| Queen Elizabeth National Park |
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Situated in the west of Uganda, the Queen Elizabeth Park became a wildlife reserve out of a natural emigration from the area at the turn of the twentieth century. Rinderpest, a tick-borne disease, and the tsetse fly drove out humans and cattle, but the game remained. It was gazetted in 1952 when Queen Elizabeth II visited the area. In the Kikorondo area, plains give way to the sensuous cones of extinct volcanoes, some of which are filled with beautiful crater lakes. The most spectacular game viewing takes place by boat on the Kazinga Channel, which connects Lake Edward with its smaller brother, Lake George. The channel is packed with thousands of hippos and multitudes of fish-eating birds. The southern Ishasha sector of the park, lying in the shadow of the Virunga Mountains of Zaire [CONGO], has huge grasslands that stretch out with grazing topi, kob and buffalo. In the old fig trees you can sometimes see tree-climbing lions.
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