Day 16: Hiking Volcanoes to See the Monkeys
Golden monkey day at Volcanoes National Park. A lot of mud, a lot of bamboo, some of the closest wildlife encounters of the entire trip, and something unexpected on the drive back that I won't forget.
Golden Monkey Tracking
Golden monkey tracking works similarly to gorilla tracking — briefing, assigned group and guide, then head into the forest. The difference is that golden monkeys live in bamboo forest, and bamboo forest terrain is its own particular challenge. The trail was muddy. Not "a little slippery in places" muddy. "Your boots are now three pounds heavier and you have lost all confidence in your footing" muddy. Every single step was a deliberate act.
The bamboo forest itself was something else. Tall stalks rising up on all sides, green light filtering through, sounds of the forest filling the gaps between footsteps. A completely different world from the open hills and lakes we'd been spending time in. Dense and enclosed and alive in a way that kept changing as we moved through it.
Up Close with the Monkeys
When we found them, I wasn't prepared for how close they would be. Golden monkeys are fully habituated — they've been around researchers and visitors long enough that they simply don't register humans as a threat. We were watching them from one to five feet away. Five feet. Some were closer than that.
Smaller than I expected. The golden-orange patches on their backs and sides are more vivid in person than in photographs. They moved through the bamboo with an ease that made the terrain we'd struggled through look like nothing — swinging, climbing, leaping between stalks with complete casual confidence. A few sat nearby and ate while we watched, unbothered. One of those wildlife moments where you forget to take pictures because you're just standing there watching the thing.
A Genocide Remembrance Procession
On the drive back, we saw something that brought the entire trip back into focus. A genocide remembrance procession was moving along the road. Hundreds of children, walking together, paying their respects to the victims of 1994. The 20th anniversary year. These observances were happening throughout the country during our visit.
Watching those children walk past was one of the most striking moments of the trip. These were kids born after the genocide. They had no personal memory of it. And yet there they were, moving quietly along the road, carrying the weight of their country's history forward. We pulled over and watched in silence as they went by.
Rwanda does this. It gives you an afternoon of golden monkeys in a bamboo forest and then, on the drive home, reminds you exactly where you are and what happened here. The two things exist side by side, always. That's the trip. That's the country.