Kidepo Valley National Park sits in Uganda's remote Karamoja region, a semi-arid sweep of grassland and acacia woodland that feels nothing like the rest of the country. Over four days you will track lions across the Narus Valley, watch Abyssinian ground hornbills stalk the dawn, and eat dinner under a sky so clear the Milky Way casts a shadow. This is one of Africa's genuinely untouched wildernesses, and it rewards every hour of the journey to get here.
Day 1Kampala to Kidepo: Flying into the North
Your morning begins at Entebbe Airport, where a scheduled light-aircraft flight carries you north across the green hills of Acholi, the land flattening and browning as Karamoja comes into view below. The flight takes roughly ninety minutes; your first sight of Kidepo is the Narus Valley opening beneath you, a pale-gold bowl edged by mountains.
After landing at Apoka airstrip, your guide Samuel Longoli meets you and drives straight into the Narus Valley for an afternoon game drive. There is no easing in: within an hour there are elephants at the waterhole, a pair of bat-eared foxes outside their den, and somewhere in the long grass, a low growl that turns everyone silent.
Sunset is taken on the terrace of Apoka Safari Lodge, cold Nile Special in hand, as the Didinga Hills go dark.


