No reason to be scared of them, they are far from agressive, but the males demand respect and they will take any food they feel is theirs...
Day 22-24 (January 14-16)
Today was the first of the two days that we would actually enter the Udzungwa Mountains National Park. We were going to one of the most popular trails, the Sanje waterfall trail, which unsurprisingly leads to a waterfall in the Sanje forest... We did not start very early, which meant that it was hot and that the birdlife had died away mostly... At least they were quiet and the first half an hour of the climb we did not see much except some
Mitis monkeys, Zanj sun squirrels and a juvenile
Palm-nut vulture. Our guide proved to be incredibly unknowledgeable, so we took the effort to show him how juvenile Palm-nut vultures look like

. I had secretly hoped he could show us some Eastern tree hyraxes or something else that is interesting, but that hope was in vain. After about an hour of climbing we reached a camp site, where we startled a
Checkered sengi and a big group of
Udzungwa red colobuses. You can never see those two species often enough. At a nearby viewpoint we were treated with good views of a
Crowned eagle, which is the Harpy eagle of Africa. We then continued to a smaller waterfall and more importantly a nice pool to swim in

. After this refreshment we followed another route downhill and we were treated with good views of the Sanje waterfall, which is about a 100 meters high. We also encountered some Italians who were stupid enough to try to climb the hill in the early afternoon heat + humidity... You could hardly be more foolish with 35 degrees and 90% humidity, but who am I to judge them
We felt blessed when it started to rain in the afternoon and a walk on the trail at late afternoon gave us views of another
Checkered sengi. They are common, though just a little bit shy

. My girlfriend wasn't very keen on doing night walks on the camp grounds as there could potentially be elephants around (they indeed come down sometimes and the village is protected by a line of bee hives, but the camp is off course not

). I could persuade her one night and we found a carnivore next to the path, but after some eyeshine it remained hidden, even though it was only 2 meters away, we could not see it through the vegetation and when we finally saw something it looked mainly brown.... There are several options including Marsh mongoose and genets, but I had the feeling it might have been an African palm civet, but with night walks you just cannot always see what you know is there.... With all the tree hyraxes calling throughout the night here, I finally realized that the calls and eyeshine I had seen in the Usambara's must have been from Eastern tree hyraxes, I just didn't make the link between these crazy calls and hyraxes....
The next day was Mangabey day. The Sanje mangabey is a mangabey that was only discovered relatively recently to science and only occurs in a few forest blocks in the Udzungwa mountains, fortunately some researchers have made successful attempts to habituate these mangabeys to human presence and they have succeeded with 2 groups. One group is followed by researchers, the other by tourists

. The mangabey group we were looking for lived very close to our camp, but some English tourists had spend quite some time climbing steep slopes to find them, given the fact that most of them were past retirement age, that must have been challenging. We were thus very glad that one of the trackers met us and said they were very close today. I was a bit skeptical because we heard the same when going for the chimpanzees in Gombe and that took us 3 hours.... These mangabeys however proved much easier and within 5 minutes walking from the camp we were in the middle of a group. Unlike the mangabeys you normally find in western zoos, Sanje mangabeys are completely gray and a bit smaller as well. On pictures they look pretty boring, but following a group of about 20-30 of these monkeys through the undergrowth is pretty amazing, given the fact they are completely ignorant of people (if you read the accounts of the people who habituated them, it becomes clear the first years they were not like this

). As we walked with chimpanzees just 2 weeks earlier it was obvious to compare mangabeys and chimps and that is an unfair comparisons. With chimpanzees you almost like you are among fellow humans and their intelligence is obvious. Mangabeys are "just" monkeys though and it was cool to spend time with them, but the connection was just not there. They would just ignore us completely and go on with playing and foraging. After one hours or so we had seen enough and we both did not feel extremely well, as we had eaten something wrong, so the rest of the day was spent lying around and preparing for the travel home the day after... I did see a nice group of
Retz's helmetshrikes though, which made me very happy, as these birds are part of my favourite bird family (vanga's and helmetshrikes).
At our last day in Tanzania we were welcomed at breakfast by a group of
Angolan black-and-white colobuses which had decided to pick the shrubs opposite the restaurant as their spot for the morning. Unfortunately we had to leave quickly to catch the bus to Dar-es-Salaam, but it was a nice last goodbye to a wonderful place. I really want to go back to the Udzungwa mountains, as we only had the chance to see the eastern slopes, but these mountains harbor so much more, including an endemic giant sengi, so I guess I have to get back one day.
As mentioned earlier the main highway to Dar transverses Mikumi national park and fortunately we had a window seat, so we could do some game spotting during the 45 minute drive through the park, we were quite successful and saw multiple
African elephants, Masai giraffes, Crawshays zebra, tons of
Impala and also some
Buffalo, Eland and the only
Marabou of the whole trip... Unfortunately no wildebeest, but you can't have it all

. The rest of the drive was pretty unremarkable with the usual traffic jam upon entering Dar, but our surprise came when we got out of the bus at the main bus terminal: we were met by an honest taxi driver. This guy actually quoted the right price when we asked to give us a ride, I was so baffled by this and it explained why bargaining was useless, as there was not much to bargain over.... After picking up some extra luggage and eating a final pizza we took another taxi to the airport for our midnight flight. When driving past rows of palm trees I wondered what all these house crows were doing, until I realized that there were swarms of hundreds of
Straw-colored fruit bats flying through the city at dusk... That was a nice goodbye from Tanzania and a good end to a fantastic holiday there. The shock could not have been greater when I arrived at my home in the Swiss jura and noticed it was -10, especially because I "enjoyed" the 38 degrees of Dar just the day before....
All in all I had an amazing holiday and including my time in Amani I saw 65 mammal species and I guess over 300 bird species in this wonderful country. When looking back I definately want to go back to Lake Tanganyika and it's chimps, but also more time in both Kitulo and Udzungwa would be wonderful. I will go back for a short while to Tanzania in January and I hope I do get a chance to visit the Serengeti then or see Kilimanjaro... I have now seen most major national parks in Tanzania, except the ones where all the tourists go. This is something good in it's own way, but there is also a reason why tourists flock to the Serengeti and apart from the great migration there is one animal I really want to see, as it has been eluding me for years now: the leopard. That said; I would trait sightings of an Abbot's duiker over any leopard immediately
The next trip has already been booked, but that won't be Africa this time, but a hell of a lot colder and windier and will involve elephant seals instead of elephants...