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Rwenzori Mountains National Park - Uganda, Residential tourist dairy 21-26 July 2020

After the long COVID-19 pandemic lockdown, I got an opportunity to join 6 days hiking expenditure from Kampala to Rwenzori Mountains National Park along with a  team of 10 tourists from 8 different counties (Nepal, United Kingdom, the Netherlands, France, San Salvador, Germany, and Belgium). 

The Rwenzori Mountains National Park is located at Rwenzori Mountain in Ugandan  and is recoznized as UNESCO World Heritage Site. Having an area of 1,000 km2 (386 sq mi),  the park has many other touristic plase such as Africa's third highest mountain peak, waterfallslakes, and glaciers. The park is known for its beautiful plant life. The highest peak of the Ruwenzori is 5,109 meters (16,762 ft) high, and the range's upper regions are permanently snow-capped and glaciated. Rivers fed by mountain streams form one of the sources of the Nile (Wikipedia).  

The 4 days hiking trip were managed by Rwenzori Mountaineering Services (RMS) and Ruboni Community Camp (RCC), which is situated at the gateway of the Rwenzori Mountains National Park. The RCC is fully owned and run by the community, where all profits go to the local community. RMS/RCC provided tour guides, porters, chefs, and medical nurses which includes a total of 32 support members from the community. The participation of the local community in tourism management is an important aspect of building ownership and to contribute towards tourism sustainability. My professional eyes heading to some simple observation and my own analytical lean go to community mobilization, employment, economic impact, contribution to the livelihood, and community ownerships. Well, I paid $473 for my tour service apart from other expenses for 4 days in the park. Tentatively, I cross-checked, how it was distributed in different connections and services provided at the local level. The above calculation is based on my informal information and estimation. 

I am from Nepal, a country of Himalayas and the birthplace of Lord Buddha, where several such national parks and touristic destinations are located. I visited a few of them such as, Khaptad national park, Bardiya National Park, Sauraha National Park, and Suklaphat National Park. I was not much aware of the relationship between local people and wildlife authority I mean at a micro-level benefits sharing mechanism. However, I was a witness of such a wonderful resource sharing relationship between community and wildlife. Apparently, as a tourist and as an observer,  I have dared to capture some notes:
  • Community participation, ownership, awareness, and adoptive relationship with Uganda Wildlife Authority (WUA), Rwenzori Mountains National Park. I.e. use of different resources, maintenance, and waste management, and cleaning.
  • Local-level employment creation (average $4.17/day excluding tips and RCC profit) – a minimum of around 100 days/year employment in normal time. Community-level benefits from wildlife – around 120 train tour guides, 1500 porters, 40 cafes are directly involved with the local community. Additional involvement from local level – professional chefs and medical nurses.
  • Participation of local-level service providers both community based and entrepreneurs, we paid our entry fee through a service provider and all tour coordination through local-level institutions called Rwenzori Mountaineering Services (RMS). 


Thank you Adrian Ouvry, Jan Bakker, and all team members for making a memorable and joyful trip.
 Chiranjibi, 27 July 2020

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