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Arrive Africa Safaris
4 Days in the Wild North: Kidepo Valley

Private Journey Uganda

4 Days in the Wild North: Kidepo Valley

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Overview

About this journey

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.

Highlights

What you'll experience

  • Kidepo holds one of Uganda's largest lion populations. Morning game drives across the Narus floodplain regularly turn up prides resting beneath sausage trees or moving through the long grass at first light, often within minutes of leaving camp.

  • Before the heat builds, a pair of ground hornbills—glossy black, with their red facial wattles catching the early sun—patrol the grassland like slow, deliberate sentinels. Kidepo is one of the few places in East Africa where sightings are almost guaranteed.

  • A guided walk along the seasonal Kidepo River bed takes you through a different layer of the ecosystem: doum palms, lesser kudu tracks in the sand, and the occasional klipspringer picking its way across the rocky escarpment above.

  • The less-visited Nangeya Valley borders South Sudan and fills with oryx, cheetah, and striped hyena—species absent from most Ugandan parks. The landscape shifts from open plain to dense thicket as the afternoon light turns amber.

  • The Didinga Hills form a burnt-ochre wall along the park's eastern edge. Each evening, your guide drives to a high point where you can watch the hills change colour as the sun drops and vervet monkeys argue in the fig trees below.

  • Over 475 bird species have been recorded in Kidepo. The Narus wetland draws African skimmer, shoe-billed associates, and the localised fox's weaver, while the park's drier zones hold species you won't find elsewhere in Uganda: the black-breasted barbet and white-crested turaco.

Why choose us

Why choose a Private Journey?

Kidepo is one of the most challenging parks in Africa to reach, and that is precisely why it remains extraordinary. These are three reasons we think Arrive Africa Safaris is the right team to take you there.

Guides Who Know the North

Samuel Longoli has guided in Kidepo for eleven years and grew up in Karamoja. He knows which termite mound the lions favour in the dry season, and he will tell you the Karamojong names for every plant you pass.

Small Vehicles, No Crowding

We cap each departure at six guests in a single customised Land Cruiser. At a sighting you are not competing with five other vehicles for the angle; you stay as long as the animal allows.

Transparent, All-In Pricing

Park fees, internal flights, accommodation, all meals from arrival lunch on Day 1, and a $50-per-person community conservation contribution are included in the price. No hidden supplements appear at checkout.

Itinerary

your day-by-day journey

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.

Lunch, Dinner

Day 2Full Day in the Narus Valley

The alarm goes at 05:30 and you are in the vehicle before the sky is properly light. The Narus Valley at this hour belongs to the predators: a pride of seven lions—two males, four females, one cub—is found on a termite mound, watching a herd of Jackson's hartebeest that has not yet noticed them. You stay until the light is good enough to photograph and the lions decide to sleep rather than hunt.

A mid-morning breakfast is served back at the lodge before a walking excursion along the Kidepo River bed with an armed ranger. The sand holds the night's record: jackal prints, porcupine scrapes, and the broad five-toed press of a hyena. A Nile monitor vanishes into a doum palm root system as you approach.

The afternoon drive heads toward the Kanan area, where a small herd of Rothschild's giraffe moves through the acacia scrub and a lilac-breasted roller—Uganda's colours seem extravagant even here—perches on every available dead branch. Dinner is a shared table under the acacia trees, a fire burning low beside the generator hum.

Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner

Day 3Nangeya Valley and the Park's Hidden Side

Today you cross into the Nangeya Valley, a less-visited sector in the park's northwest that borders South Sudan. The vegetation changes almost immediately—thicker combretum shrub, rocky outcrops, and a drier air that carries the smell of dust and wild sage. This is cheetah country, and the park's small population is occasionally spotted hunting on the open flats in the early morning.

Samuel takes you to a rocky kopje where the klipspringer—always in pairs, always impossibly balanced—stand on the uppermost boulders. From the same vantage point you can see for perhaps forty kilometres into South Sudan, a vast unbroken plain with no visible road or building.

The return drive in the late afternoon passes through a large herd of Burchell's zebra, the animals unhurried and close to the vehicle. As the sun drops behind the Morungole massif, a family of warthogs trots toward their burrow in perfect single file. The guide pours cold water from the cooler box. Nobody says much.

Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner

Day 4Dawn Drive and Departure

The final morning starts before breakfast: a short sunrise drive to the Narus waterhole, where elephant families arrive to drink as the sky turns from grey to pink to gold. Buffalo are already there, standing shoulder-deep in the shallows, red-billed oxpeckers running along their backs.

Breakfast is packed. Bags go into the vehicle. The airstrip is a fifteen-minute drive, and the plane is on time. Kidepo shrinks to a brown oval below you, the Didinga Hills a dark line to the east, and then it is all green hills again and Kampala appears through the haze.

Breakfast

Extensions

+3 Days

Murchison Falls and the Nile

Add three days at Murchison Falls: a boat cruise to the base of the falls, morning game drives for elephant and Rothschild's giraffe, and a chimpanzee walk in Budongo Forest.

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+2 Days

Rhino Tracking at Ziwa

Break the overland journey with two nights at Ziwa Rhino Sanctuary, where Uganda's only wild white rhino can be approached on foot with a ranger — one of the continent's most intimate wildlife encounters.

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+3 Days

Gorilla Trekking in Bwindi

Combine the open northern savannah with the ancient mountain forests of Bwindi Impenetrable Forest for a three-day gorilla trekking extension — Uganda's most complete wildlife contrast.

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Dates & Prices

Prices in USD, including internal air, per person, double occupancy.

  • Jun 10 – Jun 13
    $3,450Available
  • Jul 8 – Jul 11
    $3,450Available
  • Aug 5 – Aug 8
    $3,650Available
  • Sep 16 – Sep 19Offer
    $3,450Available
  • Dec 2 – Dec 5
    $3,650Call for Availability

Minimum Age

12 years

Safari Duffel

Soft-sided bags only on internal flights; maximum 15 kg per person including hand luggage

First Group Event

Arrival pickup at Entebbe Airport at 07:00 on Day 1

Last Group Event

Drop-off at Entebbe Airport by 14:00 on Day 4

Guaranteed Departures

Departures run with a minimum of 2 guests. We will notify you no later than 30 days before departure if a minimum has not been met.

Alternate Sightseeing

Nangeya Valley access depends on road conditions after heavy rain; your guide will substitute an extended Narus Valley drive or a village community visit if necessary.

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