Monday, October 8, 2012

THE KASANKA BAT MIGRATION – ONE OF WORLD’S HIGHEST-RATED WILDLIFE SPECTACLES


Robin Pope Safaris (RPS), a classic safari company known for its innovative safaris, invites wildlife lovers on a unique and exotic excursion – the annual Bat Migration to Kasanka, Zambia’s smallest national park.

The Kasanka Bat safari package starts at US$4243 per person sharing, and comprises three nights at RPS’ Nkwali Camp, three nights in Kasanka National Park and one night in Lusaka. Included: round-trip internal flights to and from Lusaka; all safari costs.  Excluded: international airfares, Visa and airport departure taxes.

Set departures:  November 23, 2012; November 22, 2013. Alternative dates can be booked for late November, early December, but rates will vary.

In the center of Kasanka National Park in Zambia’s north lies 100-acre Fibwe Forest, host to an extraordinary phenomenon – the annual visitation of some 10 million, “straw-colored fruit bats.” When in full swing, the bats of Kasanka form the highest mammal concentration in Africa, and most likely the world. Each bat weighs 8.82 ounces.  As numbers reach up to 10 million, the skies are weighed down with 5,505,267 pounds of fruitbats!  As RPS’ Emily Haynes mused, “This is equivalent to 700 elephants flying around.  All I can say is, ‘Poor trees,’ as the bats all come to roost.”

Of the Kasanka Bat Safari, trailblazer and veteran safari-goer Jo Pope said, “I have spent three hours with half a million King Penguins on South Georgia, so my wildlife bar is high, but the bats impressed, inspired and left me awestruck!”

The bats take off from their roosts at dusk and fill the skies, turning the sunset almost black, as they disappear for a night of foraging in the ripening fruit trees. They return again at dawn, and take up their cozy spots next to each other high up in the trees, covering the trunks like thick icing, as branches buckle under their weight. Best time to witness the phenomenon is pre-dawn. Standing in a 60-foot tree-top hide watching the roosting bats and the raptors hunting them is a sensory phenomenon like no other, not only for its visual effect, but for the sound of pulsating life. 

Kasanka National Park is also regarded as one of the country’s best birding destinations, inhabited by no fewer than 457 different species.  It’s home, too, to elephants, sitatungas (swamp-dwelling antelopes), hippos, bush pigs and blue monkeys.

For more information visit  www.robinpopesafaris.net

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