4. In Uganda, you don’t wear Rolex, you eat it. Don’t be confused. Rolex is a type of fast food where an omelette is wrapped in a chapatti (Roll eggs = Rolex). Ugandans love it so much that they have created an annual Rolex festival that is meant to celebrate this street food.
5. Watch out for the food in our plate. You might be eating a grasshopper. Oh yes, pan-fried grasshoppers are considered a delicacy in Uganda.
6. Lake Victoria in Uganda is the largest lake in Africa. It is also the second largest freshwater lake in the world. Lake Victoria is one of the Nile River’s sources and is even said to be where it begins.
7. Uganda has a young population. With 48% of the population below 15 years of age, it is the second youngest country in the world.
8. There are only a few countries that the equator runs through. Uganda is one of them. In Uganda, the equator is located 75 km south of Kampala, where you can purchase memorabilia and watch cool equator water experiments.
9. Uganda is one of the most ethnically diverse countries in the world. It is said that if you pick two people randomly, they would most of the times be of different ethnicity. The largest groups are Baganda, Banyankole and Basoga.
10. Uganda is the second largest producer of bananas in the world, falling second only to India. The country produces an estimated 12 million tons annually.
11. Large families are preferred in Uganda. The country has one of the world’s highest fertility rate at 5.8 children per woman. Sadly due to because of the early age of childbearing and short birth intervals, the maternal mortality rate is also very high in Uganda.
12. Uganda is one of the world’s poorest and least-developed countries. Unemployment is a huge concern in Uganda and many locals find work with local cottage industries and many are still unemployed.
13. Despite being poor, Uganda hosts more refugees than any other country in Africa. The refugees are mostly from the neighbouring countries of DRC or South Sudan.
Trip leader Sakshi’s Recommendations if you are visiting Uganda:
Murchison Falls National Park: This is the country’s largest national park and one of the best places to see Africa’s Big Five. The famous Nile River runs through it and also creates a gorgeous 140-foot waterfall. If you hike to the top of Murchison Falls, you can see where the Nile River rushes through the Albertine gorge.