+255 626 236 022

Moshi Changai

Picture of Moshi Changai

Moshi Changai

Moshi is from the Irangi tribe and knows everything there is to know about African animals and the environment. His main focus now is the Kondoa region of Tanzania. He lives with his wife and 2 children.

Honey Harvesting

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn

In Tanzania traditional beekeeping produces amoung the purest honey in the world. The best time to harvest honey is at night when the African Killer bees are at their calmest and that’s when you will join the beekeepers to harvest honey kept in the baobab or kigelia africana trees.

This is part of our home-stay program where you will harvest honey at night with the local men.  The men climb the trees and knock the bee hive onto the ground and collect the honey combs. Head back the home and press the honey and then sleep in the traditional hut for a sweet and sticky sleep. This is an experience you will not want to miss.

As the traditional hives are no longer usable we will slowly transition to the new honey boxes made from sustainable trees that we are bringing to the villages, one by one, so that no more trees have to be cut down to make the new hives.  Down the road this tour will be honey harvesting from the new and sustainable hives.

Add a project to your Cultural Tour

More to explorer

Tribe Visit (Barbaig or Sandawe)

The Sandawe and Barabaig tribes live very close together but have vastly different ways of life. The Sandawe people are a small group living

The Kolo Rock Paintings

Our knowledgable guides will help you decipher the elongated people, animals, and hunting scenes in the different locations. There are three different

Walking Tours

We offer walking tours in the towns and villages.  Take a walk around a village to learn about the history of the Irangi culture

Traditional Healer

A traditional healer is someone who treats different diseases in the local communities using plants and natural remedies that have been used over

Homestay Program

Travellers have the unique opportunity to spend more time in one of the villages. Over the course of a night, several days or

Ntomoko Waterfall

Join the water watchman and trek up Sambwa hill near the small village of Ntomoko.  Ntomoko falls is the water source that serves over 20,000

COMPLETED Iyoli Water Project

Kondoa Cultural Tourism Enterprise has identified Iyoli Village in need of a clean water supply.  Their water dried up in 2014 and they had to walk