Gorilla trekking is one of the most thrilling activities especially in the Ugandan molten forests of Bwindi impenetrable forest national park and Mgahinga forest national park and Volcanoes in Rwanda. Trekking to these primates is not a walk over and at times it takes over 6 hours of hiking before coming across these primates and if at all you are lucky enough, you can find these primates after trekking for just one hour.However, irrespective of how long you take to find these primates, the moment you come across these primates, you are given only one solid hour to stay amidst these primates and enjoying their company.

You only get an hour. And there’s an awful lot of travelling and trekking to be done beforehand. But that hour is likely to be one of the most emotional, humbling and exhilarating of your life. Rubbing shoulders with wild mountain gorillas is a true privilege and, if everyone could do it just once, the world would be a better place.

The business of gorilla tourism is a vexed one. I know people who have always wanted to see gorillas, but have worried that tourism might be causing disturbance or exposing the animals to human disease. But in truth the gorillas probably wouldn’t be here at all without tourism. It is the one thing that can guarantee their survival, by making them worth more alive than dead – to governments and local people alike.

Gorilla Tours in AfricaThere are currently about 800 mountain gorillas left in Africa: 480 in the Virunga Volcanoes, which straddle Uganda, Rwanda and the Democratic Republic of Congo and some 310-340 in Bwindi Impenetrable Forest, Uganda.

The Virunga Volcanoes is the place most people imagine when they think of mountain gorillas. Thirty-six family groups (and 14 solitary silverbacks) are distributed across three different protected areas: Volcanoes National Park in Rwanda; Mgahinga Gorilla National Park in Uganda and Virunga National Park in the DRC. But the gorilla-watching opportunities are actually quite limited. It’s a little hit-and-miss in the DRC because, unhappily, the animals have been caught in a vortex of human conflict and misery and are forced to share their home with a motley collection of rebels and heavily armed soldiers.

Meanwhile, the only habituated group in Uganda’s Mgahinga has a reputation for crossing the border into Rwanda and the DRC, so it is not a reliable spot for viewing either. That leaves Volcanoes National Park in Rwanda, which has eight habituated gorilla groups and is generally considered to be the hotspot for gorilla-watching. Rwanda has the best Short Gorilla Safaris Like 1 Day Rwanda Gorilla Tour, 2 Days Rwanda Gorilla Tour and Even 3 Days Rwanda Gorilla Tour.

The most enticing habitat of these gorillas is the Bwindi Impenetrable Forest, a discrete area some 30km to the north. Bwindi is a tiny island of 330 sq km of equatorial primeval rainforest, surrounded by a sea of banana and tea plantations. A vast, misty, mountainous jungle, it is one of the most biologically diverse places in the world.

Although it can be difficult to spot much wildlife through the mass of huge trees festooned with vines and creepers, this forest is home to no fewer than 120 species of mammal, 360 species of birds, 310 types of butterflies and 1,000 different flowering plants. As you walk the trails, you are greeted by a cacophony of animal sounds at every turn.

But mountain gorillas are obviously the star attraction. The Uganda Wildlife Authority has habituated ten gorilla families to receive human visitors. These consist of as few as seven animals to as many as 36, led by a mature male or ‘silverback’ along with his harem of several females, various immature ‘silver back’ males and youngsters.

The first to be habituated was the Mubare group, which was formally introduced to people for the first time in 1991; it’s a popular family with tourists because it spends much of its time fairly close to the park headquarters. The others are the Habinyanja, Nkuringo, Nshongi, Bitukura, Kyaguriro and Rushegura groups (unfortunately, the Rushegura group sometimes wanders out of Uganda and into the DRC, which causes havoc with treks booked months in advance).

Every morning, the latest influx of tourists gathers on the lawns near the forest entrance for a detailed briefing, before setting off chaperoned by trackers, guides, armed guards and porters.

The super-human porters will carry anything -no amount of camera equipment is too much. The trek can take anything from less than an hour if you’re lucky to as long as 11 hours if you’re not. It all depends on where your allotted gorilla family happens to be at the time.

Within minutes of entering the forest you are sweating and panting, crawling and clambering your way along slippery paths and precipitous mountain tracks. The dark, wet Impenetrable Forest is aptly named – it’s a riot of green where things grow on top of other things that grow on top of more things in layers of ferns, mosses, creepers and lichens. In places, the forest is so thick you have to hike on solid mats of vegetation that tremble and flex with every step, threatening to break through and dump you into the unseen depths below.

It’s all very exciting and the moment you come face-to-face with your first gorilla, the mud and sweat become distant memories. Standing in the heart of a seemingly limitless jungle, with a family of the largest primates in the world, is one of life’s greatest pleasures. Your allotted hour – the maximum time allowed – goes so quickly. But life will never be quite the same again.