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Expert Reviews – Shimba Hills NR
Stuart is a travel writer and author of numerous Lonely Planet guidebooks, including 'Kenya', 'Rwanda' and 'Tanzania'.
3 people found this review helpful.
Bush and Beach
This very underrated reserve is less than an hours drive from Diani Beach, the biggest beach resort in Kenya, and is ideal for an easy morning game drive. True the wildlife variety and concentrations don’t come close to Kenya’s big name parks and reserves but for a break from the beach and a taste of the bush it couldn’t be better. Many hotels in Diani and elsewhere along the south coast organize half or full day packages to the reserve which often includes (a very mediocre) lunch at the Shimba Lodge.
I’ve always enjoyed my visits to Shimba Hills and the quantity of wildlife has generally exceeded expectations. The park is best-known for the huge, graceful sable antelope and indeed this is the only place in Kenya that they can be seen. The park is also known for its elephant as well as a good mix of antelope. Whilst I have only ever seen a couple of elephants here I have seen sable antelope on each visit as well as plenty of buffalo, warthog, impala and a few giraffe. One of the highlights of a visit for me is the short (ranger-led) walk through the forest to the impressive Sheldrick Falls. There aren’t many parks or reserves you can walk in so don’t miss this opportunity.
If you come to Shimba Hills expecting wildlife on the scale of the Masai Mara then you will leave disappointed but lower your expectations somewhat and you’ll likely find this a highly rewarding park. I would say that it’s best for those with limited time and who just want a little sample of the Kenyan bush, but most of all I would recommend this park to anyone with younger children: the short distances, good roads and low costs combined with just enough animals to keep interest levels from flagging put this park alongside Nairobi and Nakuru national parks as the best for families.
Philip is an acclaimed travel writer and author of many guidebooks, including the Bradt guides to Uganda, Tanzania, Kenya and South Africa.
7 people found this review helpful.
Sables, Squirrels And Bush Babies
Shimba Hills doesn’t compare with Kenya’s finest in terms of overall game viewing, but this small reserve offers much to wildlife connoisseurs and it’s a great overnight add-on to a beach holiday, situated less than an hour’s drive from Mombasa and the resorts of Diani Beach. It is the only place in Kenya that supports the sable antelope, and I’ve successfully spotted the handsome male – with its black coat and backward-curved horns – on four of my five previous visits. I’ve also had good luck here with elephant, buffalo and other antelope, but large predators are rare and/or secretive. A highlight of my most recent visit was a guided walk to Sheldrick Falls, a free activity that leaves at 10am and 2pm daily and offers an opportunity to explore the forested slopes overlooking Diani Beach on foot. A wonderful feature of the reserve is its only lodge, which feels like a rambling, overgrown treehouse rising from above a jungle-swathed waterhole. Elephant often come to drink here, while regular avian visitors include trumpeter hornbill, African fish eagle and green-headed oriole. The real show-stealers, however, are the beautiful red-bellied coast squirrels that clamber around the building on the daylight shift, and the bug-eyed greater bush babies that take over from them after dark. Great fun!
Mike is an award-winning wildlife writer, former editor of Travel Zambia magazine and author of the Bradt Guide to Southern African Wildlife.
2 people found this review helpful.
Hilltop retreat
This little jewel of a reserve is nestled among attractive hills just an hour’s drive inland from some of Kenya’s most popular beach resorts. It can’t offer the Big Five drama of Tsavo or Masai Mara, but you will see plenty of wildlife – from colobus monkeys in the forest clefts to Kenya’s only sable antelope in the rolling grassland. Most significant, perhaps, are the 600-plus elephant: this growing population is damaging much of the precious indigenous forest, so a corridor has been created to allow the pachyderms access to land outside the park. Big game aside, this is a great place to get to know smaller wildlife, from monitor lizards to warthogs.
To get a good feel for the landscape I highly recommend the 2km hike to Sheldrick Falls – escorted by a ranger, if you’d rather not risk a solo meeting with the odd buffalo or elephant. The falls are impressive, the forest bird life rich, and it’s a rare chance to feel the bush underfoot – something that may not arise during the rest of your Kenyan safari.
My one visit was a day-trip, so I did not stay overnight at the Shimba Hills Lodge. But this old timber construction is known for its pleasant bush ambience, especially after dark, when game visits the floodlit waterhole and nocturnal species, including bushbaby and genet, swing by the terrace in search of snacks.
Lizzie is a reputed guidebook writer and author of the Footprint guides to South Africa, Namibia, Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda and Zimbabwe.
4 people found this review helpful.
A short excursion to see a variety of large mammals near the coast
Shimba Hills is less than an hour’s drive from Diani Beach and is characterised by coastal rainforest and patches of rolling grasslands. Its home to a variety of large mammals and is best-known for its herds of buffalo and elephant and being one of the few places in Kenya to see sable antelope. Our short safari was pretty eventful; our guide pointed out spoor and we saw monkeys and birds on our walk to the impressive Sheldrick Falls, on the Lango Plains we saw graceful sable, and from the look-out at Giriama Point, entrancing views of the Indian Ocean. A day trip here is rewarding and includes lunch at Shimba Lodge, from where elephant viewing is virtually guaranteed from the wooden balconies. The hills are much cooler than the coast making it a refreshing excursion.
Ariadne is a renowned African wildlife photographer whose work is featured in many well-known guidebooks and magazines.
1 person found this review helpful.
Shimba Hills, the last refuge for sable antelopes in Kenya
This very accessible coastal reserve is a real gem. Sables are one of my favourite antelopes and this park, the only sanctuary in Kenya for these majestic antelopes, is one of the best places to see them in Africa. The sable antelopes here are in fact localized sub-species under the name of Roosevelt’s sable.
The park is small and you should be able to take most of it in during a day visit from any of the coastal resorts nearby, but if you stay the night at Shimba lodge you’ll get a real feel for the surrounding forest. The stilted lodge overlooks a waterhole, which attract a stream of forest dwellers including elephant and buffalo. A real delight for me, are the striking red-bellied coast squirrels and the nocturnal greater galagos, which seem to have taken resident around the lodge.
Emma is an award-winning travel writer for Rough Guides, National Geographic Traveller, Travel Africa magazine and The Independent.
4 people found this review helpful.
Herds of sable antelope, close to the Indian Ocean
Despite being within easy driving distance of the hugely popular Indian Ocean resort of Diani Beach, Shimba Hills receives relatively few visitors. It’s a modest park, but I found it enjoyable for a quick visit, and a refreshing change from the coastal strip in every way – not least because it’s considerably less humid up here, and there’s an excellent forest safari lodge with a raised wildlife viewing platform.
The hills are a lush and pleasant mixture of tropical woodland and grassland. You’ll definitely see elephants here – a translocation programme reduced their numbers in recent years, but there are still plenty left. It’s also fairly easy to see sable antelope – this is the only park in Kenya where these magnificent creatures are found. Other species you may encounter include ostriches and buffalo.