Worldwide Photographic Journeys

Ethiopia

OMO VALLEY: THE EXTRAORDINARY TRIBAL PEOPLE OF SOUTHERN ETHIOPIA

Saturday 8th March – Friday 21st March 2025

Leaders: Ingrid Koedood and local guides

14 Days Group Size Limit 5 (1 space left)
Sunday 8th March – Saturday 21st March 2026

Leaders: Ingrid Koedood and local guides

14 Days Group Size Limit 5

OMO VALLEY PHOTOGRAPHY TOURS WITH WILD IMAGES

The extraordinarily diverse country of Ethiopia is home to some of the last true tribal people in all of Africa and has become famous for its extraordinary tribal photography potential. In the south west of Ethiopia lies the Omo Valley, a living anthropological treasure of spectacular people including the Hamer, Suri, Dassanech, Karo, Nyangatom and Mursi tribes. In the face of their ever changing world, each of these tribes is struggling to maintain their traditions of dress, dance, decoration and way of life. A visit to Ethiopia’s Omo Valley is to visit a world that is fast disappearing. A world of beauty, diversity and strength that has vanished from great tracts of Africa.

Collectively the Omo Valley people draw inspiration from the wilderness that surrounds them and this is reflected in their varying styles of traditional dress.

Why travel to the Omo Valley with Wild Images?

Currently there are quite a number of photographers and photography tour companies offering trips to the Omo Valley.  We have decided to offer a unique alternative to the more standard itineraries offered by so many.  By joining a Wild Images tour we work with an unrivalled level of ground expertise and local trackers who are well connected to the various tribal people in the Omo and Central Rift Valleys.  Our leader has almost thirty years of travel experience in Africa and knows Ethiopia extremely well.  We travel to remote villages and we arrive when the light is most beautiful for photography. We also believe that the best images come from photography of people in a two way situation.  We encourage our guests to chat to local people through our interpreters, laugh with them, engage with them and simply enjoy the experience of being immersed in their world.  As the body of work from our tour shows, we don’t just simply pass through villages spending less than an hour to get photos. We stroll around enjoying places, we sit in the shade with local people, drink coffee with them or enjoy banter with them at lively and colourful local markets.  Join us on a journey where friends are made alongside beautiful images in one of the most spectacular tribal regions of the African continent.

Peoples of the Omo we will visit

Arbore

The Arbore, also known as the Ulde, are an ethnic group living in southern Ethiopia, near Lake Chew Bahir. With a total population of around 7000, the Arbore population is divided into just four villages named Gandareb, Kulaama, Murale and Eegude. They live in hot and flat areas and are mainly cattlemen. Like for the majority of other tribes of the Omo Valley, cows, goats and sheep are the main source of existence and value for the Arbore people. Their name literally means: Land of the Bulls (Ar means bull and bore means land). The main feature differentiating the Arbore tribe from other tribes of the Omo Valley is their high spiritual status. Local legend says that once the devil attacked the Arbore, but the tribe managed to win and survive. Since then it is believed that Arbore priests are endowed with a special strength and power and if the priests of another tribe can’t solve their problems, a delegation of elders with gifts is sent to Arbore to ask for help. Thanks to this the Arbore lead a very quiet existence and no other Omo Valley tribe is brave enough to attack them or their cattle.

The Arbore live in large huts, often nestled against piles of tall Papyrus reeds that have been collected from the lakeshore to feed their livestock. Immaculately clean and beautiful in architecture, we will enjoy spending time with a group of Arbore at both sunset and sunrise as Arbore herders deliver their livestock to the fields and then home to rest. We will also experience the stunningly intricate jewellery and black cloth attire of Arbore women who, along with the Hamer women, are considered some of the most beautiful women of the region.

Dassanech

A highlight among the tribes we will visit are the Dassanech people, who originate from the spectacular region of Lake Turkana in northern Kenya.  They were traditionally known for wearing elaborate headdresses and jewellery fashioned from traded goods and bottle tops. However, in early 2018, they collectively took a stand against this practice as it was being done strictly for photographers and tourists and wasn’t representative of their true culture. Worried that the build up of tourism was altering their culture in a negative way, the Dassanech returned to their traditional dress of a red coloured ‘Bure’ or strings of necklaces, and now they live as they always have, in beautiful huts made from sticks and skins with the recent addition of corrugated iron. We will visit a remote village of Dassanech people that lies around 25 kilometres from the border or Kenya and Ethiopia.  Our donation to the village elders will help Dassanech children attend school and will support the village through purchase of food.

Hamer

The women of the friendly Hamer tribe are often considered to be some of the most beautiful in the entire Omo Valley region. They use a beautiful combination of ochre and animal fat to cover their skin, while dressing in a goat skin decorated with thousands of beads. First wives of Hamer men wear a ‘Binyari’ or heavy metal necklace fixed by a ‘lock’ of metal that indicates their status. On Monday every week the Hamer people walk from the surrounding villages to trade their wares at a bustling local market. This market, and indeed the entire village with its colourful, ramshackle buildings, allow for beautiful street photography so we will make two excursions here.

If we are lucky during our stay we may encounter a traditional Hamer Bull Jumping Ceremony. The Hamer, including their anthropologically similar tribes of the Banna and Tsemay, are known for their unique custom of “bull jumping,” which initiates a boy into manhood. In the week leading up to the ceremony, the initiate is surrounded by a group of male friends who feed him, prepare him and help him to practice for the big event. The ceremony itself usually takes place on a Monday when the market has finished. First, female relatives dance and invite whipping from men who have recently been initiated; this shows their support of the initiated, and their scars give them a right to demand his help in time of need. The men who supported the chosen boy then paint their faces so they can be recognised by the boy during the ceremony. Eventually the bulls are brought in to the assembled Hamer people where they are blessed on a walking circuit before they are taken to be lined up in the arena. Guests are greeted with either drinks of coffee or local araki (or beer) and they wait for the jumping ceremony in the shade. Eventually the bulls are brought to the arena and held together by the boy’s assistants. The initiate boy must then run back and forth twice across the backs of a row of bulls or castrated steers, and he is ridiculed if he fails. Although these events have drawn many tourists in recent years, it is still a fascinating afternoon and ceremony to witness so we will join the throngs if we discover that one is taking place during our tour.

Karo

To the east of the Rift Valley are the lands of the elaborately painted and scarred Karo People. The Karo excel in face and body painting practiced daily in preparation of their dances and ceremonies. They pulverize locally found white chalk, yellow mineral rock, red iron ore, and black charcoal to decorate their bodies, often mimicking the spotted plumage of a guinea fowl. The men create highly decorated clay hair buns, which can take up to three days to complete. Their ornate body scarring, where a cut is made with a knife and ash is rubbed into the wound to produce a raised welt, is also a known characteristic of the Karo.

We will visit a beautiful Karo village that is perched high on an embankment overlooking the spectacular Omo River.  Naturally we will visit to photograph people but we will also explore the village, enjoying the intricate and well constructed Karo huts.  Many of these, including their livestock enclosures and also a spectacular public building called a Marmar (effectively the ‘parliament house’ of the Karo) have been fashioned from local hardwoods harvested from the nearby riverine forests.  The Karo live gently in this region, sharing their world with some beautiful wildlife including Black and white Colobus Monkeys, Olive Baboons and birdlife including Gonoleks, African Fish Eagles and Hadeda Ibis.

Mursi

The second group of people who adorn themselves with elaborate ‘lip disks’ the Mursi are a Nilotic, pastoralist tribe of people who undergo various rites of passage, educational or disciplinary processes. Lip plates are a well known aspect of the Mursi and Surma, who are probably the last groups in Africa amongst whom it is still the norm for women to wear large pottery, wooden discs, or ‘plates,’ in their lower lips. Girls’ lips are pierced at the age of 15 or 16. Occasionally lip plates are worn to a dance by unmarried women.

Ceremonial duelling (thagine), a form of ritualised male violence, is a highly valued and popular activity of Mursi men, especially unmarried men, and a key marker of Mursi identity. Age sets are an important political feature, where men are formed into named “age sets” and pass through a number of “age grades” during the course of their lives; married women have the same age grade status as their husbands.

While visiting the Mursi and their close relatives, the Suri, we will try to search for a cattle camp for our group to visit.  Both the Suri and the Mursi rely heavily upon their herds of cattle for meat, milk and blood.  The latter is bled from cows to drink at breakfast, in a similar way to the cattle bloodletting of the Masaai people of Kenya.  We cannot guarantee that we will visit a cattle camp as the shepherds working with the cattle are nomadic and they move around often to graze their cattle and shelter them from being rustled by neighbouring tribes.  If found, however, visiting a cattle camp is one of the highlights of travel in the Omo Valley, providing a very unique insight into the nomadic way of life of the Suri and Mursi people.

After a spectacular drive out of the Omo Valley and through the beautiful terraced fields of the Konso people, we will enjoy a final night at the beautiful Paradise Lodge in Arba Minch where we will recap on our encounters with these magnificent people. On our final morning we will take a quiet, gentle boat trip out on Lake Chamo where fishermen from the Gamo tribe ply the waters searching for Nile Perch and Tilapia on the same papyrus reed boats they have used for centuries to fish.

Nyangatom and Toposa

The Nyangatom and Toposa inhabit a starkly beautiful region of Africa’s Ilemi Triangle which is both remote and incredibly photogenic. This hot, dry, arid region of southern Ethiopia features dusty plains and waxy-leaved Calotropis bushes. Exploring this part of remote Ethiopia we may encounter a myriad of different ethnic people emanating from South Sudan, the highlight of whom are both the elaborately decorated Nyangatom people and the spectacularly scarred Toposa people. Nyangatom women are known for wearing copious amounts of brightly coloured necklaces and their more subtle scars are sometimes glimpsed between layers of coloured fabric. The Nyangatom engage in inter-tribal conflict with virtually every one of their neighbouring tribes, with the exception of the Toposa, who may live with and inter-marry with Nyangatom people.

We will seek out the Toposa living amongst the Nyangatom so we can photograph their beautiful scarification. Toposa women often carry a series of horizontal scars across their bellies. The men adorn their shoulder blades with concentric arched lines of dotted scars.

 

Suri

The Suri are the largest ethnic group of three similar tribes who are collectively called the Surma. This group is effectively divided by altitude, modernisation, and dialect. While the two lesser sized groups in the Surma, the Deze and Mele people of the uplands, have modernised to cease wearing traditional clothes, the more numerous Suri, or people of the lowlands, have retained much of their historical appearance and lifestyle.

Over the years the advent of increased tourism and photographers has created an industry that supports the people of the Omo Valley, or the Southern Nations, Nationalities and Peoples’ Region (SNNPR), in their ever diminishing ways to earn money. It has also manifested into some rather beautiful, yet unusual practices.

The spectacular Suri tribe, for example, has two very distinct personalities. The first is a newer tradition of body painting and decoration with wild flowers, skins, metal and ceramic pots. While this traditionally formed a very small part of Suri culture (they have always decorated themselves extensively for special events like weddings and initiations), they now regularly dress up like this for photographers, even though this act has very little anthropological merit. On our tour we will definitely spend a small amount of time around decorated Suri people as photographically it is a very beautiful experience. The strength of the Suri, and the focus of our photography with them, however, lies in their ability to retain traditional body adornment in the form of scarring, piercing and shaving. Piercing lips and lobes and inserting lip plates are a strong part of the Suri culture. At puberty most young women have their lower teeth removed in order to get their lower lip pierced. Once the lip is pierced, it is then stretched and lip plates of increasing size are then placed in the hole of the piercing. Having a lip plate is a sign of female beauty and appropriateness; a common thought is that the bigger the plate, the more cattle the woman is ‘worth’ for her bride price, though this is questioned by anthropologists.

The Suri pride themselves on their scars and how many they carry. Women perform decorative scarification by slicing their skin with a razor blade after lifting it with a thorn. After the skin is sliced the piece of skin left over is left to eventually scar. On the other hand, the men traditionally scarred their bodies after they killed someone from an enemy group.

A sport and ritual the Suri take very seriously is stick fighting, or Donga. In most cases, this stick fighting is done so young men can find wives. It is a way for young men to prove themselves to the young women. To the Suri, the ideal time to stick fight is just after it rains but if we are lucky we may chance upon a fight on our tour. The fights are held between Suri clans, and they begin with 20 to 30 people on each side. Of these 20 to 30 people, all get a chance to fight one on one against someone from the other side. During these fights there are referees present to make sure the rules are being followed. Many stick fights end within the first couple of decisive hits.

We will spend time with the Suri in order to enjoy both their touristic and traditional sides, while hoping to see a much-anticipated donga during our trip.

 

The Tribal Markets of the Omo Valley

During our time in this region we will visit two significant markets that are excellent for street and portrait photography.  One is the central market of Key Afara and the local market of the Hamer people in Turmi. If you hope to purchase some beautiful African art or jewellery during our trip, these markets offer some wonderful pieces handcrafted by tribal artisans.

 

Accommodation & Road Transport

In Addis Ababa and for five nights in the Omo we will stay in comfortable lodges where all rooms have private bathrooms. For seven nights we will be staying in outfitted camps erected by our camp crew, who also cook wonderful food. The tents are two-man sized tents, but each person gets their own tent. (Couples can opt to sleep in one and put their luggage in the other should they so wish.)  Tents have a camp bed with mattress, linen and pillow with pillow case. Breakfasts at camp consist of omelettes with fresh bread or pancakes and hot coffee/tea. For lunch, salads and bread with fruit, while there is a three course dinner starting with soup, a selection of main course dishes and fresh fruit for dessert. Each camp has a shower tent and also male and female toilet tents. Road transport is by 4×4 vehicles as roads in southern Ethiopia can sometimes be quite rough.

 

Walking

The walking effort is easy throughout.

 

Climate

Generally warm or hot, dry and sunny.

 

Photographic Equipment

For most photography of the people of the Omo Valley, a travel lens of around 24-105mm on a full frame DSLR or mirrorless body will be essential. Sometimes a 70-200mm (on a full frame) will be useful for such things as a stick fight or bull jumping ceremony, shjhould we witness one.  A wide angle lens of around 16mm or  smaller will be perfect for working with the people inside small huts.

If you prefer to photograph people from a distance, then please consider bringing a larger zoom or telephoto lens. It is our experience that sometimes people can feel a bit intimidated by large cameras and lenses so you may wish to bring a smaller sized zoom lens like a 100-400mm which doesn’t appear as intimidating as a large fixed focal length telephoto lens. Such a lens can also be useful for any wildlife we encounter.

If you bring a good quality bridge camera instead of a DSLR or mirrorless it will be best if it has an optical zoom of 18-20x or more, combined with a reasonable wide-angle at the other end of the zoom range.

If you have a phone or tablet that can be used for photography, you may find these quite useful around people.

Similarly if you have a Polaroid camera like the Leica Sofort or an Instax Mini, these are wonderful to have on hand when you spend time with tribal people. If you decide to bring one of these, please bring lots of film with you as the photographs you produce will be quite popular!

Be sure to bring plenty of spare battery power. On a number of nights there will be no access to power.

If you would like to talk over suitable equipment, please contact our office. We will be happy to advise.

 

VIEW OUR GUEST’S PHOTOGRAPHS

Having recently returned from my second Wild Images trip to the OMO Valley in Ethiopia, I wanted to express my thoughts and thanks for these two great trips. These two extremely well organized trips were truly amazing experiences. I have traveled extensively having been to Africa many times mostly for wildlife photography. These trips were my first and second real experiences with cultural photography photo tours. For the first trip, I decided to go after seeing some of the photos taken by Inger Vandyke on the website. With these two trips, I can highly recommend Wild Images and specifically our tour leader for both trips, Inger Vandyke. I can not imagine a better trip or leader when it comes to this kind of experience. This trip really depends on the tour leader much more then most other trips I have been on for photography. Inger has been to the area many times and has made many important contacts with many of the villagers. Her disarming way with the tribal people and genuine love and respect for their way of life opens many doors for the trip participants. We had some explicit opportunities that depended on her personal connection with the head men of the tribes. I came home from each trip with many wonderful photos and experiences. In fact, there were so many great photos that when asked to pick a small group of favorites, I found it an impossible task. There were just to many too choose from. So, I can highly recommend Wild Images and specifically their leaders and local guides for organizing such a fantastic photographic experience. – Stuart Hahn (guest on our 2020 and 2023 Omo Valley tours).  To view a gallery of Stuart’s beautiful images from our tours, please click here.

Photographic Highlights

  • Join one of the best and most comprehensive photo tours to the Omo Valley as we visit no less than 13 tribal groups who reside in this beautiful part of southern Ethiopia
  • A chance to visit some of Africa’s most elaborately decorated indigenous people, including the Suri, Mursi, Hamer, Arbore, Karo and Dassanech tribes
  • Camp out near villages and experience life in this remote, rural environment first hand, including at sunrise and sunset
  • A true adventure in the wildest regions of southern Ethiopia, exploring the the Weito River area, the Omo River, Mago National Park, the villages of the central Rift Valley and the Omo Valley
  • Local guides who are highly knowledgeable about the natural and human history of the Omo Valley
  • Our tour will assist Dassanech children living in remote villages by way of donation to attend school
  • Potentially visit a Suri stick fight (or Donga), a Hamer bull jumping ceremony and a remote cattle camp to learn how herders work with their animals and the threats they face with this ancient lifestyle

OUTLINE ITINERARY

  • Day 1: Evening tour start in Addis Ababa
  • Day 2: Transfer to Addis Ababa airport for flight to Jimma
  • Days 3-11: 9 days of exploring the tribal communities of the Omo Valley
  • Day 12: Drive from the southern Omo Valley to Jinka
  • Day 13: Morning visit to Mursi people and Mago National Park. Drive to Arba Minch
  • Day 14: Morning cruise to visit Gamo fishing communities. Afternoon flight to Addis Ababa for tour end in the late afternoon

To see a larger map, click on the square-like ‘enlarge’ icon in the upper right of the map box.

To see (or hide) the ‘map legend’, click on the icon with an arrow in the upper left of the map box.

To change to a satellite view, which is great for seeing the physical terrain (and for seeing really fine details by repetitive use of the + button), click on the square ‘map view’ icon in the lower left corner of the ‘map legend’.

PRICE INFORMATION

Wild Images Inclusions: Our tour prices include surface transportation, accommodations, meals and entrance fees.

Our tour prices also include all tips for local guides, drivers, camp staff and accommodation/restaurant staff. We also include payments for local people who are willing to be photographed.

Deposit: 20% of the total tour price. Our office will let you know what deposit amount is due, in order to confirm your booking, following receipt of your online booking form.

TO BOOK THIS TOUR: Click here (you will need the tour dates)







2025: confirmed £7790, $10190, €9370, AUD15380. Addis Ababa/Addis Ababa.
2027: provisional £8100, $10590, €9740, AUD15990. Addis Ababa/Addis Ababa.

Single Supplement: 2025: £340, $450, €410, AUD670.
Single Supplement: 2027: £350, $470, €430, AUD700.

Kindly note that the tour price includes the full cost of the Addis Ababa-Jimma and Arba Minch-Addis Ababa flights provided you are flying into Addis Ababa with Ethiopian Airlines. You will need to provide us with your booking reference if you are not booking your Ethiopian Airlines flights through us. In the event you are not flying into Addis Ababa with Ethiopia Airlines, a supplement will apply.

If you are travelling alone, the single supplement will not apply if you are willing to share a room and there is a room-mate of the same sex available.

This tour is priced in US Dollars. Amounts shown in other currencies are indicative.

Air Travel To & From The Tour: Our in-house IATA ticket agency will be pleased to arrange your air travel on request, or you may arrange this yourself if you prefer.

OMO VALLEY: THE EXTRAORDINARY TRIBAL PEOPLE OF SOUTHERN ETHIOPIA: PHOTOGRAPHY TOUR: DETAILED ITINERARY

Day 1

Our Omo Valley photography tour will begin this evening in Addis Ababa.

Overnight: A good quality hotel in Addis Ababa

Day 2

Today we will head for the airport to fly from Addis Ababa to Jimma, where we will stay overnight before our journey into the Omo Valley. If the flight timings allow we will enjoy a short tour of the city of Addis Ababa today, including the natural history museum and the Merkato, a huge open-air market.

Overnight: Dololo Hotel, Jimma

Days 3-11

On the morning of Day 3 we will start the long journey into the Omo Valley from Jimma.  On the drive from Jimma into the Omo Valley area, we will experience a drastic change in the scenery as we leave the Ethiopian highlands behind.

During these nine days we will travel extensively around the Omo Valley and Central Rift Valley, visiting around 13 different tribal peoples and photographing them. A total of five nights will be at outfitted camps and four nights will be spent at a comfortable lodge.

Overnights:  5 nights at outfitted camps, 4 nights at Buska Lodge

Day 12

Today we will spend the morning driving to the large town of Jinka, stopping at a local market and also to visit a group of young Benna boys who wander the road on large wooden stilts.  We will take a break for the afternoon at our lovely lodge where it is possible to see African Pied Hornbills flying around from the restaurant.

Overnight: Eco Omo Lodge

Day 13

After an early start for the Mago National Park in order to visit the second of the ‘lip disk’ tribal people, the Mursi, we will spend the afternoon driving from Mago to Arba Minch through the spectacular terraced fields and villages of the Konso region.

Overnight: Haile Resort, Arba Minch

Day 14

On the final day of the tour we will take an early morning boat ride to watch the local Gamo fishermen fish for Tilapia and Nile Perch from their makeshift Papyrus reed boats on Lake Chamo near Arba Minch. There is a very good chance we will see large congregations of both Nile Crocodiles and Hippopotamus on this lovely boat trip. We will also view some of Africa’s beautiful water birds,including Great White Pelicans, Egyptian Geese and African Fish Eagles.

After we return to the lodge, we will check out and fly from Arba Minch back to Addis Ababa where the tour will end this afternoon.

If your international flight leaves late in the night, or the next day, from Addis Ababa we can arrange an optional room or day-use room at an hotel in Addis on request, at extra cost.

 

Important Note: The Omo Valley has two charismatic ceremonies that may occur during our tour; the Donga Stick Fight of the Suri people and the Bull Jumping ceremony of the Hamer people. These events are not scheduled regularly and to visit one requires a combination of good luck and a little persistence, so neither can be guaranteed. We may also get the chance to visit a cattle camp while we are in the regions of the Suri or Mursi people.

Omo Valley: The Extraordinary Tribal People of southern Ethiopia: Photography Tour Report 2023

by Inger Vandyke

The 2023 Wild Images Omo Valley expedition was the most successful trip in our company’s history.  Not only did we manage to see three full ceremonies (something that is more or less unheard of with tours to the region), but we were generously invited to witness and photograph some truly intimate and beautiful cultural practices […]

View Report

Omo Valley: The Extraordinary Tribal People of southern Ethiopia: Photography Tour Report 2020

by Inger Vandyke

The Omo Valley of Ethiopia is Africa’s birthplace of civilization. There is nowhere else on the continent that celebrates the diversity of tribal culture in Africa to the same degree. The Valley is home to around 18 different ethnic peoples who engage in some of the most intricate and spectacular decoration in the world. Our […]

View Report

Omo Valley: The Extraordinary Tribal People of Southern Ethiopia Photography Tour Report 2019

by Inger Vandyke

In February Wild Images undertook its inaugural tour to the stunning Omo Valley in southern Ethiopia. In this region if you happen to chance upon a nomadic cattle camp, the Suri stick fighting match or Donga and a Hamer Bull Jumping ceremony, you will be excessively lucky to see all three in one journey to […]

View Report

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