Unlike most lakes of the Gorilla Highlands region, Uganda’s Lake Bunyonyi is not a crater lake. It was formed 10,000 years ago when lava dammed a river, drowning an area of 61 square kilometres (24 square miles), with 29 islands protruding it.
Is Bunyonyi Second Deepest in Africa?
Not likely. Knowing that today’s islands are former mountain tops, one can mentally connect underwater ridges and come to a conclusion that it is unlikely that Lake Bunyonyi is “the second deepest in Africa”. Nobody can trace the source of this claim, repeated by local guides.
Old scientific documents talk about 44m (144ft) as Bunyonyi’s maximum depth but it is likely that has increased over time. Namely, the river is still flooding the valleys, as it has been for thousands of years.
Lake Bunyonyi’s Birds & Fish
“Bunyonyi” means “the place of many little birds” and over 200 bird species have indeed been recorded here. That number, however, doesn’t make it a particularly unique destination in a region where double that number is not unheard of.
At the beginning of the 20th century fish were introduced but massively died in the 1960s, perhaps as a result of a volcanic gas emission. Present today are crayfish, mud fish and mirror carp — and their predators, otters.
More recent restocking attempts have led to locals trying serious fishing, to no avail. But children do have fun catching little fish, pulling staples out of their notebooks to make improvised hooks.

Bunyonyi’s Street Food
Jimmy Betubiza has spent 40 years pulling tiny silver obuyamba from Lake Bunyonyi with papyrus baskets. Roasted into crispy skewers, his protein-packed catch feeds locals, cures malnutrition, and draws canoe-drifters. Learn more.
How Safe is Bunyonyi?
There’s an amusing story about hippos visiting Lake Bunyonyi this millennium and there was something similar taking place in the 1980s. Outside of that, Bunyonyi is completely hippo- and crocodile-free.
Bilharzia (schistosomiasis) is not a threat but low water temperature can be — although it can reach 25℃/77℉ on the surface, it is recommended you enter the lake gradually on hot days to avoid cold water shock drowning.
Lake Bunyonyi’s Major Islands
Lake Bunyonyi has a great number of islands: 29. Some of their histories:
- Akampene (Punishment Island): Until the 1940s, unmarried pregnant women were left here to starve to death or drown trying to swim to the shore; they were often saved by poor men or slaves who could not afford the regular bride price.

Island of Death
Punishment Island, once held unmarried pregnant girls, abandoned without food or hope because virginity meant bride price. Some starved, others drowned, a few were rescued. Similar brutal practices existed across the Gorilla Highlands region until Christianity curbed them. Learn more.
- Bwama: In 1914 it was an anti-colonial rebel base of a famous leader, Katuregye. In 1921, Dr. Leonard Sharp, a missionary, founded a leprosy hospital here.
- Njuyeera (Sharp’s Island): Dr. Sharp’s family lived on this island when he was not on duty in Kabale Hospital and converted it into a gorgeous botanical garden with a tennis court, boat house, guest cottage and windmill.

Doctor Sharp’s Miracles
Three Lake Bunyonyi islands — Bwama, Njuyeera, and Bushara — share the legacy of Dr Leonard Sharp, who founded a leprosy hospital on Bwama in 1921. His family lived on Njuyeera, famed for its gardens and hospitality, while Bushara supported doctors. Learn more.
Our Stories From Lake Bunyonyi:
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Are You a True Daredevil? Better Hurry to Lake Bunyonyi!
Update, November 2018: Three brave Belgians tested this road recently, and it remains a total mess… The murram road connecting Kachwekano and Heisesero (Muko) is the most scenic of all…
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“Guides were Amazing”
We had two big groups of hikers in the Lake Bunyonyi basin today, kicking off the second half of the high season. The Gorilla Highlands Trails of Uganda and Rwanda…
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96 Years, 114 Children, 6 Songs
“Katarinaaaaaaaaaaa-aaaaaa-aaaa,” you could hear a voice rise from Tom’s Homestay in the middle of Lake Bunyonyi, right there on the southwestern edge of Uganda. Sitting in a circle around a…
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Revolutionary Ideas by Batwa “Pygmies”
Every New Year’s Day, a few hours after Edirisa’s traditional dugout canoe celebrations, we sit down with representatives from two Batwa communities. With some heads possibly still heavy, it may…
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People, People, People: Gorilla Highlands Bootcamp 2017
They proved to be the toughest of the 20 participants from 7 countries…
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Good Kind of Crazy: Volunteering and Hiking in Uganda and Rwanda
This has been an American year for the Gorilla Highlands team. The fourth US specialist volunteer of 2017, Benjamin Blayne Dawson from Florida, is flying home at this very moment,…
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Spacey’s Booty Goes to Bootcamp – What About Yours?
“Strength doesn’t come from what you can do, it comes from overcoming the things you thought you couldn’t do.”
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Farewell to Jeremiah Byarahugo, Our Beloved Traditional Healer
The last five years the vast majority of hikers on the Gorilla Highlands Trails began their cultural experience with a visit to Jeremiah Byarahugo. Last Saturday he again introduced two…
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Charles Kalyango: Interview with an Intercultural Manager
If there’s anything the Gorilla Highlands region doesn’t have enough of, it is events. Special reasons to come back, to have fun, to celebrate. This Friday evening, BirdNest Resort –…
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Silverchef 2017 Delights, Secrecy to Challenge the Best in 2018
12 chefs and dozens of tourism industry leaders from Uganda and Rwanda came to Lake Bunyonyi.
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BBC about Bunyonyi: Successes, Failure & Dilemma
The BBC World Service broadcast two catchy Lake Bunyonyi stories this month. The first one was about canoeing to school, the second one about Punishment Island. As the Gorilla Highlands team…
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People of the Gorilla Highlands Are Characters
Before my arrival to volunteer in Rwanda and Uganda there seemed to be one phrase that I was told that hung over me: The people of the Gorilla Highlands are characters. I…
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Why Tom’s Homestay Didn’t Win
Uganda’s Tourism Excellence Awards winners 2017 were declared last night at Sheraton in Kampala. Tom’s Homestay was sadly not among them. This was a blow to the Gorilla Highlands team…
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Rwanda Is an Interesting Experiment
Francis Tapon is a globetrotter, best-selling author, videographer and speaker. In December 2016 – January 2017 Francis and his wife Rejoice travelled through the Gorilla Highlands of Rwanda and Uganda, on a quest…
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Love in the Wild Gets Wild
Last weekend the Gorilla Highlands team was joined by guests from all over the world—from Kigali to Kampala, from the US to all the way to the Netherlands—to celebrate Valentine’s…
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1 Week of Hiking + Savannah – Jealousy = 29 Shots
Why would somebody opt for hiking through Africa? What is wrong with a good old motorised safari through Rwanda and Uganda? How can a walking safari be an improvement on…
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Masozera in an Open Relationship
Mr Fear of Water… Oh, what an annoying partner on my journey through life you used to be!
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Never Double Cross an Evil Genius
This is the queen of bloggers Enya Logar (ENYA!!! ENYA!!! ENYA!!! Yeah!!! She’s so amazing! ENYA!!! ENYA!!! ENYA!!!). … Shhh I know I’m pretty amazing but quiet down, and let…
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Valentine’s Comes Early: Love in the Wild
“You are special to me,” we like to say to our loved ones. What about proving that sweetly by surprising them with a truly special experience? Think about bonding on…
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Building Traditions: New Year’s Eve Celebration on Habukomi Island
“How do local people celebrate New Year’s Eve?” visitors to the Gorilla Highlands often ask. Until 2007 there wasn’t much to say. The drumming that traditionally announces Christmas would get…
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Masozera Something in Between
Never had I thought there would come a time in my life when I would want to explore myself. Conquer my fears…. Walk.
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Missing Hippos
Out of the blue, three hippos appeared. They became the talk of Lake Bunyonyi, the lake so casually described as super-safe for swimming, with no bilharzia (more about that here),…
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GH Bootcamp: From Bunyonyi with Love
Envisaged to inform and inspire the Gorilla Highlands team in Kigali, it has grown into something bigger.
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Our Grandest Trek in 28 Photos
As an introduction to the upcoming Gorilla Highlands Bootcamp we’ve pulled something attractive from our archives. This is how our global team hiked in June two years ago — through…
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Bootcamp Invite: Get Your Hands Dirty, or Join Online
The Bootcamp is intended to prepare and motivate the people expected to take our initiative to the next level.
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“I Liked It before I Hit the Tree”
Hello my public! This is I Enya again 👏👏. What’s up? Last week I wrote about police in Kampala but now I’m taking you back to Lake Bunyonyi, if that…
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Would You Trust a Traditional Healer?
Meg Whelan’s (she’s pictured in the centre) familiarisation trip was coming to an end. In just a couple of days she had flown all over Uganda, experienced three national parks—Kidepo…
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Selfish Traveller’s One Secret to Spill
I am a selfish traveller. I do not like to share. When I find something special, and better yet undisturbed, the last thing I want to do is tell everyone…
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Bullshit Meter
I often get stuck in my crammed little room. It has a bed as big as a football pitch (a headmaster once said), shelves with files and my multi-colour Getting…
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Stop “Borrowing” Gorilla Highlands Photos and Videos
Yesterday the guys who run the social media account for Uganda Waragi used the iconic Lake Bunyonyi photo that Marcus Westberg took for Gorilla Highlands. Without anybody’s permission, without attribution, without…
