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tibebu ethiopia tour

10-Day Cultural Immersion Experience with Omo Valley Tribes

from
$1,474.00$1,424.00

You will meet the Dorze, Ari, Mursi, Bana, Hamer, Dassanach and Tsemay peoples.

  • Reviews 0 Reviews
    0/5
  • Vacation Style Holiday Type
    Culture, Wildlife
  • Activity Level Fairly Easy
    2/8
  • Group Size Large Group
    30
All about the 10-Day Cultural Immersion Experience with Omo Valley Tribes.

You will meet the Dorze, Ari, Mursi, Bana, Hamer, Dassanach and Tsemay peoples. There’ll be chances to try your hand at local crafts such as spinning and weaving and experience colorful village markets whilst also supporting community tourism projects in Dorze and Konso. You’ll explore the natural wonders of the Rift Valley lakes, including hippos and crocodiles, and see the UNESCO World Heritage Sites of Tiya and the Konso Cultural Landscape.

Departure Point

Arada, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia Customers can meet us at our office which is within the compound of the Taitu Hotel, or we can pick up customers from any hotel within 6km of the Taitu Hotel.

Departure Time

12:00 PM Return Details Returns to the original departure point

The tour package inclusions and exclusions at a glance
What is included in this tour?Items that are included in the cost of tour price.
  • Private transportation
  • Breakfast (9)
  • Lunch (10)
  • Dinner (10)
What is not included in this tour?Items that are not included in the cost of tour price.
  • Gratuities
  • Alcoholic drinks (water and soft drinks with meals are included)
  1. Day 1 Addis Ababa
    Addis Ababa
    Day 1 starts with a half-day city tour of Addis Ababa, including its museums, churches, and the Mercato, reputedly the largest market in Africa.
    Duration: 5 hours
    Admission Ticket Free
    National Museum of Ethiopia
    The oldest museum in Ethiopia, its most famous exhibit is ”Lucy”, the 3.5 million-year-old skeleton whose discovery in 1974 demonstrated that bipedal hominids evolved much earlier than previously thought. The museum also holds many other palaeontological and archaeological artifacts, as well as ethnographic and modern art displays.
    Duration: 1 hour
    Admission Ticket Included
    Holy Trinity Cathedral
    Built to commemorate Ethiopia’s emancipation from the Italian occupation, the cathedral is an important focal point for the Ethiopian Orthodox church. As a place of worship, it is considered second only to the Church of Our Lady Zion in Axum (where the original Ark of the Covenant is believed to be held).
    Duration: 1 hour
    Admission Ticket Included
    Addis Mercato
    Reputedly the largest market in Africa, the Mercato is the commercial hub of Addis Ababa. A close-knit grid of streets crammed with stalls, kiosks, and shops, you can buy virtually anything here, but be prepared to negotiate!
    Duration: 1 hour
    Admission Ticket Free
    Accommodation: Overnight at a hotel in Addis Ababa
    Meals: Lunch  Dinner
  2. Day 2 Addis Ababa to Arba Minch

    Tiya

    On day 2, you will leave Addis Ababa early in the morning and head towards Butajira, stopping on the way to the mysterious stone stellar field of Tiya. Now a UNESCO World Heritage site, nobody really knows who carved the stellae, or the meaning of their mysterious symbols.

    Duration: 1-hour

    Admission Ticket Free

    Arba Minch
    From Butajira, it is a long but scenic drive through the fertile countryside to Arba Minch, where you will stop for the night.
    Duration: 6 hours
    Admission Ticket Free
    Accommodation: Overnight at a hotel in Arba Minch
    Meals: Breakfast  Lunch  Dinner
  3. Day 3 Arba Minch

    Chamo Lake

    In the morning, you will take a boat trip on Lake Chamo to see the famous ”crocodile market” – a stretch of sand where enormous Nile Crocodiles like to warm up in the sunshine. Sightings of hippos are also common on the lake.

    Duration: 3 hours

    Admission Ticket Included

    Dorze Village

    In the afternoon, you’ll take a drive up the hillside to the highland community of Dorze. The Dorze people are famous for their skill as weavers and on a tour around the village, you will see some of their products. Even their houses are woven from bamboo. You can try your hand at the spinning thread, and find out some of their many uses of the enset (false banana) plant. From there, you’ll return to your hotel in Arba Minch, where you’ll stay a second night.

    Duration: 4 hours
    Admission Ticket Included
    Accommodation: Overnight for a second night in the hotel at Arba Minch
    Meals: Breakfast  Lunch  Dinner
  4. Day 4 Arba Minch to Jinka

    Konso

    Leaving Arba Minch, the tour continues southwards, past Lake Chamo to Karat-Konso. The Konso Cultural Landscape, which includes 42 villages and surrounding farmland, is designated as a UNESCO World Heritage site. There are around 250,000 people living in this area, mostly in hill-top villages surrounded by high stone walls. Konso farmers use a sophisticated system of stone terracing to retain moisture and prevent erosion of the hillsides. The area is also famous for the waka (carved wooden funerary statues) that dot the landscape. The Konso people are thought to have lived in this area for at least 400 years and they speak a language belonging to the Cushitic family.

    Duration: 3 hours
    Admission Ticket Free
    Weyt’o

    From Karat-Konso, the journey continues, stopping on the way to see a village of the Tsemai people, who live around the Woito River. The Tsemai practice slash-and-burn agriculture, as well as animal husbandry. The spiritual leader of the Tsemai is the Bogolko, who prays for rain, good harvests, and the health of children. The Tsemai are considered magicians by some people in surrounding urban areas, but they are also known as one of the most peaceful peoples among the ethnic groups of the Omo Valley.

    Duration: 2 hours
    Admission Ticket Free
    Key Afer
    If it is a Thursday (market day), you may choose to visit the local market at Key Afar, rather than the Tsemai village.
    Duration: 2 hours
    Admission Ticket Free
    Jinka
    At the end of the day, you’ll then continue on to Jinka, where you’ll spend the night.
    Duration: 6 hours
    Admission Ticket Free
    Accommodation:  Overnight in a hotel in Jinka
    Meals:  Breakfast  Lunch  Dinner
  5. Day 5 Jinka

    Mursi Village

    From Jinka, you’ll spend the morning exploring a village of the Mursi people, who live in an almost inaccessible area between the Mago and Omo rivers and are famous for the clay lip-plates traditionally worn by women. There’s controversy over the origins of the lip-plates, with theories ranging from disfigurement to discourage slave-raiders to a sign of beauty. Both men and women practice scarification and cut their hair very short, often with patterns shaved into it. Men traditionally wear only a blanket tied at one shoulder, and women, a similarly-fashioned goatskin. The Mursi have a reputation for being aggressive and the men carry a Donga (large stick) for fighting. Ceremonial fights are also performed. Cattle are the Mursi’s most prized possession. They’re used in virtually every social relationship, including in marriage, as a dowry paid to the bride’s father. They provide milk and blood, which form an integral part of the Mursi diet.

    Duration: 2 hours
    Admission Ticket Included
    Jinka
    In the afternoon, you’ll have the choice of visiting the Jinka museum or a village of the Ari people. The Ari people, who live in the fertile lands surrounding Jinka, predominantly practice settled agriculture and produce a variety of cereals, pulses, root crops, fruit, and vegetables, as well as the cash crops coffee and cardamom. In rural areas, you may still see Ari women wearing traditional dresses made from the leaves of the false banana plant, and draped with colorful beads and bracelets. At the end of the day, you’ll return to Jinka, where you’ll spend a second night.
    Duration: 3 hours

    Admission Ticket Free

    Accommodation: Overnight for a second night in the hotel at Jinka
    Meals:  Breakfast  Lunch  Dinner
  6. Day 6 Jinka to Turmei

    Turmi

    Leaving Jinka, the tour continues south to Turmei, passing through an area occupied by the Hamer/Bana people. In the morning, you will stop off either at a local market (if it is Tuesday or Saturday) or at a Bana village. In the afternoon, you’ll either visit a traditional Hamer village or, if you are lucky, witness the Hamar’s famous bull-jumping ceremony, which takes place when a Hamar man comes of age. He must successfully leap over a line of 8-20 cattle 4 times if he is to be allowed to marry, have children, and own cattle of his own. In the village, Hamer women wear elaborately decorated goat skins with beaded necklaces, bracelets, and waistbands, usually black and red, with the number and type of necklaces worn denoting their marital status. Women decorate their hair with clay and butter and twist it into small braids. Men wear a clay cap which is painted and decorated with feathers and other ornaments. Overnight at a hotel in Turmei.

    Duration: 12 hours
    Admission Ticket Free
    Accommodation: Overnight at a hotel in Turmei
    Meals: Breakfast  Lunch  Dinner
  7. Day 7 Turmei

    Omorate

    From Turmei, you will visit a village of the Dassanech people. The Dassanech tribe, living around Omerate, is not strictly defined by ethnicity but has absorbed a wide range of different people over time. The Dassanech are divided into eight main clans, each of which is believed to have special powers over different things such as water, crocodiles, snakes, diseases, drought, eye infections, scorpion bites, and muscular problems. Members of the same clan are forbidden from marrying (or even dancing with) each other. Both men and women of the Dassanech adorn themselves with beads and bracelets.

    Duration: 4 hours
    Admission Ticket Free
    Turmi
    In the afternoon, you may be lucky enough to see a Hamar Bull-jumping ceremony or visit the Hamar village if you saw the bull-jumping ceremony on the previous day. At the end of the day, you’ll return to Turmei, where you’ll spend a second night.
    Duration: 10 hours

    Admission Ticket Free

    Accommodation:  Overnight for a second night in the hotel at Turmei
    Meals:  Breakfast  Lunch  Dinner
  8. Day 8 Turmei to Arba Minch
    Arba Minch
    From Turmei, it is a scenic drive back to Arba Minch, where you’ll stop for the night.
    Duration: 6 hours
    Admission Ticket Free
    Accommodation:  Overnight in a hotel in Arba Minch
    Meals:  Breakfast  Lunch  Dinner
  9. Day 9 Arba Minch to Hawassa

    Awasa

    From Arba Minch, you will continue the journey back north, passing through fertile countryside. The roadsides are often lined with villagers selling fresh, seasonal fruits. Your final destination for the day will be Hawassa, a pleasant lakeside town where you will spend the night. Views over the lake at sunset can be spectacular.

    Duration: 6 hours

    Admission Ticket Free
    Accommodation:  Overnight in a hotel in Hawassa
    Meals:  Breakfast  Lunch  Dinner

     

  10. Day 10 Hawassa to Addis Ababa
    Fish Market at Awassa Lake
    In the morning, you will see Hawassa’s famous fish market, before departing north for Addis Ababa.
    Duration: 1 hour
    Admission Ticket Included
    Lake Abijatta

    On the way from Hawass to Addis Ababa, you will stop for a tour of Abiyata-Shala National Park, where flocks of up to 50,000 flamingos gather. Duration: 2 hours  Admission Ticket Included

    Yod Abyssinia Traditional Restaurant | bole |

    The tour ends with dinner at a cultural restaurant in Addis Ababa, where you can see traditional dances from around the country while sampling various Ethiopian dishes.
    Duration: 2 hours

    Admission Ticket Included

    Accommodation:  Not Included
    Meals: Breakfast  Lunch  Dinner
  • Confirmation will be received at the time of booking
  • Not wheelchair accessible
  • Near public transportation
  • Travelers should have a moderate physical fitness level
  • This tour/activity will have a maximum of 10 traveler
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