Guides to the lake
Beaches
Saga Beach and the strip of lakeside clubs and hotel beaches north of the port, with practical notes on facilities and entry fees.
Boat trips
Sunset cruises, trips toward the Rusizi delta, and chartering local boats safely.
Fishing
Night fishing for ndagala with lamp boats, the famous mukeke and sangala, and where to watch the catch come in.
Water sports
Kayaking, paddleboarding and sailing options along the Bujumbura shore.
Understand
A lake unlike any other
Tanganyika is ancient — several million years old — and its isolation produced hundreds of fish species found nowhere else, including the cichlids prized by aquarists worldwide. For Bujumbura, the lake is livelihood first and leisure second: the port handles most of Burundi's imports and exports, and fishing supplies the city's tables with mukeke, sangala and ndagala.
Swimming: what to know
People swim at the established beaches, but two cautions are standard. First, hippos and the occasional crocodile move along quieter stretches of shore, especially near the Rusizi delta and at dawn and dusk — stay on busy, managed beaches. Second, bilharzia (schistosomiasis) exists in parts of the lake; risk is lower off deeper, wave-washed beaches, but ask locally and see our health guide.
Best time on the water
Mornings are calmest; afternoon winds raise a real chop. The dry season (June–September) brings haze but reliable sun; after rains, the air clears and the Congolese mountains across the water feel close enough to touch.