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Yabelo

Yabelo (Ethiopia)

Practical information on Yabelo

  • Nature Reserve / Wildlife Observation / Safari
  • Countryside
  • Off the beaten track
3 / 5 - 2 reviews
How to get there
124 ml south of Dila by car
When to go
From May to November
Minimum stay
1 to 2 days

Reviews of Yabelo

Camille Griffoulieres Seasoned Traveller
116 written opinions

Yabelo is a small village in southern Ethiopia in the Omo Valley next to the natural reserve of the same name, in Borana country.

My suggestion:
Yabelo is a good base from which to visit the natural sanctuary, before continuing one's road towards Konso or going back up towards Arba Minch .
My review

I really liked Yabelo as it is an authentic village, but it is clearly "off the beaten track" and the hostelry offer is very basic and limited. A stop over here is really not indispensable, but I really appreciated my visit to a Borena village. 

Just like its twin reserve, the Senkele Wildlife Sanctuary, the Yabelo sanctuary was founded to protect Swayne's hartebeest, a gazelle indigenous to the region that is becoming extinct. In the space of ten years, its population in Ethiopia has dwindled from 3 000 to 250... However, this park that is 965 ml2 is much larger than Senkele and is henceforth also a refuge for other wild animals. Here, you can see Burchell's zebras, kudus, Grant's gazelles, dik-diks and 200 species of birds.

The barren savannah landscape is typical of East Africa. You must pay an entrance fee (of 100 birrs) and be accompanied by a scout (120 birrs for the day) to enter this park with your own vehicle. You go through the necessary procedures in Yabelo. 

Borena woman in Yabelo
Camille Griffoulieres Seasoned Traveller
116 written opinions

Yabelo is a small village in southern Ethiopia in the Omo Valley next to the natural reserve of the same name, in Borana country.

My suggestion:
Yabelo is a good base from which to visit the natural sanctuary, before continuing one's road towards Konso or going back up towards Arba Minch .
My review

I really liked Yabelo as it is an authentic village, but it is clearly "off the beaten track" and the hostelry offer is very basic and limited. A stop over here is really not indispensable, but I really appreciated my visit to a Borena village. 

Just like its twin reserve, the Senkele Wildlife Sanctuary, the Yabelo sanctuary was founded to protect Swayne's hartebeest, a gazelle indigenous to the region that is becoming extinct. In the space of ten years, its population in Ethiopia has dwindled from 3 000 to 250... However, this park that is 965 ml2 is much larger than Senkele and is henceforth also a refuge for other wild animals. Here, you can see Burchell's zebras, kudus, Grant's gazelles, dik-diks and 200 species of birds.

The barren savannah landscape is typical of East Africa. You must pay an entrance fee (of 100 birrs) and be accompanied by a scout (120 birrs for the day) to enter this park with your own vehicle. You go through the necessary procedures in Yabelo. 

Borena woman in Yabelo