Kora
National Park
Background
Information
The Kora National Park was gazetted in 1973 as a reserve and
gazetted as a park in 1990. It comprises of an area of a little
over 1700 km2. This triangle of dense woodland and scrub is
limited along its 65 km northern boundary by the Tana River,
which rises in the highlands between Aberdares and Mount Kenya,
before commencing its 700 km passage to the Indian Ocean.
The western boundary follows a straight line from Tana River
which a joint boundary with the adjacent Mwingi N. Reserve,
while the eastern boundry runs along Mwitamyisi River.
The
land surface slopes gently from an altitude of 490m in the
south-west and about 270m in the north-east. Central areas
comprise of an undulating peneplain through which Basement
ridges protrude above the surface as rocky inselbergs the
highest of which are Mansumbi 488 m, Kumbulanwa 450m and Kora
Rock 442m. The park also has several seasonal rivers.
Location:
Coast region, Tana District and covers 1,787 km2.
HOW
TO GET THERE
Roads:
Kora is 280 km to the north-east of Nairobi. Access is via
Thika to Mwingi then north-east through Kyuso village. A bridge
across the Tana River joins the park with Meru National Park.
Airstrips:
There is an airstrip that is used for reserve's administration.
With another airstrip about 10km away on the eastern side.
Park
Roads:
The park has a road network.
MAJOR
ATTRACTIONS
Pristine
wilderness, Inselbergs, Tana River with Adamson's Falls, Grand
Falls and Kora rapids, diverse birdlife George Adamson's grave.
ACTIVITIES
Game
viewing, rock climbing, fishing in River Tana.
Park entry fees |