Namoroka Tsingy Camp is a unique tented camp located in Namoroka National Park in northwestern Madagascar. This remarkable destination offers an exclusive opportunity to explore one of the world’s most extraordinary natural wonders. The park features deep gorges, underground caverns, stunning limestone “tsingy” formations, and endemic wildlife found only in Madagascar. It remains largely unexplored by mainstream tourists.
Namoroka Tsingy Camp is the only property in the 220-square-kilometer Tsingy de Namoroka National Park. Over the last five years, only a handful of visitors have ventured here, making it one of the most remote and unexplored places in Madagascar. At the camp, you’ll experience phenomenal wildlife encounters in a surreal landscape where towering baobab trees cling to jagged limestone formations. Curious lemurs may greet you, fossa roam near the camp, and at night, each glance reveals a new bird species. Mysterious caves invite exploration.
Tsingy de Namoroka National Park hosts six distinct ecosystems: tsingy, western dry deciduous forest, gallery forest, bamboo forests, perennial and seasonal wetlands, and the Marosakabe cave system.
The camp is open from 15 May to 10 November, as the park is closed from December to April when roads become inaccessible. Western Madagascar has a tropical climate, with hot temperatures year-round and a distinct rainy season. Typically, there is no rainfall between May and October, while the primary rainy period occurs from January to March. The ‘winter’ months of June to August bring cooler evenings, where a light sweater may be needed, though daytime temperatures remain in the high 20s to low 30s.