossing.
The Crossing Technique: Low Range First Gear
- Engage 4L (low range) and select first gear before entering the water
- Enter the crossing at a 30 to 45 degree angle to the current to reduce lateral water pressure on the vehicle
- Maintain a steady bow wave in front of the bonnet by holding a consistent slow speed (5 to 8km/h) — the bow wave displaces water ahead of the engine intake
- Do not stop, change gear, or accelerate suddenly mid-crossing
- After the crossing: check the brakes by applying light pressure for the first 100 metres on dry ground — wet disc brakes may have reduced effectiveness immediately after immersion