Ngorongoro Crater: A Wildlife and Wild Space Wonder of the World

A Safari In A Class Of Its Own Through Ngorongoro Crater

Ngorongoro Crater is a veritable dreamscape. Today, visiting this beautiful, special safari destination, it is easy to lose touch with the seismic, apocalyptic event that created the crater.

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Ngorongoro Crater Story | What To Pack for Ngorongoro, Tanzania | Quick Travel Tips for a Ngorongoro Safari |


Ngorongoro Crater by The Safari Store

It had been a long day in the car. We had left Serengeti National Park and took in the views of the Ngorongoro Conservation Area from some jaw juddering rutted roads. The scenery went from uninhabited vastness to the elegance of the Maasai going about their day. We drove past Olduvai Gorge – a place that connects us to earliest man and standing mankind to Africa. This was a view of the world captured in time.


Eventually, undulating landscapes took us through villages and big scenery surrounded us. Loliondo, an ‘unnamed village’ on Google Maps, Maasai playing soccer in the dust, watched by dogs. We drove down into valleyed wetlands, sighing amazement at what must have been thousands of birds. We climbed into highlands, directly into the view that had so dwarfed us until we saw the sign for the Ngorongoro Crater gate.

We pulled off the road and looked out from the viewpoint. I was in disbelief. This incredible natural wonder of the world is profoundly stirring. A haze covered much of the bowl of the caldera with the exit of daylight. We were surrounded by the most exquisite, thick forest – a shock of trees that was unexpected. This is a place that beams its beauty beyond the crater bowl – and it is a place made even more beautiful by the presence of the Maasai, their villages and daily lives.


We arrived at our busy campsite outside the crater, with the famous Ngorongoro Crater Lodge balancing on the rim in the distance. In the darkness, a leopard rasped and lions roared from this giant cauldron below us. We were up at first light and drove down to the gate through mist with a Highland colour palette that made me feel completely lost in the world for a moment. Even shukas are tartan-esque if you think too much about it. →


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Ngorongoro Safari - by The Safari Store

The Mosaic of the Crater Floor
The crater floor of Ngorongoro Crater has a collection of different ecosystems - rich environments that include swamps, the soda lake of Lake Magadi, shortgrass plains, and acacia woodlands.

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Augur Buzzard, Ngorongoro Crater - by The Safari Store

We went through the gate just as the sun was rising. A new day over Ngorongoro Crater. Game viewers raced past us, but we paused on the road down from the rim as if contemplating the shift into another dimension. This was some Disney wonderland situated on, in, and around a huge volcanic crater. About 2,5 million years ago, the massive eruption caused the volcano to collapse in on itself creating an enormous caldera – the world’s largest terrestrial intact caldera that isn’t a lake.


Today, this is an amphitheatre that creates an ideal mise-en-scene for incredible wildlife activity to play out every day in seclusion from the rest of the world. This extinct volcano is brimming with life. It is a terrarium of different ecosystems – home to more than 30 000 mammals and one of the largest lion populations in the world.


With that kind of context, it is a place that can’t help but feel mystical, otherworldly even. From the rim, the sun rose over Lake Magadi and we watched the meditative silhouette of an Augur Buzzard perched in a euphorbia as the crater filled with colour. The magic of the world has collected in this beautiful place and it was impossible for me to ignore the majesty of life in a place borne of devastation and desolation. →





Lake Magadi, Ngorongoro Crater - by The Safari Store

Dust in the Dawn
Top Tip: Go into the Ngorongoro Crater as the gates open. This gives the incredible luxury of quiet drives and beautiful golden light.

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We watched the game viewers pick their routes and head off around the lake. We inched our way down the rim road, taking in every perfect moment of being in this special place. We decided to go in a different direction to the operators and headed towards the fever trees of the Lerai Forest. Flamingos pinked the shoreline and elephants were dwarfed by the crater walls.


As we went into an open area, buffalo grazed in the marsh and we realised that the grass was alive with the heaving bellies of sleeping lions. One pair would get up and mate, followed by another. Lions would lift their heads and look, shift and move – all with the far wall of the crater in the distance. Cranes flew overhead and, in the candyfloss early morning light of Ngorongoro, I felt like I was in a fantasy land – one with dangerous game sometimes secreted away. From watching herons fishing to looking up at pink flocks of flying flamingos and regal pelicans, every square inch of this place is alive with fascination and wonder.


As the morning went on, our experience shifted. From being completely alone, the crater quickly filled with game viewers. You could see where the action was by the volume of stationary game viewers in the distance. This tactic led us to a busy sighting around a pride of red-faced lions on a zebra kill next to the road, panting in the heat. The herd moved in the background behind them and a hyena watched nearby, low in the grass. →

Ngorongoro Crater Wildlife - Lions - by The Safari Store


Lions would lift their heads and look, shift and move – all with the far wall of the crater in the distance.
Flamingos at Lake Magadi, Ngorongoro Crater - by The Safari Store

Bush Blush
Whether they are feeding along the shore or taking off in great flocks, flamingos add a pink tinge to the landscape in the Ngorongoro Crater.

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Ngorongoro Crater Wildlife - Elephant - by The Safari Store

As with so many safari experiences, branching away from the crowds has the potential to yield for-your-eyes-only sightings. We headed away from everyone, leaving another lion, and went up Engitati Hill to take in the herds and views from up high. A giant elephant bull with a single, thick tusk watched us under heavy-lidded eyes and long lashes. Another mash of cars ahead made us check through our binos and there, shimmering in the heat haze, was a beautiful black rhino – a horned jewel out in open grassland being admired by a long line of cars.


As we circled round to the exit, we decided to pass by the spot where we had seen the lions first thing that morning. Few creatures have the tenacity of these mating cats. Out in the sun’s heat, panting and together, we saw them in the grass where we had left them hours before.


We drove out of the crater through the cracked shade of the rim’s forest. Up and up we climbed. The gate felt like a portal to another dimension. My heart was filled with the day’s experiences, a story closed with climbing canopies of trees. We stood at the viewpoint and looked into the crater. Exploring this incredible biosphere had been like living through the microscope, with the wildlife and detail undetectable from this vantage point.


Ngorongoro is said to be the name given to the echoing sound of a cow bell. I love the idea that there is something that so quintessentially resonates the place of Maasai pastoralists in this unique landscape, with villages that surround it like a button. To me, it is a word that is so much like a heartbeat – giving life to a dream-come-true experience. After writing this story, research alerted me to the fact that there is a secondary, cultural interpretation of the word that means 'gift of life', so there is a heartbeat in there - ancient and steady - after all. →

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Ngorongoro Crater Rhino - by The Safari Store

Iconic Wildlife
Every rhino sighting is a privilege, but spotting this incredible species in this landscape is something special. The best sightings need binos.

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Lerai Forest, Ngorongoro Crater - by The Safari Store

Lerai Forest
The Lerai Forest gets its name from the Maasai word for the yellow-barked fever trees. This wooded area secrets away birds, leopard, and herds of elephants among the boughs.

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How To Prepare and What To Pack for a Ngorongoro Safari

What To Pack for a Tanzania Safari to Ngorongoro Crater - by The Safari Store

What To Wear on Your Ngorongoro Safari
Get Ngorongoro-ready with the best safari clothes and accessories.

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Ngorongoro Crater Wildlife - Gazelle - by The Safari Store

The Circle of Life
Every day, the spectacular interplay of age-old new life, death, and survival plays out.

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Lions in Ngorongoro Crater - by The Safari Store

Alive with Lions
The Ngorongoro Crater has one of the highest densities of lions in Africa. Look out for the movement of tawny forms in the grass.

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Aerial View of Ngorongoro Crater - by The Safari Store

View From the Top
The viewing decks along the rim of the Ngorongoro Crater are great stops for aerial views.

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Tanzania Links:
Ngorongoro Destination Story | What To Pack for Ngorongoro | Quick Travel Tips for Ngorongoro Crater | Serengeti Balloon Safari | The Great Wildebeest Migration | Serengeti National Park Overview | Southern Serengeti, the Ngorongoro Conservation Area, Ndutu, and Olduvai | Central Serengeti, Seronera, and Grumeti | Northern Serengeti, Kogatende, and the Mara River | Quick Travel Tips For Serengeti National Park | What To Pack For a Serengeti Safari | Steve's Top 5 Packing Tips for a Tanzania Safari