Mount Kenya
Central Kenya

Mount Kenya

Africa's second-highest peak — snow-capped equatorial giant wrapped in alpine moorland and bamboo forest.

Region

Central Kenya

Best time

January–February and July–September

Coordinates

-0.152, 37.308

About Mount Kenya

Mount Kenya (5,199m) is a UNESCO World Heritage Site and sacred home of Ngai to the Kikuyu. Its glaciated summit, afro-alpine vegetation, and lush lower forests make it one of East Africa's most spectacular landscapes — whether for serious mountaineers targeting Point Lenana (4,985m, a trekker's peak) or day visitors enjoying its forested foothills.

AECONS arranges trekking via the Naro Moru, Sirimon and Chogoria routes, and scenic day tours around Nanyuki and Mt Kenya National Park.

Highlights

  • Point Lenana summit trek
  • Sirimon–Chogoria traverse
  • Alpine lakes (Michaelson, Ellis)
  • Equator crossing at Nanyuki
Live forecast · Mount Kenya
1°C Mainly clear · 14 km/h wind
Updated 2026-05-18T16:00
  1. 🌦 -4° 💧 0.3mm
  2. 🌦 -5° 💧 0.7mm
  3. 🌦 -4° 💧 5.5mm
  4. 🌦 -4° 💧 11.1mm
  5. 🌦 -4° 💧 2.1mm
  6. -4°
  7. 🌦 -5° 💧 0.6mm
Weather data by Open-Meteo.com
Live wildlife observations
Recently spotted near Mount Kenya

Real observations published to GBIF by researchers, lodges, and citizen scientists — refreshed daily.

Source: GBIF.org — Global Biodiversity Information Facility

Best time to visit

January–February and July–September

Custom build

No published tours yet for Mount Kenya

We can still build you a custom itinerary. Tell us your dates, group size and interests.