Tanzania’s Mount
Kilimanjaro, affectionately known as Kili, is the tallest mountain
in Africa and the third highest in the world. Snow-capped and not
yet extinct, at 5 895 metres it’s the highest free standing
mountain in the world comprising one extinct volcano, Shira at 3 962
metres, and two dormant volcanoes, Mawenzi 5 149 metres, and Kibo
5 894 metres. Kibo was still active 360 000 years ago but all three
peaks have been pretty well behaved since then.
Kili isn’t part
of a high mountain range but rises in complete isolation. Its towering
snow-capped, symmetrical cone is a world-recognised image of Africa. It
stands up so unexpectedly from Tanzania’s flat plains that if
you drive past when Kili is covered by cloud, you could miss it altogether
without realising it was there.
A World Heritage site since 1989,
the Kilimanjaro National Park covers an area of approximately 755
sq km. It is about 120 kms from Arusha - though the nearest large town
is Moshi - and 90 km from the Kilimanjaro International Airport. The
mountain creates a micro-climate and the rain-shadow to the south
and east supplies Arusha and Moshi with superbly fertile land full
of banana groves and coffee plantations. There are many explanations
for how the mountain got its name. It could have been derived from
the Swahili word kilima which means 'top of the hill', though there
is a Tanzanian beer called Kilimanjaro so perhaps the great mountain
was named in its honour!
Climbing Kili is the adventure of a lifetime for many visitors
to Tanzania, and about 20 000 people climb it every year. It’s
the highest 'walkable' mountain in the world. It can be climbed
without ropes or technical expertise and is the world’s most
visited mountain. The mountain supports a unique combination of
climatic zones that take you on the equivalent of a trip from the
equator to the Arctic in just over a few days.
The grassy cultivated
lower slopes lead up into rich rainforest inhabited by leopard,
elephant, antelope and buffalo. Above the forest is moorland dotted
with giant lobelias and massive heathers. The barren and
cold Alpine desert is just below the snow line. Between four and five
thousand metres the temperature of this desert zone ranges from
subzero at night to 30°C during the day. The
oxygen level is half that of sea level. At the top, there are permanent
glaciers. The ice cap on Kibo peak is 2.25 km wide, but like Mount
Kenya, Kili’s glaciers have started to erode because of global
warming. The ice is receding at such a rate that there is concern
it may disappear completely within the next 20 years - 33% of Kili’s
ice has disappeared in the last two decades, 82% since 1912.
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