Bwamba Forest in Semuliki National Park: One of the several forests located within Semuliki National Park is Bwamba Forest. Bwamba is found in Semuliki National Park, which is home to East Africa’s sole lowland tropical rainforest. Semuliki National Park, located in the western Ugandan province of Bundibugyo, includes Bwamba Forest.
Numerous bird species can be found in the forest, which is also home to several of the creatures that have been observed in Semuliki National Park. While on safari in Semuliki National Park, visitors can explore the Bwamba Forest and engage in a variety of on-site tourism activities.
The region that was gazetted as a Semuliki game reserve in 1932 included Bwamba Forest. Bwamba Forest was gazetted by the government in 1993 when it was gazetting the park, and it is now a component of Semuliki National Park. With a total area of 220 square kilometers, Semuliki National Park is a tiny territory that the government is working very hard to preserve.
During a safari in Semuliki National Park, visitors can explore the park’s Bwamba Forest and participate in a variety of activities there. Tourists have a list of things to do when they visit the forest because it contains a variety of vegetation and wildlife types. The most popular activities in Semuliki National Park’s Bwamba Forest are listed below.
Top activities that to do in Bwamba forest in Semuliki national park
Birdwatching
Because Bwamba Forest is so close to Semuliki National Park, visitors who enjoy bird viewing frequently stop by the area. This woodland is home to a number of documented bird species, and visitors can get a better view of them by walking around the region. You can visit as many bird species as possible in the Bwamba forest with the help of a knowledgeable birder or a local birding guide.
Blue-headed Coucal, Shoebill, Yellow-Throughed Cuckoo, Klaas’s Cuckoo, Yellow-Throughed Tinkerbird, Little Greenbul, Brown-chested alethe, Hairy-Breathed Barbet, African Grey Parrot, Grey-crowned Crane, African Palm Swift, Wahlberg’s eagle, Mountain Buzzard, Brown Snake Eagle, White-Throughed Blue Swallow, Black-Winged Stilt, African sacred ibis, white crested hornbill, Red-chested Cuckoo, and Ayres’s Hawk Eagle are among the birds that can be found in Bwamba Forest.
Common sandpiper, African pied hornbill, blue-cheeked bee eater, barn swallow, lesser stripped swallow, little egret, green-white-eye, white-thighed hornbill, piping hornbill, African harrier hawk, bronze naped pigeon, olive sunbird, grey-headed sunbird, blue-spotted wood dove, lizard buzzard, African woolly-necked stork, white-spotted flufftail, long crested eagle, yellow-breasted forest robin, spur-winged lawping, and grey kestrel.
African pygmy kingfisher, wood sandpiper, black and white casqued hornbill, black billed barbet, northern grey-headed sparrow, scarlet-chested sunbird, mackinnon’s shrike, golden-crowned woodpecker, magnificent starling, speckled tinkerbird, black bee eater, rufous flycatcher thrush, fire crested alethe, yellow-whiskered greenbul, violet-backed starling, rufous flycatcher thrush, blue throated roller, and black and white casqued hornbill.
Among these are the following: rufous side broadbill, little stint, rufous greenbul, olive-bellied sunbird, grey-backed fiscal, African dwarf kingfisher, cattle egret, red-tailed greenbul, red-tailed bristlebill, xavier’s greenbul, palmnut vulture, red-tailed ant thrush, rameron pigeon, red-rumped tinkerbird, lesser bristlebill, western nicator, yellow-footed flycatcher, little stint, rufous side broadbill, little bee eater, yellow-billed barbet, and purple-headed starling, to name a few.
Nature hikes
By participating in nature walk activities, visitors to Bwamba Forest can get up close and personal with the natural world. Due of security concerns, armed ranger guides lead the nature hikes at this park. The majority of the forest’s areas are accessible to visitors via a variety of routes. Visitors can encounter a variety of wildlife, plants, and water sources while on the nature walks.
Forest elephants, Semuliki red colobus, mantled guereza, red-tailed monkey, de brazza’s monkey, olive baboon, grey-cheeked mangabey, bush squirrel, Uganda kob, bat, side-striped jackal, sitatunga, and warthog are among the creatures that visitors can see while on nature walks in Bwamba forest.
When should I Visit Bwamba Forest?
Visitors to Semuliki National Park can explore the Bwamba Forest whenever they’d like while on a safari. Although the forest is accessible for a variety of activities throughout the year, the best time to visit is during the dry season when the trekking routes are dry and manageable. In addition to having less vegetation, the months of June through September and December through February offer excellent vistas of wildlife.

