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Kilwa Ruins Lodge

KILWA RUINS LODGE - TANZANIA:
Thatched dining and sitting/bar areas have beautiful openviews of the beach and spectacular coral reefs beyond. These areas have all been enlarged and now surround a fresh water swimming pool in the center.

The cuisine is excellent, with catering organized by chefs who trained in the Tanzanian big game hunting industry. They have now adapted their menus to include much of the abundant seafood available in the area. Just imagine returning from a day’s fishing and enjoying sundowners accompanied by freshly sliced Sushi or Carpaccio made of the fish that you caught.

We offer 3 type of accommodation:

* 6 Wooden Bandas overlooking the sea, all with en suite bathrooms, overhead fans, mosquito nets and outdoor verandas.
* 3 beach-front chalets with 2 bedrooms and extra bedroom/ lounge interleading, airconditioning, 2 en suite bathrooms, mosquito nets and large outdoor verandas.
* 2 beach bandas, accommodation for 4 in 2 rooms, 1 bathroom, airconditioning, mosquito nets and large outside veranda.

Game Fishing:
Kilwa is one of Africa’s most exciting fishing destinations. Huge swarms of Mantis Shrimp come to the surface in order to breed, attracting game fish which spend months feeding on this nutritious and easy meal. Giant Yellowfin, weighing anywhere from 40 kg up to 100 kg move into the area in their thousands and can be seen feeding on the surface as far as the eye can see. Big Wahoo and Dorado are common in the area and Kingfish become easy targets as they too shoal and feed on the surface. In November and December, sailfish make Kilwa’s latitude of 8° South their feeding grounds.

These feeding game fish can be either targeted by trolling lures through the action, or by casting spoons and plugs from the drifting boat. This is some of the most exciting spinning imaginable.

Marlin are in the area and fish of up to 200 kg have already been taken.

For the light tackle and fly fishing enthusiasts there is excellent fishing to be had from a boat in the estuary mouth area, in the estuary itself and wading the shallow flats inside of the main reef. The estuary is home to species such as River Snapper, Queenfish, Barracuda, and Estuary Cod. Wading the shallow flats one can sight cast to a variety of Kingfish, Garfish, Barracuda etc.

Outside the reefs and along the drop-offs anything can happen if you’re brave enough.

The new owners support a responsible Catch & Release policy. Only fish required for the lodge and its guests’ immediate consumption are landed.

Distinctly unique to Kilwa Lodge – because of its remoteness from other fishing lodges - is that clients can find themselves exploring reefs and islands never before visited by sport fisherman.

We have the following boats available at the lodge:
FALUSI Blackfin - 28ft - offshore game fishing boat
CARAMBISI Reefrunner - 27ft - as above but also spinning and flyfishing
JODARI Supercat - 21ft - as above but also spinning and flyfishing
SUMAKI Monohole - 23 ft - as above but also spinning and flyfishing
KOLE-KOLE Flyfisher - 16ft - spinning and fly
HALFBEAK Coxcraft - 14ft - spinning and fly
TOLEDO Motor Cruiser - 45 ft - available from January 2006 onwards
TRINITY II Bertram - 58ft - offshore game fishing overnighter
ST CHRISTOPHER Sailing Yacht - 45ft - sailing and fishing overnight

Certain species of fish are obviously better caught on certain months of the year.

Other species caught on an irregular basis are:
Dogtooth Tuna, Striped Marlin, Jobfish, Garfish, Torpedo Scads, Coral Trout, Mangrove Jack, Cobia, Bonefish, Milkfish.

Other Activities:
Kilwa is in Tanzania, 300km south of Dar-es-Salaam on the mainland, close to the Selous Game Reserve. Surrounded by extensive waterways and the Indian Ocean, it offers not only a truely magnificent experience to fishermen, but also to those travellers interested in history as well as birdwatchers.

The Kilwa Masoko area (Masoko = Market Place) boasts a historic settlement dating back to the times when Arabs ruled Africa’s eastern seaboard. (A UNESCO World Heritage Site http://whc.unesco.org/en/list/144). Kilwa Kiswani is a small island across the water from Kilwa Masoko in South-Eastern Tanzania. Kilwa has been inhabited since the beginning of the 9th century and reached its peak in the 13th and 14th century. Kilwa Kisiwani became an important town due to its control of the gold trade from Zimbabwe and Sofala in Mozambique as well as the slave trade right up to the 19th century.

We offer guided trips to these ruins for those who need a break from fishing.

A short drive away is the town of Kilwa Kivingy. This interesting town with its old broken down buildings dating back to when it was a German Military base from 1886 until World War I.

The village is also an experience in itself. The market with its unique smells and flavours of the local herbs and spices and the little shops which offer anything from local textiles to imports from the other side of the planet...all accompanied by blaring hip hop music intermingled with the local sounds. Where ever you go in Kilwa...you will always be greeted with a big smile and a friendly JAMBO to make you feel welcome.

Travelling up the waterway in a Dhow, gliding past the Mangroves stretching their feet into the water, the abundant birdlife and even the odd Hippo showing its head above the water makes for wonderful leisure day if those muscles have become overworked fishing.

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KILWA:
There are actually three Kilwas - the oldest, Kilwa Kisiwani (Kilwa on the island), lies on a small island two kilometres offshore. Here are the ruins of the medieval city of Kilwa, once thought to be the site of King Solomon's mines. Kilwa Kivinje (Kilwa of the Censuarina Trees) was a major 19th century slave trading centre, while Kilwa Masoko (Kilwa of the market) is a regional headquarters. The Kilwa area is of great historical interest and great scenic beauty. The Kilwas were at their height during the 12th century and continued until the 1800s, ending with the abolition of the slave trade. Power shifted and soon all that remained of the Kilwa's former glory were the fabulous ruins along the coastline.

Kilwa Kivinje was the terminus of the southern caravan route from Lake Nyasa . Over 20,000 slaves were exported from here annually during the 1860s . It was also the site of the Germans' southern administrative headquarters. With the end of the Arab time at the end of the 19th century, the German colonial government built a fort and extended the town. From German times one can still find a Market Hall, the big Fort with a canon from the 1st World war, and two pillars one for the tribal dead of the Maji Maji War fought between the local tribes of Southern Tanzania and the German Colonial government and the other for two German traders also killed during the same Maji Maji War.

A colourful market is held daily on the square at Kilwa Masoko. Men in white robes and women in black buibuis gather under the mango trees to barter fresh produce and a variety of goods.

Kilwa Kisiwani is famous for spectacular ruins, the finest and most intact collection of Islamic architecture south of the Sahara. Its position in the Indian Ocean is just less than three miles off the shore of Tanzania, so it can be seen from the mainland. Kilwa's closeness to the mainland but the isolation of being an island gave this site an active role to play in world events from 800c.e. to the present. These ruins, together with the stone town ruins on Songa Mnara Island, a few kilometres to the south as well as the ancient oblong houses of uninhabited Sanje ya Kati, make this area the historical nucleus of the south. Small fishing villages are scattered along the coast, unchanged by the progress of the rest of the country. The main buildings on Kilwa are the Great Mosque and the Great House, the Small Domed Mosque, the Jangwam Mosque, the palace of Husuni Kubwa and the nearby Husuni Ndogo, the Makutani palace and the Gereza fort. Kilwa Kisiwani was named a UNESCO World Heritage site in 1981.

The Great Mosque is a large complex structure dating from several periods. The building consists of two main parts, a small northern part divided into sixteen bays and a larger southern extension divided into thirty bays. The earliest phase evident at the mosque is dated to the tenth century although little survives of this above foundation level. The earliest standing area of the mosque is the northern part which dates to the eleventh or tenth century and was modified at the beginning of the thirteenth. Adjacent to the Great Mosque on the south side is the Great House which mostly dates to the same period as the latest phase of the mosque (i.e. eighteenth century). The Great House actually consists of three connected residential units each with a sunken central courtyard.

To the south-west of the Great Mosque is the Small Domed Mosque which together with the Jangwani Mosque are the only two examples of a nine-domed mosque in this area. This building probably dates from the mid-fifteenth century (it is built on an earlier structure) and contains an arrangement of vaults and domes similar to the later phase of the Great Mosque. The other nine-domed mosque is of approximately the same date and is known as the Jangwani Mosque; it is located to the south of the Small Domed Mosque.

To the east of the main group of buildings are the remains known as Husuni Kubwa (large Husuni) and Husuni Ndogo (small Husuni). The term Husuni derives from the Arabic term husn meaning fortified enclosure or fortress. Husuni Kubwa is located on a coastal headland overlooking the Indian Ocean. It seems to date mostly from the late thirteenth or early fourteenth century and may well have never been completed. The complex consists of three main elements, the gateway or monumental entrance, the large south court and a complex of four courtyards which form the core of the palace. By contrast Husuni Kubwa is a severe-looking building which fits the name Husuni (fort). It consists of a rectangular structure aligned north-south and measuring over 70 m long by more than 50 m wide. Thirteen evenly spaced, solid, semi-circular bastions protect the outside of the wall with one rectangular tower on the west side.

The other two important buildings on Kilwa island are also defensive structures although they seem to date mostly to the eighteenth century. The largest of these is the Makutani palace which was the residence of the sultan in the eighteenth century. The Gereza or fort is located between the Makutani palace and the Great Mosque. It consists of a roughly square enclosure with two towers at opposite corners.

There are also important ruins on nearby islands including Songo Mnara, Sanje Majoma and Sanje ya Kate.

The earliest of these sites is Sanje ya Kate, an island to the south of Kilwa where there are ruins covering an area of 400 acres, including houses and a mosque. The mosque is of an early type with a mihrab niche contained in the thickness of the wall rather than projecting out of the north wall as is usual in later East African mosques. Excavations have shown that the settlement was abandoned before 1200 and most of the ruins date to the tenth century or even earlier.

To the east of Sanje ya Kate is the larger island of Songo Mnara which contains extensive ruins on its northern tip. The remains date to the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries and consist of thirty-three houses and a palace complex, as well as five mosques contained within a defensive enclosure wall. The remains at Songo Mnara are informative as they are one of the few places in East Africa where pre-eighteenth-century houses survive in any numbers. The houses have a standardized design with a monumental entrance approached by a flight of steps leading via an anteroom into a sunken courtyard, to the south of which are the main living quarters of the house.

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