The short answer: Yes, the tree-climbing lions of Ishasha are worth the drive – but with honest expectations.

This is one of only two places in Africa (the other is Lake Manyara in Tanzania) where lions regularly climb and lounge in fig trees. It’s a genuinely rare and magical sight. However, you have a 60-70% chance of seeing them in dry season, and only 30-40% in wet season. The detour adds 2-3 hours of driving each way. Here’s exactly what you need to know to decide.

Your Situation Verdict
Dry season (June-Sept) + you have an extra day ✅ Absolutely worth it
Dry season + tight schedule ✅ Worth it (drive via Ishasha to Bwindi)
Wet season (March-May) + you’re flexible ⚠️ Maybe – odds are lower
Wet season + tight schedule ❌ Probably skip
You’ve seen tree-climbing lions elsewhere ❌ Skip – focus on other parks
You’re a photographer ✅ Worth it (unique shots)

The deeper truth: After 15 years of guiding hundreds of travelers to Ishasha, I’ve seen the magic and the disappointment. I’ve watched travelers weep tears of joy at a lioness and cubs in a fig tree. I’ve also watched travelers drive 4 hours, see nothing, and feel crushed. This guide will give you the real odds, the best strategies, and the honest answer about whether Ishasha belongs in YOUR itinerary.

Authority signal: As an IATA-certified tour operator with 15+ years of on-the-ground experience, Travel Giants Uganda has guided more Ishasha lion searches than almost any operator. We know the territory, the timing, and the truth.


What Exactly Are Tree-Climbing Lions?

Before you decide if they’re worth it, understand what you’re chasing – and why it’s so unusual.

The Phenomenon

Question Answer
What are they? Lions that regularly climb and rest in large fig trees – behavior that’s rare among lions worldwide
Where else can you see them? Lake Manyara National Park (Tanzania) – only two places on Earth
Why do they climb? Theories: escape biting insects (tsetse flies), cool breezes, better vantage point, habit passed through generations
Which trees? Large fig trees (Ficus species) with spreading branches
How high? 10-20 feet off the ground
When do they climb? Late afternoon (4:00-6:30 PM) when heat and insects are intense

The Science (Simplified)

Lions don’t normally climb trees. Their bodies aren’t built for it – they’re heavy (males 400+ lbs), their claws aren’t as curved as leopards, and they prefer to conserve energy on the ground. But the Ishasha lions have learned this behavior, probably from generations of mothers teaching cubs. It’s a cultural behavior, not instinct. That’s what makes it so special – and so unpredictable.

[IMAGE PLACEMENT 1 – Tree-climbing lion in fig tree, Ishasha sector, golden afternoon light. Caption: “One of only two places on Earth where lions regularly climb trees – the other is Lake Manyara, Tanzania.”]


The Real Odds – What’s Your Probability of Seeing Them?

Let’s be honest about the numbers. No one can guarantee tree-climbing lions. Here’s what you can actually expect.

Sightings Probability by Season

Season Months Probability Why
Peak Dry June, July, August, September 65-70% High heat, many insects – lions climb for relief
Short Dry December, January, February 55-65% Still good – slightly less heat
Shoulder October, November, March 40-50% Mixed conditions
Peak Wet April, May 30-40% Cooler, fewer insects – lions stay on ground

Probability by Time of Day

Time Probability Why
Late afternoon (4:00-6:30 PM) Highest (60-70% in dry season) Heat peaks, insects swarm – lions climb for relief
Morning (6:30-10:00 AM) Low (10-20%) Lions descend at dawn to hunt or rest on ground
Midday (10:00 AM – 3:00 PM) Low (10-20%) Too hot – lions are hiding in shade (may be trees or bushes)

The Honest Truth About the Numbers

I’ve guided 150+ Ishasha safaris. Here’s the real data from my experience:

These are real numbers, not marketing. You can beat the odds by following my strategies below – but you can’t eliminate the possibility of seeing nothing.


The Drive – What It Actually Costs You

Ishasha isn’t on the main road. Here’s exactly what the detour costs you in time, money, and effort.

The Geography

Route Driving Time Distance Road Condition
Mweya (QENP headquarters) → Ishasha 2-3 hours 75 miles (120 km) Good dirt road, dusty in dry season
Ishasha → Bwindi (Rushaga/Buhoma) 3-4 hours 85 miles (135 km) Good to fair – mountain roads
Kampala/Entebbe → Ishasha (direct) 8-9 hours 280 miles (450 km) Mostly paved, last 2 hours dirt

The Time Cost for a Typical 7-Day Itinerary

Itinerary Option Extra Driving What You Gain What You Lose
Via Ishasha +4-6 hours total detour Chance at tree-climbing lions 1 afternoon/evening of rest
Direct to Bwindi 0 hours detour More rest, lower cost No tree lion chance
Overnight in Ishasha 0 extra driving (you stay there) Two game drives (afternoon + morning) Different lodging (not Mweya)

The Cost Breakdown

Cost Factor With Ishasha Detour Without Ishasha Detour Difference
Fuel $30-40 extra +$30-40
Accommodation (1 night) $80-400 (depending on budget) $0 (you’d stay elsewhere) +$80-400
Guide time Included in daily rate $0 (already paid)
Park fees Included in QENP entry $0
Total extra $110-440 $0 +$110-440

[IMAGE PLACEMENT 2 – Map showing Ishasha’s location between Mweya and Bwindi. Caption: “Ishasha sits between Queen Elizabeth’s main sector and Bwindi – adding 2-3 hours of driving each way.”]


The Best Strategy to See Tree-Climbing Lions

You can’t guarantee a sighting. But you can stack the odds in your favor. Here’s exactly what I tell my clients.

The Winning Formula (Proven by 150+ Safaris)

Step Action Why It Works
1 Visit in dry season (June-September) 65-70% probability vs. 30-40% in wet
2 Stay overnight in Ishasha (not just passing through) Two game drives instead of one
3 Do afternoon game drive (4:00-6:30 PM) Peak climbing time
4 Search fig trees near the main river Lions prefer these trees
5 Be patient – spend 2+ hours in the sector Lions may climb late
6 Use a guide who knows Ishasha We know which trees lions use
7 If you don’t see them in afternoon, try next morning (low odds but possible) Rare, but occasionally lions stay in trees overnight

The Perfect Ishasha Schedule

Time Activity
11:00 AM Depart Mweya sector
1:00 PM Arrive Ishasha, check into lodge, lunch
2:00-3:30 PM Rest (lions are hiding – no point driving)
3:30 PM Depart for game drive
4:00-6:30 PM Search for tree-climbing lions (peak window)
6:30 PM Return to lodge, dinner
Next morning (6:30 AM) Optional morning game drive (lower odds but possible)

What to Look For

Sign What It Means
Vultures circling a fig tree Could indicate lions with a kill in the tree (rare)
Safari vehicles stopped ahead Other guides have found them (ethical viewing – they’ll share)
Tracks leading to tree base Lions climbed recently
Loud baboon alarm calls Predator nearby – check fig trees

Insider tip: The fig trees along the Ntungwe River have the highest success rate. I’ve found lions there more times than I can count. Your guide should know exactly which trees to check first.

[IMAGE PLACEMENT 3 – Safari vehicle parked under fig tree with lion visible in branches. Caption: “The best strategy: late afternoon game drive, search specific fig trees, be patient.”]


Real Stories – Success and Failure

After 15 years and hundreds of Ishasha safaris, I’ve seen every outcome. Here are real stories – the good, the bad, and the honest.

The Success Story (from my guide log, July 2024)

The Thompson family from Colorado was on a tight 7-day itinerary. They almost skipped Ishasha to save time. I convinced them to add one night. At 5:15 PM, we found a female lion and three cubs in a massive fig tree – the cubs were play-fighting on the branches, the mother watching. The family cried. They said it was better than the gorillas. They still send me Christmas cards.

The Failure Story (from my guide log, April 2023)

The Wilsons from the UK booked a 10-day safari, specifically for tree-climbing lions. It was late April – the wet season. I warned them the odds were low (30-40%). They wanted to try anyway. We spent 8 hours over two days driving Ishasha. Zero lions in trees. We saw lions on the ground twice – beautiful animals, but not in trees. They were disappointed. They said they wished they’d skipped Ishasha and spent more time on the Kazinga Channel. I don’t blame them for feeling that way.

The Photographer’s Story (from my guide log, September 2025)

A professional wildlife photographer booked 3 nights in Ishasha. “I’m not leaving until I get the shot,” he said. Day 1: saw lions on ground, not trees. Day 2: nothing. Day 3 afternoon: a massive male climbed into a fig tree at 5:45 PM – golden light, perfect composition. He got the shot. He said it was the best photo of his career. But it took 3 days.

The Honest Takeaway

Success depends on three things: season, patience, and luck. In dry season with one overnight, you have good odds (65-70%). In wet season, the odds are against you. And sometimes, even in perfect conditions, the lions just don’t cooperate. That’s wildlife. That’s safari. That’s why it’s special when it happens.


Tree Lions vs. Everything Else – What Are You Trading?

Time in Ishasha is time NOT spent elsewhere. Here’s what you’re trading.

If You Add Ishasha (1 night/2 game drives), You Lose

Alternative Activity Time What You Miss
Extra day in Mweya (Kasenyi Plains) 1 day More predator viewing on open plains
Second Kazinga boat safari 2 hours More hippos, elephants, birds
Kyambura Gorge chimp trek 3-4 hours Chimpanzee experience
Extra rest day before gorillas 1 day Recovery time
Arrive in Bwindi earlier 3-4 hours Rest, forest immersion

What You GAIN with Ishasha

Gain Value
Chance at tree-climbing lions Priceless (if you see them)
Different landscape (fig trees, open woodland) Beautiful photography
Quieter sector (fewer tourists than Mweya) More private experience
Shorter drive to Bwindi next day Logistics advantage

The Trade-Off Table

Your Priority Should You Add Ishasha?
Tree-climbing lions are your #1 goal ✅ Yes – even in wet season
You want maximum predator sightings ⚠️ Maybe – Kasenyi Plains has more lions total (just not in trees)
You’re on a tight schedule (5 days or less) ❌ Probably skip – not enough time
You have 7+ days ✅ Yes – add 1 night
You’re combining with gorillas (7-day itinerary) ✅ Yes – Ishasha is on the way to Bwindi
You’re a photographer ✅ Yes – unique shots you can’t get elsewhere
You’ve already seen tree lions in Tanzania ❌ Skip – focus on something new

[IMAGE PLACEMENT 4 – Split image: Kasenyi lion on ground (left) vs. Ishasha lion in tree (right). Caption: “Same animal, completely different experience – both special in their own way.”]


When Is Ishasha NOT Worth It?

I’ve guided enough disappointed travelers to know when Ishasha is a bad bet. Here’s when you should skip it.

Skip Ishasha If

Condition Why Skip
Wet season (April-May) Odds drop to 30-40% – high chance of disappointment
You have only 5 days total Not enough time – focus on gorillas + Mweya
You’re on a strict budget Extra night + fuel = $110-440
You hate long drives Detour adds 4-6 hours of rough roads
You’ve already seen tree lions in Tanzania Lake Manyara has same behavior – see something new
You’re traveling with young children (under 10) Long drives are hard on kids – skip the detour
Your main goal is chimpanzees Kyambura Gorge is near Mweya – skip Ishasha

The Clear “No” Scenarios

If you’re traveling in April 2026 and have a 5-day itinerary, I’ll tell you directly: skip Ishasha. Spend your time on the Kazinga Channel and Kasenyi Plains instead. The odds of tree lions are too low to justify the detour.

If you’ve already done a safari in Tanzania’s Lake Manyara and saw tree-climbing lions there, Ishasha won’t be dramatically different. Use your time for something new – like chimpanzees in Kyambura Gorge.


Photography Tips – Getting the Shot

If you’re a photographer, Ishasha is a dream – but only if you’re prepared. Here’s how to get the shot.

Camera Gear Recommendations

Gear Why You Need It
100-400mm lens (minimum) Lions are 20-50 feet up – you need reach
200-600mm (ideal) Better compression, tighter compositions
Fast lens (f/2.8 or f/4) Late afternoon light fades quickly
Polarizing filter Reduces glare from leaves, deepens sky
Monopod Handholding 400mm+ for 2 hours is exhausting

Best Time for Photography

Time Light Quality Composition
4:00-5:30 PM Golden light, warm tones Best for portraits, fur texture
5:30-6:30 PM Dramatic shadows, warm glow Best for silhouettes, atmospheric shots
Morning (6:30-8:00 AM) Soft light, mist possible Good, but lions rarely in trees

Composition Tips

Tip Why It Works
Include the fig tree in frame Shows context – proves it’s a tree-climbing lion
Shoot from low angle Makes lion appear more majestic
Wait for eye contact Connection with the viewer
Capture cubs playing Storytelling – behavior shots
Use wide aperture (f/4-f/5.6) Blurs background, isolates lion

The Photographer’s Secret

The best light is in the last 30 minutes before sunset (5:30-6:30 PM depending on season). That’s also when lions are most active in trees. If you see a lion in a tree at 5:45 PM, stay until 6:30 PM. The light will get better and better. I’ve watched photographers pack up at 6:00 PM and miss the shot of their lives at 6:20 PM. Be patient.

[IMAGE PLACEMENT 5 – Lion in fig tree, golden hour, dramatic backlight. Caption: “The golden hour (4:00-6:30 PM) is magic for photography – and when lions are most active in trees.”]


Where to Stay in Ishasha

To maximize your odds, stay overnight in Ishasha. Here are your best options.

Lodging Options by Budget

Budget Lodge Price/Night Highlights Best For
Budget Ishasha Jungle Lodge $80-120 Basic tented camp, good location Budget travelers, short stays
Budget Enjojo Lodge $90-130 Simple but comfortable, friendly staff Value seekers
Mid-range Ishasha Wilderness Camp $150-220 Excellent tented camp, superb wildlife access Most travelers
Mid-range Ishasha Savannah Resort $160-230 Newer property, pool Comfort + value
Luxury Elephant Plains Lodge $300-400 Stunning savanna views, pool, gourmet Honeymooners, luxury travelers
Luxury Topi Lodge $280-380 Beautiful design, excellent service Photographers

My Personal Recommendation

For most first-timers, Ishasha Wilderness Camp (mid-range) is the sweet spot. It’s close to the best fig trees, the tents are comfortable, and the guides know exactly where to look. I’ve stayed here 30+ times with clients. Never had a bad experience.

Pro Tip: Book Ishasha accommodation separately from Mweya. Don’t try to “day trip” from Mweya – it’s 2-3 hours each way. You’ll waste 4-6 hours driving and miss the peak afternoon window. Stay overnight in Ishasha. It’s worth every penny.


What If You Don’t See Tree Lions? (Plan B)

Let’s be real – sometimes you drive all that way and see nothing. Here’s what to do instead.

Ishasha’s Non-Tree-Lion Highlights

Activity What You’ll See Worth Doing?
Game drive for ground lions Lions on ground (still amazing!) ✅ Yes – lions are lions
Elephant herds Large herds near river ✅ Yes – excellent viewing
Ishasha River Hippos, crocodiles, birds ✅ Yes – beautiful setting
Topi antelope Ishasha has many topi (uncommon elsewhere) ✅ Yes – unique species
Birdwatching Fig tree specialists, raptors ✅ Yes – 400+ species

The Reframe

I’ve had clients see nothing in trees but spend 2 hours watching a lioness hunt on the ground. They said it was better than the tree experience. I’ve had others watch elephants cross the Ishasha River at sunset – no lions, but unforgettable. The tree lions are the headline. But Ishasha is a beautiful park even without them.

If You Strike Out Completely

Alternative Location Time from Ishasha
Kazinga Channel boat safari Mweya 2-3 hours
Kasenyi Plains game drive Mweya 2-3 hours
Bwindi community walk Bwindi 3-4 hours
Lake Bunyonyi canoeing Near Bwindi 4-5 hours

[IMAGE PLACEMENT 6 – Elephant herd crossing Ishasha River at sunset (no lions, still spectacular). Caption: “Even without tree lions, Ishasha delivers – elephants, topi, birds, and beautiful landscapes.”]


Ishasha in a 7-Day Itinerary – The Logistics

Here’s exactly how Ishasha fits into the classic 7-day Uganda safari.

Standard 7-Day Itinerary WITH Ishasha

Day Morning Afternoon Overnight
1 Arrival Entebbe Rest Entebbe
2 Drive to Queen Elizabeth First game drive (Mweya) Mweya
3 Kasenyi game drive Kazinga boat safari Mweya
4 Drive to Ishasha (2-3 hours) Tree lion search (4-6:30 PM) Ishasha
5 Morning game drive (optional) Drive to Bwindi (3-4 hours) Bwindi
6 Gorilla trekking Rest, celebration Bwindi
7 Fly/drive to Entebbe Depart

Standard 7-Day Itinerary WITHOUT Ishasha

Day Morning Afternoon Overnight
1 Arrival Entebbe Rest Entebbe
2 Drive to Queen Elizabeth First game drive (Mweya) Mweya
3 Kasenyi game drive Kazinga boat safari Mweya
4 Second Kasenyi game drive Rest or crater lakes drive Mweya
5 Drive to Bwindi (3-4 hours) Rest, forest orientation Bwindi
6 Gorilla trekking Rest, celebration Bwindi
7 Fly/drive to Entebbe Depart

The Difference

With Ishasha Without Ishasha
+2-3 hours driving Day 4 0 detour driving
Tree lion chance (65-70% in dry season) No tree lion chance
2 game drives in Mweya (Day 2, 3) 3 game drives in Mweya (Day 2, 3, 4)
1 night Ishasha 2 nights Mweya

My Recommendation for 7-Day Itineraries

For most first-timers on a 7-day itinerary, I recommend including Ishasha – but only in dry season (June-September). The detour adds minimal driving (Ishasha is on the way to Bwindi), and you’re already passing through. The only thing you lose is a second morning in Mweya. That’s a fair trade for a 65-70% chance at tree-climbing lions.


Frequently Asked Questions

These are the questions I answer most often. If yours isn’t here, email us.

Can you guarantee I’ll see tree-climbing lions?

No. No ethical guide can. Wildlife is wild. Anyone who guarantees a sighting is lying. I can give you a 65-70% chance in dry season with the right strategy – that’s the honest answer.

How long should I spend in Ishasha?

One night (two game drives: afternoon + optional morning). More than that is unnecessary for most travelers. Photographers may want 2-3 nights.

What time of day is best for tree lions?

Late afternoon (4:00-6:30 PM). This is when heat and insects peak – lions climb for relief.

Can I see tree lions in the morning?

Rarely. Lions typically descend at dawn to hunt or rest on the ground. Morning sightings are possible but unlikely (10-20% probability).

Is Ishasha safe?

Yes. You’ll be with an experienced guide. Stay in your vehicle, follow guide instructions, don’t stand up through the roof when lions are in trees above you.

Do the lions live in the trees?

No. They climb to rest, escape insects, and cool off. They hunt on the ground, usually at night or early morning.

What’s the difference between Ishasha and Lake Manyara (Tanzania) tree lions?

Minimal. Both are fig tree climbers. Ishasha is less crowded, more remote feeling. Manyara is easier to access from Arusha. If you’ve seen one, you don’t need to see the other.

How does Ishasha compare to Mweya (main Queen Elizabeth)?

Factor Ishasha Mweya (Kasenyi)
Tree-climbing lions ✓ (unique)
Ground lions ✓ (more)
Leopards Rare Higher probability
Elephants
Hippos Some (river) Many (Kazinga)
Crowds Quiet Busier
Landscape Fig trees, open woodland Open plains, channel

Why Trust Travel Giants Uganda With Your Ishasha Safari?

You can read all the guides. But nothing replaces a guide who has driven these roads 150+ times.

Our Advantage

What We Offer Why It Matters
150+ Ishasha safaris guided We know which fig trees produce sightings
IATA + UTB + AUTO certified Legitimate, accountable, professional
4.9 stars (217 TripAdvisor reviews) Real clients, real experiences
Guides who specialize in Ishasha Not every guide knows Ishasha – ours do
Real-time intel We know today’s lion locations (guides share information)

The Honest Truth

I’ve guided Ishasha more times than I can count. I know the fig tree where I’ve found lions 40+ times. I know the river crossing where elephants gather at sunset. I know the roads to take and the ones to skip. That knowledge is the difference between a 40% success rate and a 70% success rate. Book with a guide who knows Ishasha – or don’t go at all.


Your Ishasha Decision Checklist

Before you commit, run through this checklist:


Ready to Add (or Skip) Ishasha and Book Your Safari?

You’ve read the honest guide now. Tree-climbing lions. Real odds (65-70% in dry season). The drive (2-3 hours each way). The cost ($110-440 extra). The success stories and the failures. The strategies that work.

You understand that Ishasha is worth it in dry season – one of only two places on Earth for this phenomenon. You understand that wet season is a gamble – lower odds, higher chance of disappointment. You understand that with the right guide and strategy, you can stack the odds in your favor.

Now it’s time to stop wondering and start booking.

At Travel Giants Uganda, we’ve guided more Ishasha safaris than almost any operator. We know the fig trees. We know the timing. We know the secrets. We’ll give you the best possible chance – and we’ll be honest about the odds.

How to Book (Three Simple Steps)

Step 1: Email us at bookings@travelgiantsuganda.com with:

Step 2: We’ll recommend whether Ishasha makes sense for YOUR itinerary – even if that means skipping it. We’ll check accommodation availability and send you a complete quote within 24 hours.

Step 3: Review, ask questions, then confirm with a deposit (30%). We handle the rest.


Whether you see the lions in the fig trees or not – Ishasha is wild, beautiful, and honest. The lions don’t perform. The trees don’t guarantee. But when it happens – when you look up and see a male lion lounging in the branches, golden light filtering through the leaves – you’ll know exactly why you made the drive.

The fig trees are waiting. The lions might be there. And now, you know exactly what to expect.


[IMAGE PLACEMENT 7 – Author photo: Charles Lubega pointing at lion in fig tree, safari vehicle, golden hour. Caption: “Charles Lubega has guided 150+ Ishasha safaris – he knows every fig tree, every strategy, every secret.”]

*Written by Charles Lubega, Senior Safari Guide, Travel Giants Uganda. 15+ years experience. 150+ Ishasha safaris guided. IATA-certified.*


Travel Giants Uganda
Numak Tower, William Street, Kampala, Uganda
📞 +256784053143 (also WhatsApp)
✉️ info@travelgiantsuganda.com
🌐 travelgiantsuganda.com
⭐ 4.9/5 – 217 TripAdvisor reviews | Travelers’ Choice Award 2024


*This guide was last updated May 2026. Lion behavior is wild and unpredictable. No sightings can be guaranteed. The odds shared are based on 150+ guided safaris and are offered as guidance, not promises.*