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Lac Assale

Lac Assale (Djibouti)

Practical information on Lac Assale

  • Viewpoint
  • Hiking / Trekking
  • Desert
  • Lake
  • Essential
5 / 5 - 2 reviews
How to get there
40 kilometres from As Eyla
When to go
From October to March
Minimum stay
1 to 2 days

Reviews of Lac Assale

Camille Griffoulieres Seasoned Traveller
116 written opinions

Lake Assale, also known as Lake Karum, is located in the heart of the Danakil Desert, next to the Danakil Depression. It evaporates under the sun during the dry season and turns into a salt pit, to where camel caravans travel.

My suggestion:
You should bring sunglasses and good sun cream with you, the sun's reflection in the salt lake is very strong in the open Danakil Desert. 
My review

Visiting Lake Assale is part of the expedition which leads to the Danakil Depression and lasts two days. Among the various pit-stops, we start nearby, where there are areas of boiling water in the ground, salty natural jacuzzis where the salt concentration is greater than that of the Dead Sea! You can also go for a swim to try out the floating experience, but the salt dries out your skin and you'd be spending the night in the Afar Village of Ahmed Ela without a shower... We'll let you decide if it's worth it!

Then we walk to the banks of Lake Assale, actually a salt desert where the water doesn't reach a few dozen centimetres deep over some hundred metres before sinking into the salty depths. The place is magical, especially with the reflection of the mountains and the sky on the salt water which creates mirages. My convoy then stopped at the foot of some enormous salt mountains which you explore with a torch. Not suitable for claustrophobic people, it's quite narrow.

The highlight of the trip to Lake Assale, is when we found the salt caravans, made up of hundreds of camels which journey across the desert to a huge salt mine. There men carve out salt blocks using oppressive heat, something they've done for the last 2500 years, when the Queen of Sheba's artisans came here to find salt...

Camel caravan arriving at the Lake Assale salt mine.
Camille Griffoulieres Seasoned Traveller
116 written opinions

Lake Assale, also known as Lake Karum, is located in the heart of the Danakil Desert, next to the Danakil Depression. It evaporates under the sun during the dry season and turns into a salt pit, to where camel caravans travel.

My suggestion:
You should bring sunglasses and good sun cream with you, the sun's reflection in the salt lake is very strong in the open Danakil Desert. 
My review

Visiting Lake Assale is part of the expedition which leads to the Danakil Depression and lasts two days. Among the various pit-stops, we start nearby, where there are areas of boiling water in the ground, salty natural jacuzzis where the salt concentration is greater than that of the Dead Sea! You can also go for a swim to try out the floating experience, but the salt dries out your skin and you'd be spending the night in the Afar Village of Ahmed Ela without a shower... We'll let you decide if it's worth it!

Then we walk to the banks of Lake Assale, actually a salt desert where the water doesn't reach a few dozen centimetres deep over some hundred metres before sinking into the salty depths. The place is magical, especially with the reflection of the mountains and the sky on the salt water which creates mirages. My convoy then stopped at the foot of some enormous salt mountains which you explore with a torch. Not suitable for claustrophobic people, it's quite narrow.

The highlight of the trip to Lake Assale, is when we found the salt caravans, made up of hundreds of camels which journey across the desert to a huge salt mine. There men carve out salt blocks using oppressive heat, something they've done for the last 2500 years, when the Queen of Sheba's artisans came here to find salt...

Camel caravan arriving at the Lake Assale salt mine.