Overview

Our one day safari with the Hadzabe people is worthwhile, as you get to know how they live and hunt. Hadzabe are an endangered people, having lost 90%  of their ancestral land. They subsist entirely off the bush and by bow hunting. Everything they use is made from local materials, including their bows which are strung with giraffe tendons and their arrows which are coated in lethal poison.

1 Day 22 Nov, 23 Nov, 24 Nov, and more Lake Eyasi, Tanzania
Itinerary

Lake Eyasi is a seasonal shallow endorheic salt lake on the floor of the Great Rift Valley at the base of the Serengeti Plateau, just south of the Serengeti National Park and immediately southwest of the Ngorongoro Crater in the Crater Highlands of Tanzania. The lake is elongated, orientated southwest to northeast, and lies in the Eyasi-Wembere branch of the Great Rift Valley.

The Hadzabe Bushmen live in this region, as do the Datoga and Mbulu tribes.

A visit with the Bushmen is worthwhile and they will graciously show you where and how they live and hunt. They subsist entirely off the bush and by bow hunting. Everything they use is made from local materials, including their bows which are strung with giraffe tendon and their arrows which are coated in lethal poison. Their language resembles that of Kalahari Bushmen tribe (who were featured in the 1980 film ‘The Gods Must Be Crazy’) with clicking noises used.

The Datoga and Mbulu people are pastoralists, like the Masai people

Inclusions/Exclusions
What we'll give. What we won't

What is included in the tour

  • Park entrance fee
  • Transportation
  • Water & packed lunches
Pickup point
Starting Point
Lake Eyasi, Tanzania View on Map