Mount Kilimanjaro Climbing information

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, Mount Kilimanjaro Climbing information

At 5895m, Mount Kilimanjaro is the world’s highest free-standing mountain. The trek to the summit is challenging but enormously rewarding. Climbing Kilimanjaro is a unique experience and from its summit, over four kilometres above the surrounding plains, it’s even possible to see the curvature of the earth.

Kilimanjaro might be the highest mountain in Africa – and one of the toughest trekking challenges in the world – but we believe you can conquer it!

Kilimanjaro is one of the world’s most accessible high summits, a beacon for visitors from around the world. Most climbers reach the crater rim with little more than a walking stick, proper clothing and determination. And those who reach Uhuru Point, the actual summit, or Gillman’s Point on the lip of the crater, will have earned their climbing certificates.
And their memories.

But there is so much more to Kili than her summit. The ascent of the slopes is a virtual climatic world tour, from the tropics to the Arctic.
Even before you cross the national park boundary (at the 2,700m contour), the cultivated footslopes give way to lush montane forest, inhabited by elusive elephant, leopard, buffalo, the endangered Abbot’s duiker, and other small antelope and primates. Higher still lies the moorland zone, where a cover of giant heather is studded with otherworldly giant lobelias.

Above 4,000m, a surreal alpine desert supports little life other than a few hardy mosses and lichen. Then, finally, the last vestigial vegetation gives way to a winter wonderland of ice and snow – and the magnificent beauty of the roof of the continent.