

Fly from Entebbe International Airport (EBB) — about a 45-minute charter or scheduled flight to Bugungu Airstrip — followed by a roughly 25-minute road transfer to the lodge, alternatively drive from Entebbe/Kampala (around 5 hours), an ideal route to break at Ziwa Rhino Sanctuary.
Eight bandas, and the choice is about privacy, the six Deluxe Bandas line the riverbank with thatched roofs, day beds, freestanding bathtubs, indoor and outdoor showers and a private deck with a swing chair over the Nile, several with their own plunge pool, the standout is the Exclusive Banda, the pick for couples and honeymooners with a private plunge pool, a daybed and a star bed for sleeping under the night sky, while the Family Villa suits families and small groups. Reviewers consistently single out waking to hippos and elephants from the deck.
Full board is included, three multi-course meals a day in the open-sided restaurant and lounge bar over the river, with all hot drinks, bar snacks and house drinks, the kitchen uses fresh ingredients and home baking and adapts willingly to dietary needs, and bush breakfasts and brunch at the top of the falls can be arranged.
Neutral, lightweight clothing for the heat, and deliberately avoid blue and black, which attract the tsetse flies in Murchison, a warm layer for early-morning boat cruises and game drives, closed walking shoes, a wide-brimmed hat and high-factor sunscreen, insect repellent and your antimalarials, plus binoculars for the giraffe, big game and the famous shoebill, and a universal adaptor if you're touring onward.
Take both Nile cruises if you can, upstream to the crashing foot of Murchison Falls for hippos, crocs and elephant, and downstream to the Lake Albert delta for the elusive shoebill stork, climb to the top of the falls on the way to or from the lodge, and break the journey at Ziwa Rhino Sanctuary for rhino trekking, since rhino aren't in the park itself. The lodge is fully plastic-free with refillable water bottles, so bring your own reusable bottle to top up.
Built entirely plastic-free, the lodge runs on solar energy, harvests and purifies rainwater, and is constructed from local renewable materials to sit gently on the land. It funds clean-water infrastructure for nearby villages, supports anti-poaching by commissioning artisans to turn confiscated snares into wildlife sculptures, and runs community visits, a Responsible Tourism Policy and a Beyond Green membership built around nature, community and culture.