Limalimo Lodge hotel review: a new base for exploring Ethiopia's Simien Mountains National Park

Spot wildlife right outside your door at this rustic new addition to a spectacular location

Graeme Green
Tuesday 13 September 2016 07:15 EDT
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The lodge's restaurant
The lodge's restaurant

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New openings in the Ethiopian Highlands are rare. When it comes to the Simien Mountains National Park, one of the richest wildlife areas in the country, visitors could previously stay either in the nearby town of Debark or, if keen to be inside the park’s borders, the decade-old Simien Lodge. Limalimo Lodge, the second to be opened inside the National Park, offers something stylishly new.

Built on an escarpment within the recently expanded park boundaries, close to the village of Limalimo, the lodge has been a long time coming. Originally scheduled to open in September 2015, building work was still going on during my visit in May; the soft opening should (fingers crossed) become an official full opening once it’s all finished this month.

Limalimo’s a smart boutique lodge, with only 12 rooms. There’s a deliberate earthiness about the place; the boxy cabins spread out across the wooded hillside and the main hilltop lodge are all made from “rammed earth” (soil collected from the site and compacted together), eucalyptus wood and thatch. The bar and restaurant had yet to be completed when I stayed, but both are now ready and I’m sure will make cosy areas in which to relax post wildlife-spotting. The star of the show, though, is the terrace, which looks out onto a view of mountains, valleys, forests and rock formations.

The restaurant is now complete
The restaurant is now complete

The Simiens have a deserved reputation for wildlife, home to, among others, gelada monkeys, who occasionally come wandering through the lodge’s grounds in the mornings and gather out on the escarpment most evenings before descending to their beds in the cliffs. You might see a lammergeier (known locally as “bone-breakers” because they take bones from carcasses and smash them against rocks to get at the marrow inside) circling over the hillsides, or, at night, perhaps you’ll hear the grunts of a roaming leopard.

Gelada monkeys
Gelada monkeys

Clearly, there are good intentions here at the lodge. Opened by a small team of local Ethiopian guides and one of their wives, a British woman, the lodge was built almost entirely using a local workforce, many coming from the village of Limalimo, a half-hour walk down the hill. And the majority of staff, from chefs and waitresses to the on-site handyman, again come from Limalimo and the surrounding area. It’s providing much needed employment opportunities in the area and makes the lodge feel part of the local community.

Location

The escarpment-top location has an exceptional view of the national park. It’s quite something to wake up and eat breakfast on the terrace at the start of the day. The the more basic Simien Lodge – the park’s only other option – is deeper inside, however; accessing the key wildlife areas from Limalimo involves a 40-minute drive out of the park and back in again through the main gate.

The dramatic Simien Mountains
The dramatic Simien Mountains

As well as checking out the hordes of habituated geladas and other wildlife, including the endemic walia ibex, klipspringers, bushbucks, birds of prey and, if you’re lucky, the endangered Ethiopian wolf, it’s also worth spending an afternoon hiking down to Limalimo to get an idea of daily life in the village. The lodge arranges guided community visits, which include spending time in the home of one of the villagers for freshly ground coffee, chunky wheat bread (dabo), barley and possibly a home-brewed beer (tela), as well as checking out the local church and taking in a fine view of the valley.

Comfort

Like the salt in the salt hotels of Bolivia, the rammed earth makes a novel, attractive natural material, which dominates the rooms, along with concrete floors in bathrooms. Rooms have been kept simple; they were a little sparse and could use some Ethiopian art or crafts to bring a bit of colour and life. It felt quite dingy in the evenings, too; some additional lamps would be helpful. It can be chilly up in the mountains, too; there’s talk of installing heating, which would benefit the rooms.

A room with a view
A room with a view

Beds are incredibly comfortable and warm, and there’s also a window seat and lounging area. Big sunset-facing windows along the front look out onto the forest, though, a little disappointingly, the views don’t really make the most of the Simien Mountain scenery that’s out at the front of the lodge.

The staff have been given good training; service is friendly and thoughtful. Meals, especially dinner, are on the simple side, though it’s good to see the country’s national dish injera (a spongy pancake served with different sauces) make a showing, along with surprisingly tasty Rift Valley wine.

Essentials

Limalimo Lodge, Simien Mountains National Park, Ethiopia (00 251 93 168 8062; limalimolodge.com). Doubles from US$300 (£224) per night, full board.

cazenove+loyd (020 7384 2332; cazloyd.com) offers five nights’ full board at Limalimo Lodge, including flights, guides and transfers, from £3,515 per person.

Ethiopian Airlines (0800 016 3559; ethiopianairlines.com) flies from Heathrow to Addis Ababa from £505 return in economy and £2,065 in business class.

Rooms: ***
Value: ***
Service: ****

Wi-fi: in the pipeline, though there is currently no internet connection
Access: no wheelchair-accessible rooms

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