The following is post trip communications with our tour leader David kiprono koskei:
Jambo David,
Thanks ever so much for the nice post-trip postcard that you sent to us. This is especially a good postcard choice to send because it shows the Great Migration and you know just how important seeing that was to Nancy and me --- and to all of us.
And thanks again for being our trip leader and for all that you did to make this the best trip ever for all of us. You are the best!!!
Tom and Nancy Sommers (and the rest of our group)
JamboTom and Nancy,
Nice to hear from you,Thank you too for acknowledging the receipt of my Post card which I sent to you,that is exactly what I was doing when we stopped at Karatu Post office on our way to Serengeti.I glad that I was your Trip Leader and I really enjoyed every moment I spent with you and it is my great Joy that I was able to meet your expectations.All the best to you and your entire family.
Cheers, David kiprono koskei
The following is a detailed recap, day by day, of our trip and was prepared by Nancy Sommers:
TRIP TO KENYAAND TANZANIA (June 21 -
July 9, 2016)
June 21-22, 2016
TRIP TO KENYA
Fly
from LAX to Amsterdam
and from Amsterdam
to Nairobi , Kenya
Accommodations: Longview
Suites - June 22 and 23
Somewhat
basic room in a small hotel, but nice bed, small but OK bathroom, safety box,
net around bed, nice toiletries provided, needed dressing table mirror; good
meals.
Touring: All but one couple took the morning tour of
Kibera, the slum area of Nairobi . We toured on foot on the outskirts and then
by van through the actual slum area. All
have basic electricity, but no running water in the houses. Residents go fill up large bottles of water
from a central source each day. Sewer
system was referred to as “flying toilets” when people just threw waste
collected in bags! They are working on
the sewer system, but also in moving people from this area to new multi-story
apt. buildings nearby. In the rainy
season the dirt roads can be a real mess.
Funny thing though, as we drove through I noticed all the smiley faces.
Our
other couple joined us at lunch which was at a nice restaurant in the city. All meals on the trip were buffet style, but
good and ample. Most times you could
order beer, soda or mixed drinks at a charge.
After that we visited the Nairobi
National Museum ,
which was excellent and diverse…. huge taxidermy section show-casing
birds. We didn’t really have much time
there though before we headed off for a city walking tour and a visit to the
site where the American embassy had been bombed in August, 1998. Nairobi is a large,
bustling city with lots of cars and traffic. African headquarters for the WHO. Nairobi and Arusha in Tanzania were
the only two pretty modern cities we visited.
Nice
dinner at a local restaurant that turned out to be on the old Karen Blixen
estate. This was way out of town in a
very darkly lighted area and the restaurant seemed like it was in a jungle and
we ate at an outside patio location.
June
24-
We
went early to “Giraffe Manor” established in 1974 for the protection of Rothschild giraffes, the ones that have white stockings from
the knees down. J
It
was great. Got lots of time with the
giraffes, feeding them, and we managed to beat a large group of school children
who came just as we were concluding. Yeah! The children were very cute and well
mannered, however. We then went to a
center set up for women who are trying to support themselves and their children
and watched them make ceramic jewelry. OAT helps support this type of endeavor and it was
very interesting. Of course, I bought
some bracelets. J We then went to the
home of Karen
Blixen (made famous in Out of
Africa). Toured through the house
and the grounds and had excellent guides.
She is well thought of there and there are several areas, housing
districts, named in her honor. She had a
lot of land it seems. Obviously the
movie brought notoriety and they smartly are capitalizing on that. Her husband
is buried there and her lover at the foot of near-by mountains. She lived there 1914-1931, and then returned
to Denmark . She had affection for the Kikuyu tribe and it
is still a major ethnic group there.
We
had lunch at the Karen Country Lodge, which was very nice.
After
leaving Nairobi PM June
24, we traveled north by Range Rovers through the Rift Valley to Lake Nakuru
National Park . We were delayed in route by a traffic jam on
the only road into the valley. Ugh! The lodging was nice and our cabins were on a
lake, but not actually at Lake
Nakuru , however. There was a long dirt driveway to the cabins
and kids were often out to watch the comings and goings. J We had dinner at the Lodge that evening.
Accommodation: Sentrim Elementaita
Lodge - June 24-25
These
lodges were circular with peaked roofs.
They were made of concrete and were quite nice. Rooms were large, great mirrors, nice small
patio outside sliding door, bathroom was large. Had blow dryers we could use J
and chairs. The bed was pretty firm, but ok.
There was a room safe. Walked
through a garden to the main dining area.
At night that was pretty dark, and the dining area itself was somewhat
dark, but all in all ok. Food was
excellent and there was always a lot.
Touring:
After that first night, we had a morning
game viewing excursion at the Lake
Nakuru National
Park . Known for flamingos, & white and black
rhinos. We saw the white rhinos and that
is rare -- they are members of the Big Five (Elephants, Lions, Rhinos, Cape
Buffalo, Hippos). BTW, the name white or
black rhino has nothing to do with their color -- It simply designates the
grazer (white) and browser (black) and comes from the shape of the mouth and
the South African (Dutch) word for it that sounded like “white.” It was sort of a lowland area but not
particularly memorable. Got back to camp
at 1:00 for lunch and an
afternoon walk about in the area. Tom got a chance to see a young boy minding his young
brother at the same time while working in the fields beating grain with a stick. Dinner at the lodge. Early the next morning, we departed for
Amboseli.
Accommodations: Sentrim Amboseli
June 26-27
Nice,
large tented cabins with zip up front opening.
Nice central dressing table but needed light - they all needed
light!! Ha. J Had a refrig, but no safe. Hair dryer didn’t work. Nice bathroom with counters on both sides of
the sink. Bed was nice. Nice lush
setting and pretty walkway to the dining area.
Dining area was nice and great food.
Touring: Left
Lake Nakuru morning of
June 26, en route south to Amboseli
National Park on the
border with Tanzania
and near Mt. Kilimanjaro . This turned out to be a full-day of travel
for the most part. We picnicked en
route. Before checking into our tent
cabins we had an afternoon game viewing drive.
Amboseli has 400 bird species, but the elephants were the hit of the
day. We were lucky to see a huge herd
coming from the swamps where they had been wallowing, and they crossed the road
right in front of us and all around us.
Bottom half dark from the water, top half was their dry skin. We were awash in elephants as they headed to
a wooded area for the night. It was
glorious. Welcome to Amboseli!!
There
are wildebeest and Burchell’s (or common) zebras too - dazzling. Now for the frosting on the cake --- As we
were heading to our lodge, another guide radioed that he’d seen cheetah. We made a u-turn on a dime (with change to
spare) in time to see several cheetahs (3) perched on some dead logs. They were far away, but ……. What an end to
the day and we got out of the park just as it was closing, but we also got a
wonderful view of Mt. Kilimanjaro’s snow covered peak pushing through its cloud
cover at sunset. This was especially
meaningful to us because Tom and I have two wonderful friends (one of whom is
deceased) who have climbed that mountain. Whew.
The
next morning, we went to a Maasai village!
We joined school children walking to their elementary school and watched
them perform their morning flag salute, student honor guard ceremony and
student singing. All in uniforms, of
various quality, close cropped haircuts.
Cute heartwarming sight. We
attended an 8th grade class and answered lots of questions from the
students and took lots of pictures.
Really nice, polite, interested kids.
We also met with the school director and teachers and got a rundown of
how the school functions, their goals, their needs, their progress. We all brought school supplies to donate to
the school and I think we all gave monetary donations as well. OAT
sponsors this school and many more around the world, and with every OAT trip we visit and participate at the schools. Great program!
We also
met with the Maasai leader, Joseph ,
and his people. They explained daily
life, how they tend their herds, how they make mud/dung houses or bomas, how
they cook. It was clear that the women
do a LOT of the work! J The guys watch the herds. Tough! Ha!
Then the fellows went off with the guys to have a man-to-man chat and we
girls stayed with a group of ladies and had a discussion about birth
control….as per the hope of Joseph . The ladies we were told were resistant to
pills and we tried to explain the benefits and how it worked. Our leader stayed with us to translate as
neither spoke the other’s language.
After our “meetings,” we were given an opportunity to buy necklaces,
bracelets, etc. that they make. They set
up a open air flee market in the field and each lady set out her products. Wonderful art work by these gifted ladies and
their “warrior” men. I like to buy
gifts, so I was very happy. (Later it became a running joke with all the
jewelry I was buying…. but it was so inexpensive, wonderful quality and unique,
and I knew I had friends and family who would enjoy it all.) As it turned out, there would be a LOT of
buying opportunities as the ladies everywhere make things and are very anxious
to sell them. J I made friends.
Back
to the lodge for lunch, a short walk around the camp, and then an afternoon
game viewing. We actually got to see
some giraffe antelope or Gerenuk, known for their long giraffe like necks. We also got to see some cheetahs and what a
great experience that was. Three of them
were in a field rather close to the dirt road and after a bit, they got up,
stretched and heading right behind our Range Rovers to cross the road. Wow! They
were gorgeous….and real close!! In the
morning, we headed to Tanzania
in our trusty RR’s.
Accommodations:
Tarangire Simba Lodge
- June 28-29
We
were in tented cabins overlooking the plains.
Our tent was Duma, which means Cheetah.
It was large and very nice.
Comfortable bed J, large bathroom with two showers,
lovely porch, pretty view. No safe and
couldn’t use hair dryer due to electricity constraints. Had laundry done there. The central area was nice. There was a meeting room/bar area, and a tree
house between that room and the dining room.
Lovely to sit up there and have a drink at sunset. Meals were good but nothing memorable.
Touring:
We left Amboseli June 28, in the morning
after breakfast. Headed for Tanzania . At the border crossing we had to show our
passports but as we pulled up the ladies flocked around trying to sell their
beaded items. One lady latched on to me
and I decided to make a deal with her, but she had to wait till I cleared the
passport process. She was aglow and
waited for me. She did not allow
interlopers. Ha! So I bought from her and we were both happy. Lots
of laughter on the van. J We said good-bye to our drivers Kenyan
drivers/guides, Adan and Frank , who
had been great. Re-boarded our new van
and headed for Arusha in Tanzania
and the Arusha Coffee Lodge for lunch. We had a nice lunch
out in the patio of this really nice restaurant and at the conclusion of the
lunch a gentleman came to speak to us about the issue of albinos in Africa . He is an
albino, married to an African woman, and it turns out in Africa
albinos are seen as evil and are often killed and dismembered. He was a very educated man and spoke
passionately about the problem and the need for shedding light on this issue.
It was
very interesting and really nice. From
there we viewed game on the way to Tarangire
National Park , Tanzania ’s
3rd largest park. Had a
guided walk around the lodge area and then dinner at the lodge.
Our
guides here were Alfred (Big Al) and
Ellie. We got up early and after
breakfast, left at 7:30
for a full day tour of Tarangire. Many
distinct vegetation zones are on display here, grasslands, woodlands, deep
gullies and rocky hilltops. Huge
concentration of breeding bird species, 2,000-year-old Baobab trees that look
like they’ve been uprooted and planted upside down! Valley
of Tarangire River
dominates the landscape. We saw
elephants in a pond, two lion sightings where our travel partner, Karen, got a
great lion shot with lots of teeth showing, dazzles of zebras, waterbuck, a
python who was really hiding, gazelles, wart hogs (Tom’s favorites), monitor
lizards and giraffes as well as many neat birds. Got back pooped at 4:30 !
Dinner and bed. Tomorrow, we head
north.
Accommodations: Karatu Simba Lodge: June
30-July 3
This
lodge area was up on a hillside overlooking a valley that looked as if you were
in Italy
(Tuscany
region). It was beautiful. These were solid cabins, without canvas and a
porch overlooked the valley. Our cabin
was “Elephant.” There were two nice
beds, a safe, small bathroom, and again we couldn’t use hair dryers due to
electrical restrictions. There were canvas-sided cabins up above us. The main dining room was in a circle around a
garden area in the center. Meals were
wonderful, especially the celery soup!!!! It was to die for. Staff very friendly. There was a nice pool
area too.
Touring: After breakfast on June 30, we left Tarangire Simba and headed north to Mto Wa Mbu
village at the foot of the Rift Valley. We
had lunch at a roadside restaurant, Swahili Canteen, and ate outdoors under a
thatched roof. Nice service. David
contracted for three small tri-wheeled motor bikes to take us through the town
and up the hill (“I think I can, I think I can” style). At the top, we stopped at a view point and I
was accosted J by guys selling necklaces and I bought five (5) with little
animals to give as gifts to the flower girls at Megan ’s
wedding. Got back in our Range Rovers
and checked into Karatu
Simba at the end of a very long
dirt road. After checking in we were
taken for a tour of a small coffee plantation.
Our guide, Pasqual, was a really nice, knowledgeable fellow. We walked through the coffee plants, and then
passed a private school, on to see a small health center, a school that Overseas
Adventure Travel (OAT ) helps
support (no one there at the time). We saw
people singing and practicing for Sunday service and we joined them in
singing. From there we went to a local
brick making operation. Local families
working in a co-op fashion would hand make bricks and get money for each
brick. Quite a sight. Back to the lodge and had dinner there. Oh that celery soup. Yum
Next
day, July 1, Lake
Manyara National
Park - Lot of
foliage, hillsides covered with foliage, elephants, birds on a lake, snack/lunch
on a hillside and then we walked down to a zigzag wooden pier that jutted out
into the lake. Saw giraffes, baboons, golden orioles, spoonbills, yellow bill
storks, flamingos. Back to the lodge for
dinner. It was a full day of sight
seeing.
July
2, We started at 6:30 for the Ngorongoro Crater. Spent an hour trying to get through the entry
process!! (we found the entry process
was painfully long in Tanzania) Long drive along the crater rim in the early
fog. What an eco system: highland plains, savannah, savannah woodlands
and forests as well as a lake area. We saw hippos, jackal, Cory Bustards, ostriches,
Thompson Gazelles, hyenas, crested storks, flamingoes on the lake and a black
rhino. Had a tea break and also ate
lunch in our Range Rovers overlooking a watering hole. Saw a lot of hippos and also had fun watching
a pride of lions move between areas, ending up on a rock outcropping over
looking our picnic area (good reason to eat in the RR’s).
July 3,
Another adventure…a rare one. We took a
loooong, dusty, bouncy drive to “nowhere” to meet the Hadzabe and Datoga
tribes. The Hadzabe are
hunter/gatherers and live a VERY primitive life. Our guide was Qwadra and he walked us in to
their village. Small population of men,
women, small children. Their “houses”
were made of twigs in a tent shape but very permeable. Slept on animal skins. The men made their own bows and arrows and
took the OAT men on a hunt. Wasn’t easy keeping up. J We gals went with David
and walked through the area, but I never saw anything at all to gather. It was very barren. They do not raise any animals or crops. They showed us how they make a fire, the old
fashion way and they were very skilled. Got that fire going quickly. What they eat they cook over an open
fire. The men showed us their archery
skills and invited us to join in. Tom actually hit the target to much hooting and
hollering. The bows were very tight and
very hard to pull back. The Hadzabe may
be small, but they’re strong. Their
primitive life style is hard to describe, but they are by far the most
primitive people I’ve ever been around.
We then drove to the Datogas.
They gather scrap metal and make implements and bracelets. Again, it was all done in a very primitive
fashion. Skin bellows making an open
fire, melting things in a basic scooper.
They made nice bracelets and we all bought some. Their housing was much less primitive than
the Hadzabes.
Back
to the lodge for lunch, but then we met Pasqual for another coffee experience
at a friend’s home that was set up as a special visit by our trip leader, David . We sat
outside at picnic tables and they treated us to another lunch!! And showed us
how the coffee beans are separated, roasted, ground, and we were able to buy
bags of coffee from them to bring home.
Lovely experience. Two cute kids,
one named Rita . We gave them our house gifts that we’d
brought. Next, it is off to the
Serengeti!!!!
Accommodations: Serengeti Simba
Lodge - July 4-7…. our last lodge
This
lodge was located on the top of a mountain and was a lovely location. These were partially tented cabins with a
sliding glass door entry. Ours was
called Rhino. J
We had a nice balcony to look out over the valley. Very nice bed, bathroom with a tub, small
sink area, toilet and also an outdoor shower.
The shower leaked into the toilet area however. Had a safe in the bathroom, but no dressing
table anywhere. The cabin was dark, as
were most of them. Again couldn’t use hair dryers. The lodge at the top of the hill was nice and
there was a pool. They had a fire pit area outside as well. Food was very good
and staff friendly.
Touring:
July 5 - Jackie , Lynn ,
Karen and Mike
got up in the middle of the night for a hot-air balloon ride. They loved it with great views of elephants
and all the wildlife – only a little rough landing for one gondola that hit an
ant hill upon landing. The rest of us
did a game viewing and saw a large group of stinky hippos in a pond. We then met up with the ballooners and came
back to the lodge for a late lunch. Then
we went out again. Saw stalking lions, two
cheetahs and topi.
July 6
- Today was our shot at seeing the migration of the wildebeest and David and our guides were determined to make it
happen!! David KNEW this was huge on our
priorities. We had to drive to an
airport inside the park to pay the fees to get into the Serengeti and it was a
ridiculous wait. Tanzania was
terrible in this regard. They made
getting into parks and paying hefty fees absolutely painful and a huge waste of
time. Marilyn
about lost her mind. On this day, we
were there close to TWO HOURS waiting.
However, we endured dusty, very bumpy roads, road construction where
they were putting in new pipes, and a lot of hours, but at 11:00 we were at the Mara River
surrounded by wildebeest and a few zebras.
Got our Range Rovers positioned and for four hours we watched the
incredible spectacle of the wildebeest crossing the river to migrate north to
Masai Mara for greener grazing. What a
thrill and we learned later that it was indeed a rare and special event to be
able to witness the migration crossing of the river. It was just breathtaking and never to be
forgotten. Finally, when we’d taken
every imaginable picture and video recordings, we pulled off that site, parked
and had lunch in our rovers. Then for
the long road back to our lodge, but we all had happy faces.
July
7- One last day in Africa to sight see. Left at 8:00
for the Serengeti. We stopped at a
hillside picnic area overlook and watched a whole group of hippos. Amazing animals…who basically swim and loll
in a toilet bowel. What a smell. We couldn’t figure out how they don’t DIE
from the polluted environment that they seem to so love. Phew. Later we saw giraffes, leopards in trees, dazzles
of zebras (my personal favorite) wart hogs, stealth cheetahs and Topi. Capping it off was a lion pride that
remarkably and obligingly decided to saunter over to a tree right near our
rover. Watching their interactions so
close to us was very special and a great way to end our touring. That evening
we enjoyed our Farewell dinner at the lodge.
July 8
- Today we drove to the bush dirt-runway airport and flew in a small plane to
Arusha. Arusha is a fairly modern town
and we checked into a lovely hotel there, had a very nice lunch in the Baobab
Lounge, and were able to rest in our rooms until we drove to Kilimanjaro International
Airport for our overnight
flight to LAX and home.
A
truly interesting, educational trip that we were so lucky to make. No mishaps, no one got sick, got to do
everything we wanted to do, nice traveling companions, excellent tour guide and
drivers, and flights went smoothly.
However, it is one LONG flight over there. Holy cow!!
Departed
LAX June 21 at 12:25 , for Amsterdam ; Depart June 22
at 12:45 from Amsterdam and arrive Nairobi at 9:40pm . Maybe 30+ hours of travel time!!
Cost
(for two): Overseas Adventure Travel: $14,197
Travel
insurance: 884
Air fair thru KLM 4,260
Extras God only knows
The is an unbelievably long and detailed travel blog. So, I have prepared a "travel summary" which you can view by opening the following link: youtu.be/0DtZKIZ1PKY to view some of my travel highlights. You can then scroll farther down for specific pictures and videos.
Begin Blog:Arrive Nairobi, Kenya - first Day Tour to view via van The Kibera Slum spread out over 2.5 kilometers. For all of the following pictures or videos, you can double click on the image to enlarge, but may not have as sharp an image.
The following is a video taken from our van:
Nairobi National Museum:
Giraffe Center Visit - We were told there are three kinds of African giraffes: Reticulated, Masai and Rothschild. At the Giraffe Center we saw and learned how the Rothschild Giraffe has been rescued and conserved for future generations. But here is an article on four kinds of giraffes:
There May Be Four Species Of Giraffe, Not Just One
Popular Science
Popular Science
Giraffes, those gangly loners on the African savannah may not be as lonely as they appear. At least from a genetic perspective. Read the full story
Shared from Apple News
Leaving the Giraffe Center, we visited the museum and former house of Karen Blixen who wrote Out of Africa under the pen name of Isak Dinesen from her experiences with the Kikuyu people from 1914 to 1931. Unfortunately, no pictures were allowed of any of the rooms or interior inside the house.
But there was a tour guide outside that gave a review of Karen Blixen's life (video):
Next on our itinerary was travel to the Rift Valley and a morning game viewing excusion to Lake Nakuru National Park where we could see off in the distance the rare white rhino along with siting lots of impalas, zebras, cape buffalo, baboons, warthogs, birds, flowers and Maasai villages:
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| View from our lodge room |
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| Californians Nancy, Jackie, Lynn and Marilyn |
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| Sentrim Amboseli Lodge |
Explore Lake Nakuru and Lake Nakuru National Park:
White Rhino Video (click on start arrow to view):
The ever present Zebra video:
Thompson's Gazelles Video:
Baboon Video:
Secretary Bird:
Grey Crowned Cranes Video:
Superb Starlings and Buzzard:
Other Birds:
Waterbuck et al video:
Lyons in the brush Video:
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| Chief Joseph and wives |
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| Jackie making friends |
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| Marilyn, Jackie, Sue and now Lynn |
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| Add caption |
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| Construction of new dormitory financed by Grand Circle Foundation |
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| Chief and Maasai Mud Hut |
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| Straw and Stick Ceiling |
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Maasai Captain Tom jumping
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| Nancy shopping and Tom saying "it's only money." |
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| Chief Joseph's sons |
We were extremely well fed at the lodge:
Afternoon game viewing in Amboseli National Park:
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| Klipspringer???? |
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| Cheetah |
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| Acadia umbrella Tree |
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| Distant view of Mount Kilimanjaro |
Overland 10 plus hours drive to Kenya-Tanzania border, game viewing to town of
Arusha, Tanzania for lunch st the Arusha Coffee Lodge:
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| Our drivers Adan and Frank |
Learning and Discovery and Lecture of the plight of African albinos:
Coffee Orchard at Restaurant next to where we ate lunch:
Arrive at outskirts of Tarangire National Park:
Market
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| Park entrance |
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| Ancient bilbao tree |
| You have to look closely but under the brush there is the outline of a rock python |
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| Never leave food on tables because the cheeky monkeys are faster than you |
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| Name this Monkey, You got it- Blue balls |
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| Zebras to the left, right, everywhere |
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| Elephant March |
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| cooling off |
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| dusting off |
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| feed me |
June 30
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| Yes this is African cotton |
The boys dressed in black robes are the circumsized boys who must depend on handouts and their mothers for food and wait two years before they are accepted as Maasai Warriors
| No I am not giving you candy |
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| OK, maybe $1 |
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| the guy on the left wants part of the action |
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| Mto Wa Mbu Village |
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| Market Day |
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| Swahili Canteen lunch stop |
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| Ride to top of hill for lookout of Riff Valley |
Lake Manyara National Park:
Learning and discovery on Karatu coffee plantation
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| OK, you can get in the picture |
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| Yes, this is corn for making maize, cattle feed |
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| community water supply |
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| local brick factory |
Karatu Simba Lodge:
July 1
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| Intern Briefing |
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| Flood and mud damaged building forcing relocation of Park's offices |
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| Nancy, Tom, Sue and Lynn |
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| Tom and Nancy |
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| Picnic lunch by hot springs (below) |
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| Baboons on the march |
July 2 Ngorongoro Crater:
| Grey Crowned Crane |
Drive to Hadzabe hunter/gather, nomatic tribe
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| Pit Stop with A/C |
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| Arrow dipped in poison |
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| Making fire the traditional way |
Where there is smoke, there is fire
|
Datoga Village of farmers and metal craftsmen
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| Oh no, not another picture |
Drive back to Karatu Simba Lodge
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| Karatu Market |
Home Hosted Visit to coffee bean processing family home
Drive to Serengeti
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| Agama and Superb Starling |
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| Rock Hydrax |
Serengeti Simba Lodge
Drive to Serengeti National Park
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| Sleeping Puff Adder asleep in the middle of the road |
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| Thank goodness for four wheel drive and high clearance |
VIEWING THE MIGRATION: These videos were taken on our second to last day of our trip when we were fortunate enough to view thousands of wildebeests that had not only been grazing, but were crossing the Mara River when we arrived. To view the migration on TV is one thing, but to view it in real time and location is simply spectacular, exceeding all my expectations. The following is one of the many videos I took on July 6, 2016. Click on the arrows to view video and double click to enlarge video screen:
A video of a stranded juvenile wildebeast:
A video of forward and backward movement to avoid bunching up:
What follows is a 13 minute mp4 video with a portion of the many videos that I took on July 6th. The video starts off disjointed and eventually quiets to a view of our Toyota Land Cruiser rushing to the river while bouncing along the river's edge. There were six of us in vehicle scurrying around so I make no apologies for my erratic video, but, what the hell, I hope you can get a sense of our amazement in watching this video. I will thereafter insert pictures and videos on a chronological order, day by day of our trip. Turn on your computer speakers and double click on the arrows to start the long video and increase the image size if necessary. You can start and stop the very long video as needed:
The next video below is not mine but from the internet. It is not only funny, but a scene I would have loved to witnessed:
Long ride back to Lodge after viewing the migration up close:
Drive back to Simba Lodge
Rhinos
Leopards
Cheetahs
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| Termite |
Hippos
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| White Rhino |
More Giraffes:
Zebras:
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| Our final happy hour(s) |
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| Sue and daughter Casandra |
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| Jackie and Lynn |
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| Blaze to control tall grass and to reseed |
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| Fly to Arusha |
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| African Tulip Tree |
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| Lunch and 1/2 day stop at African Tulip Lodge in Arusha |
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| Drive to Kilimanjaro Airport for flight to Amsterdam |
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| Mount Kilimanjaro in background |
The End
























































































































































































































































































































































































































































Chuck, great job. Seeing these truly gives me the feeling of being there all over again. Wow, were we lucky to have had the exciting opportunity to see the migration!! Captain Tom
ReplyDeleteChuck, now I have had the opportunity to view all of your postings and all I can say is 4.0!! Or BZ, as they say in the Navy for a job well done. You have some great photos here and, as I said above, gives me the feeling of being there all over again. Cheers, Captain Tom and Nancy
ReplyDelete