Hot Springs In Semuliki

 

The rich story behind Simulink’s female and male hot springs

Most of the locals know the hot springs as Sempaya which originated from a Kiswahili phrase Sehemu mbaya (the difficult side) owing to the steep challenging rocks and terrain during the construction of the Fort Portal Bundibugyo road along the ridges of the Rwenzori Mountains.

While the scientists have a technical explanation to the origins of the hot springs, the indigenous Bamaga clan neighboring the tourist attraction in Semuliki National Park have their own story from the folk lore.

 

Sempaya Hotsprings

According to the elders of the Bamaga clan, the site of the steaming male hot spring is historical. It is said the Bamaga women had gone to fetch firewood from the forest when they sighted a hairy man dressed in bark cloth wielding a spear and with dog moving in a zig-zag formation around that location. The women ran back home to tell their husbands who decided to pick and take him to their homes and subsequently got him a wife from the same village.
The said man who later became known as Biteete, continued hunting but one time never returned home. After three days, the men went out to search for him and at the present day male hot spring they only found a spear but no traces of the man nor his dog. It was assumed he had disappeared from the same spot and they ran back to tell the wife (Nyansimbi) who also ran to the forest never to return. In the subsequent search, only her clothes were found at the present day female hot spring. This was how the two springs became to be known as the male and female hot springs and to-date the Bamaga believe their female ancestors live beneath the female hot spring while their male ancestors live at the male spring.

Visiting hot springs in Semuliki National Park

On a recent off the beaten track safari our visitors were taken to Semuliki National Park where they got to experience the hot springs. The park is located in the western part of Uganda, bordering the Democratic Republic of Congo, and it is one of Uganda’s less visited national parks. It includes East Africa’s only lowland tropical forest that is recognized for its rich birdlife. The park is known for the two Sempaya hot springs, one male called Bintente and one female called Nyasimbi. The idea that they are male and female comes from the Bamaga clan’s folk lore; they believe that their female ancestors live under Nyasimbi and their male ancestors under Bintente.

 

Our visitors went on a guided walk in the park to see the hot springs. The female spring is dominated by a geyser that sprays water to a height of up to 2 meters and the male spring is a pool of hot water. The walk to the springs took them through beautiful nature. The temperature of the water in both springs reaches 100 degrees Celsius and it is well known that you can cook food in the springs. Our visitors tested this and successfully boiled egg

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