Kilimanjaro PHOTOS

Trip report by BestHike editor Rick McCharles.

Disclaimer ➙ There are MANY other mountains to climb in Africa which are much less expensive. Any one of those would be good acclimatization before Kili.

I hiked Kilimanjaro February 2026 on the Machame Route organized by Eric Hanson.

Eric is one of the top hiking YouTubers. He’ll be documenting our trip in coming weeks.

In the meantime, I’m posting some photos here.

We had 22 hikers. 18 of us made both summits. That’s about typical for the Machame Route. It went well for me. My 3 weeks training & acclimatizing in Ecuador prior to this trip was a good idea.

Kili Summit Ridge

Age & fitness matter much less than the ability to acclimatize to altitude.

It took me 68-years to finally get to Kilimanjaro. The eldest my African guide got to the summit was 79.

We had another in our group age-66.

Truly impressive is one of our assistant guides who’s been to the summit over 200 times over 31 years. He’s age 64.

Here we are — clean & keen — at the start of the 7 day adventure.

In fact, it was a party from the start as many who had hiked with Eric in the past joined for Kili. I was simply an addition to a large group, many who knew one another. This is a very social adventure ➙ shared suffering.

Eric was our American guide. Freddy our African guide. Both responsible for keeping us safe. It was these two who’d make the decision whether or not you were healthy enough to keep climbing.

Those who decided to go down were unable to acclimatize quickly enough. We had daily blood oxygen tests.

Three decided to walk out. One took a helicopter, hoping she will recoup the $4100 cost through insurance.

New to me on a trail was the singing and dancing. Non-stop. To the top.

Oddly, all 7 days we had the same weather. Some sort of micro-climate.

Morning clear. Sunny to start the hiking day. Snow, sleet, and hail in the early afternoon. Clearing by dinner time. Clear skies at night. Kili summit clear at dawn.

We added and removed layers non-stop during the day.

Each day we spent some time hiking through clouds.

We mostly had clear skies at night. The iPhone 16 Pro is terrific at night photography on a tripod.

I’d paid a little extra to have a tent to myself. It was fairly comfortable — though many of our tent sites were far from level. 😀

Kili is a monstrous lump of a mountain. Much bigger than it appears on the horizon.

I’d signed up for Kili in 2020 with Dave and Kraig — cancelled due to Covid.

When I heard in 2025 that Eric Hanson was hosting a climb, I signed up instantly.

His wife was coming so I knew it would be a quality trip. 😀

Food was plentiful and basic. Especially SOUP and potato dishes.

We saw very little animal life. Four-striped grass mouse. And something like a shrew.

Birds aplenty, however. We lived side-by-side with aggressive White-necked Ravens in every camp.

And we did see one Auger Buzzard.

We were happy to see two kinds of monkeys. But both were at lower slopes, close to the start and finishing gates.

Blue Monkey.
Black-and-white Colobus.

Baboons and velvet monkeys have been spotted, but rarely.

This bird took a dump in my backpack. 😀

Vegetation was much more interesting as we climbed through so many different ecological zones.

I do love thistles.

We had great views over to nearby Meru volcano. When you see hikers posed like this, you know they are searching for line-of-sight mobile phone reception. 😀

The Machame Route was crowded when I was there. We often had long lines of hikers & porters.

Camps are crowded and littered.

Personally, I felt the portable toilets provided weren’t great. I preferred squatting over a hole in the concrete in the permanent toilet buildings.

Hygiene is not top of mind for any of the guiding companies. In particular, I was surprised alcohol gel was not constantly provided.

That said, nobody in my group got sick from water or food.

CRUX of Kilimanjaro is summit night. One of the toughest hiking days any of us could recall. I felt perfect. No pain. No problems … when starting.

Wake at midnight. Hot drinks 12:30pm. Start up at 1am.

It was a slow, cold trudge until dawn.

We had an ideal view of the changing light.

Way above the clouds.

We finally reached the first summit peak. And on perhaps another 35 minutes to the highest peak.

I took a LOT of photos and video up there. Most impressive were the odd, receding glaciers.

That was the FUN part.

Guides hustled us down as quickly as possible to avoid altitude sickness. We climbed down 8000 feet, not getting into low camp until 6pm or so. I ascended & descended for 16 hours, grabbing 1 hour sleep around noon.

Sore knees. Sore toes. And cramping quads.

Highlight?

Most would agree that the porters, guides, and staff were the most impressive takeaway from this adventure. We probably had over 100 staff taking care of us over the week. And these folks will do positively anything you request.

Back at the hotel, we celebrated with alcohol and devoured a full roast goat. Delicious.

A hiker died on Kilimanjaro while I was there. Reported heart attack.

On December 24, 2025, a rescue helicopter crashed, killing all 5 people on board. Two were hikers being evacuated.

10–20 deaths annually out of 30,000+ climbers.

I wrongly thought Kilimanjaro would be easy for me. It wasn’t.

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