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Half day, 5 hours door to door
No Cancellation
Unlimited
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This is for birders and anyone who wants one genuinely odd, memorable wildlife encounter without a full safari budget. The shoebill is a huge, prehistoric-looking stork that stands motionless in papyrus swamp, and Mabamba, twenty minutes from Entebbe, is one of the most reliable places on the continent to see one.
Pickup from Entebbe hotels starts around 5.30am to 6am. That early start is not for effect. Shoebills feed at dawn and retreat into cover as the heat and boat traffic build, so sightings drop off sharply after 9am. At the landing site you transfer into a narrow wooden canoe, either paddled or with a small outboard, with a local guide who reads the swamp for movement and knows the birds’ usual territories. You glide through channels cut into the papyrus, watching for the grey silhouette standing still at the water’s edge. Alongside the shoebill you will likely see jacanas, herons, kingfishers and, with luck, the odd otter or monitor lizard. The search itself takes 90 minutes to two hours; sightings are common but not guaranteed, since this is a wild bird, not an exhibit. After the canoe you head back to Entebbe, usually arriving by 10am or 11am, with time left for the Uganda Wildlife Education Centre or a late breakfast.
Budget USD 60 to 90 per person, covering transport from Entebbe, canoe hire, guide fees and the community wetland access fee. Larger groups bring the per-person cost down since the canoe and guide fee are largely fixed. Kampala pickups cost more due to the extra hour each way.
Send us your dates and hotel, and we will arrange a licensed local canoe guide and reply within 24 hours.
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