Launch of the Kyambura Gorge Eco-tourism Project

18 March 2019
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Volcanoes Safaris has launched the Kyambura Gorge Eco-tourism Project, a series of community and conservation activities developed since 2009 to safeguard the Kyambura Gorge ecosystem.

Dr. Johannes Refisch, Coordinator for GRASP - the UN Great Ape Program - said, "This is an excellent example of private sector social and environmental responsibility. We are very proud in the Great Apes Survival Partnership that we have Volcanoes Safaris as a partner."

At the launch event, Praveen Moman, Founder, Volcanoes Safaris, said:

"The Kyambura Gorge is at the centre of the Albertine Rift and symbolic of the issues faced by the Rift. Volcanoes Safaris and Volcanoes Safaris Partnership Trust have been working to safeguard the Gorge ecosystem for 10 years. We have assembled four sites next to the Gorge to protect it - the Lodge, the Conservation Centre, the 3km buffer along the northern side and the wetland which had an illegal brickworks. Today, VS and VSPT are the single largest stakeholders in the Gorge ecosystem after the Ugandan Wildlife Authority. Without the intervention of VS and VSPT, the survival of the gorge and the isolated chimp community of 27 chimps would be under severe threat.

"We have also created a number of projects to support conservation and communities and a number of new walking safaris. These measures will help protect the chimpanzees, wildlife and birds in the ecosystem, increase visitor numbers and increase economic benefit for communities. We are proud to make this significant contribution to the future of the Kyambura Gorge system."

Guests' Engagement with the Project

A series of guided walks in the private reserve around the lodge have been introduced in the Kyambura Gorge Buffer Zone and in the Kyambura Wetland, allowing guests to experience this magnificent wilderness area.

Guests will be invited to plant a tree in the buffer zone to appreciate its significance and to encourage them to support the expansion of the buffer. VSPT will also continue efforts to create a community conservancy area and a forested corridor to link the lost chimps of Kyambura with chimps in another forest.

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