There are more than five hundred elephants in Zakouma National Park, forming one of the largest populations in Central Africa. They’re an impressive sight to behold, but what’s surprising is not just the size of the herd. It’s the fact that there are any elephants left in Zakouma at all. Until 2010 this wilderness area in Chad was effectively under siege from heavily armed poaching groups who, in the space of just a decade, reduced elephant numbers in the park by 90 percent.
But then the Chadian government took the bold move of handing over management of Zakouma, and the wider ecosystem with its migratory corridors, to the non-profit conservation organisation, African Parks. And now, some of the best-trained, best-equipped rangers on the continent patrol here, with the result that poaching within the park boundaries has fallen to near zero and wildlife populations, so long in steep decline, are finally improving. Once on the brink of destruction, today Zakouma is the safari destination of choice for those in the know.
“Whenever people ask me where the most exciting place is to go on safari right now, I always say that Zakouma has to be near the top,” says Tom Clode, founder of our partner Pictus Safaris, who organises our
Zakouma tours.
And what is it exactly that makes this park so special?
“I think there are three reasons: the geography, the animals, and the story.”
Let’s start with the geography.
Located in the south-east corner of Chad, with rainforest to the south and the vast Sahara to the north, Zakouma is, as Tom points out, the closest place to Europe where you can see the Big Five: elephants, lions, leopards, rhinos and buffaloes. The park is composed of several interlinked ecosystems so that, even at the height of the parched dry season, the wildlife has places it can retreat to until the climate suits it better.
Antelope such as kob and tiang fall prey to big cats on savanna grasslands, buffalo splash over the floodplains, and rare Kordofan giraffes munch thoughtfully along the treetops of verdant forest. “Because they’re so sensitive to poaching and conflict, giraffes are a kind of bellwether for the overall health of an ecosystem,” continues Tom. “If they’re doing well, as they are in Zakouma, then it says a lot.”
There are abundant smaller animals here too, including servals, aardvarks and pale foxes that are likely to be new even to experienced safari-goers.