Safari in Masai Mara



Not even pictures can really capture the African experience. From our first moments in Nairobi, gazing out over the Nairobi Southern Bypass Highway, we were entranced. From the 1800 or so photos I took in three days, I winnowed those down to about 450 which you can find in the gallery. I struggled to narrow the photos to these few here.

Dust and grit in the African skies

After a night in Nairobi, we were whisked off to the Wilson Domestic Airfield for a short hop on a 6 seater Mombasa Airways flight …

No need to check in online or worry about boarding passes

… to Olkiombo Airstrip in the Masai Mara region (see the Google Earth Placemarks provided at the top of the page).

No time to waste – we got out on one side and the next group were climbing in on the other side.

One of the Masai guides from the Kicheche Bush Camp , named Livingstone, picked us up from the airstrip in a landrover and took us back to the camp.

In the landrover

Co landrovers

There are only six tents in this camp so we were assured very exclusive and personal service.

Our tent

In the tent

As this camp is in an eco-conservancy – a privately owned region protected by strict laws – there are no fences surrounding the camp, so all manner of beast, big and small were free to wander through the camp.

Birds are not stopped by fences anyway..

Amazing birds

Giraffes, elephants, and other beasts wandered through the camp. At night, we were strictly forbidden to leave our tent without a guide to lead us from our sleeping tent to the dining tent and back.

No fences stop him

Giraffe

Within an hour or so of arriving at the camp, we were fed a lovely 5-course gourmet meal, packed into a landrover and taken off to the savanna for our first safari tour. For a small additional fee, we had our own landrover and driver.

Elephant tusks are bent, broken and battered from knocking down trees.

Bent tusks

One of the things that surprised me the most was the proximity of the animals to us and to each other. Because the Masai have never hunted the animals for food, they are quite accepting of humans and are not afraid of us in the least. In fact they more or less ignore us as insignificant to their lives.

Views

Hunter

Cheetahs hunt – and are hunted

While there, we heard that a cheetah had been hunted and killed by a lion. The lions did not like the cheetahs moving in on their prey.

Cheetahs might be fast, but lions are still top of the food chain.

We toured around until sunset, and then enjoyed a traditional (British tradition, that is) sundowner on the plains.

Herds of ungulates of all types roam the grasslands

Amazing scenes

Sundowners

After returning to camp after dark, we shared a wonderful meal with the other tent dwellers, and were in bed by 10:00. Odd noises and large animals pawing at the tent kept us alert for much of the night. In order to make the most of our time, we were awoken in the dark with coffee and biscuits, and were off on safari at the crack of dawn.

Charged by a baby elephant!

Baby elephant just born

We stopped near a hippo pool for breakfast. I am not sure which was the more memorable of this experience – the sound of the hippos snorting as they rose to the surface, or the smell as about 25 of them pooped out their night’s food into the pool, in which they were bathing.

Do not fall into the hippo pool

There are …

… hippos

Watching

The hippo pool was in a bend in the river and so provided us with a relatively safe place to have breakfast.

Breakfast

The animals wander around in great numbers and so we did not actually drive very far from our camp. Zebras mingled freely with …

Zebra stripes are like fingerprints – no two alike

… wildebeast, who are a very nervous bunch.

Checking out the crossing

Getting closer

Go! Luckily, no alligators were hiding in the shallows

Look nasty

On our last day, we did a bush walk. Note the armed guard with us.

Roaming the grasslands like our ancestors did a million years ago

The grasslands

The whistling Acacia tree sports large, sharp spikes. As a result, elephants, which love to eat these trees, have developed large molars which can grind the spikes into an eatable mash. The trees also have a symbiotic relationship with a species of ant, which live in the large brown bulbs. The holes made by the ants whistle when the wind blows through the trees.

The Common Acacia Tree.

We shall return.

Partners

What’s that?

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *