By the third morning in Rwanda, as shy hippos surfaced ahead of our boat on Lake Ihema, showing themselves just long enough for us to spot them before slipping back underwater, I realized the gorillas would have serious competition. Before the trip, I knew Volcanoes National Park would be the climax. It was the experience people asked about first, the one I kept picturing, and the one that made the whole itinerary feel unreal until I was standing at the edge of the forest in Volcanoes National Park. To be fair, the obsession makes sense.
Gorilla trekking in Rwanda was extraordinary. Even in a trip packed with moments I’ll remember, those hours in the forest are the ones that stretched me most. By the time I reached Volcanoes National Park, I felt grateful for all that Rwanda had already given me up to that moment, from shy hippos in Akagera to tea fields in Gisakura, Lake Kivu by boat, and a community meal near the Virunga Mountains. The gorillas were still the climax, but they arrived inside a trip that already had so much life in it.
Visit Rwanda organized the 11-day trip, and the itinerary gave each region enough room to leave an impression. Kigali opened with memory, museums, cranes, and city life. Akagera brought the first wildlife jolt on Lake Ihema. The southwest carried us into Nyungwe’s rainforest, Gisakura’s tea fields, and Karongi’s lake mornings. In the north, community visits and conservation stops sat alongside the anticipation of Volcanoes National Park. The gorilla trek still had its full force, and the days leading up to it kept the rest of Rwanda vivid, too.
Kigali, Akagera, And The Safari Side Of Rwanda

Our first full day in Kigali started at the Kigali Genocide Memorial, and I was glad it came early. The memorial is the final resting place for more than 250,000 victims of the Genocide against the Tutsi, and it changes the way you move through Rwanda afterward. It gives the country’s beauty a heavier frame, which a first visit needs if the rest of the trip is going to mean anything beyond beautiful views and good hotels.
Later, the Kandt House Museum pulled the day in a useful direction. It brought in Rwanda’s pre-colonial and colonial history through one of the country’s national museum sites, then lunch, traffic, and the ordinary movement of the capital carried the day back into present-day Kigali. The next morning, our group left the city for Akagera National Park. Once we reached Lake Ihema, everyone’s mood changed quickly. Cameras came out, voices dropped, and people started staring at reeds as if we had all suddenly developed professional tracking skills.
The hippos were a little far ahead of the boat, shy and half-hidden, coming up just enough for us to see them before slipping back down. That made the sighting more fun. It turned the whole boat into a group of people waiting for the next little reveal. Around them were reeds, birds, crocodiles, and the wide water of Akagera opening into the savanna. Then came the moment none of us saw coming: elephants feeding in the water. The boat went from quiet concentration to excited talking and admiring, with everyone rushing for photos. Finally spotting them there felt unreal, like the lake had saved its biggest surprise for last.
A game drive the following morning gave us giraffes, buffalo, zebras, antelopes, warthogs, and the safari suspense of waiting to see what appeared next. Akagera is home to lions, leopards, elephants, rhinos, buffalo, zebras, giraffes, antelopes, and hundreds of bird species, so every stretch of road held a possibility. The drive from the southern side of the park toward the northern exit moved through lakes, woodland, savanna, and open plains. I also love what safari does to people. One faraway shape appears, and suddenly the whole vehicle becomes a committee debating horns, tails, ears, and whether the guide is about to politely crush everyone’s confidence.
Rainforest, Tea Country, And Lake Kivu In The Southwest

After Akagera, we returned to Kigali for the night, then left again the next morning with a long road toward Nyungwe ahead of us. Nyanza, a historic town in Rwanda’s Southern Province, gave us a much-needed break at the King’s Palace Museum, where the reconstructed royal residence and long-horned Inyambo cattle brought us into Rwanda’s royal history.
By the time we reached the Nyungwe area, the long drive had caught up with us. Cooler air came through the windows, the bends got tighter, and everyone’s energy started telling the truth. Rwanda may look compact on a map, but early starts, forest trails, long drives, and altitude will humble anyone pretending to be low-maintenance. With Ivomo, the afternoon stayed close to the work behind Rwanda’s tea, from walking through the fields and learning how leaves are picked to tasting tea with the people who know the process best. The fields were open and orderly, and the best part was how hands-on it felt. After hours on the road, we were happy to take the afternoon at tea-field speed.
The canopy walkway and zipline came the next day, once our bodies had forgiven us a little. They put us high above the trees almost immediately, and the view was worth the nerves. The walkway runs 160 meters and hangs 70 meters above a ravine, so there is a real thrill in realizing how much rainforest is moving beneath you while you are trying to act normal.
Karongi and Lake Kivu came at the right point in the trip. After forest roads, tea fields, and back-to-back movement, being on the water felt easy in a way everyone needed. The wider lake region also has enough hiking, cycling, and water time for travelers who want to stay longer.
Volcanoes National Park And The Gorilla Finale

After Lake Kivu, the trip began to move toward the moment everyone had been waiting for. On the way north, a short briefing at Gishwati-Mukura National Park headquarters added one more conservation stop before the Virunga Mountains came into view. Red Rocks Rwanda, an eco-tourism company and social enterprise near Volcanoes National Park, gave us a closer look at community life before the gorilla trek. The visit included local food, dance, and crafts, and helped connect the tourism around the Virunga landscape to the people who live there.
The next morning, the gorilla trek finally moved out of my imagination and into the forest. At Volcanoes National Park, with guides, trackers, and the trail ahead of us, the experience felt real before we had even seen a gorilla. For planning, it is also a big budget item. Rwanda’s official booking platform lists foreign visitor gorilla permits at US$1,500, with a minimum tracking age of 15.
On my trek, I was the only African traveler in my group, and that is something I will never forget. I expected awe, nerves, mud, and the comic realization that my dream activity had turned into a serious hike. What I felt most was pride. Seeing the gorillas up close, guided by African trackers and guides, made the moment deeply personal. It became the experience I would talk about first. Afterward, the Ellen DeGeneres Campus of the Dian Fossey Gorilla Fund in Kinigi helped make sense of the conservation work that went into that carefully managed hour with a gorilla family. The campus is a research and education center that honors Dian Fossey’s legacy and supports the mission to save gorillas from extinction.
Dinner and drinks at Virunga Mountain Spirits gave the day an easy landing, with a meal, a chair, and something strong after an experience that asked a lot from the body and the heart. The woman-led distillery describes its site as a field-to-bottle agro-tourism experience. The last day took us to the Twin Lakes biking circuit before lunch, then a drive back to Kigali. For a first trip to Rwanda, 10 or 11 days feels right. Go for the gorillas, absolutely. Then let the Kigali Genocide Memorial, Akagera’s safari, Nyungwe’s rainforest, Gisakura’s tea fields, Lake Kivu’s slower mornings, Red Rocks Rwanda, the food, the people, and the long roads give those hours in the forest their full meaning.




