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Sept 6/24- heading to Maasai Mara

After saying goodbye and jointly leaving tips to the local staff, we head off just after 7am.

Horrendous roads but beautifully laid out farms on the mountain side. Lots of corn ( a main staple) grown. Lots of trucks waiting for the potato crops to be brought in from the farms…. To be taken to Nakuru and Nairobi

True it is cooler this morning but you see so many local people wearing hoodies and woollen toques . So many up and at it, waiting to be taken to work at the farms. Some farms are privately owned and some are owned by wealthy people in the government. Some pay a little more(/day) &/ or give added perks like lunches and so are always certain to get workers quickly.

Narok (meaning black or dirty in Maasai language) is the name of the city after the river. It is a more modern, very busy, thriving city. Shopping centre ringed with bottle brush and hibiscus bushes.

Lots of livestock (cattle and goats) being herded along the highway right of way, some crossing and preventing us from passing.

We headed out through a Maasai village. It was disgustingly filthy with garbage and plastic strewn everywhere.

Maribu stork

Zebras

Herd of elephants

Wildebeest

A male impala and its harem. He was hot on the trail of one female

Hyenas on the run

Then the group impala “losers”…. The males waiting in the wings to get the harem.

Topi antelopes

Giraffes

Water buffalos

Jackals

OMG….our driver is amazing what he made this vehicle go through to get to the other side to get a better view of…..a convention of 21 safari vehicles all watching a lion couple

Then we start to leave only to see another female with 2 cubs

John told us that all kids wear the same uniforms, all get heads shaved…. Girls or boys so rich or poor , girl or boys all same treatment.

Even when we are hooked to wifi it’s almost impossible to add pictures. What I think I will do is post without pictures but post them once I am home but….. who know!

Sept 5/23-Nakuru Nat’l Park

Horse riding training centre as we leave the camp around 7:15 this morning.

Nakuru zebra… the common zebra has wider stripes that go through from one side to other side under the belly.

We see quite a number of yellow fever trees. The trunks are “yellow” and people in the past believed that they were the cause of fever. The actual scoop is that they grow in swampy areas where mosquitos breed.

Grants Gazelle

Warthogs

Thomson gazelle

Impala

A lion pride of 2 brothers, one female, 2 cubs plus 2 females coming down from higher up… pretty exciting

Defassa waterbucks

Two adult and 1 baby wide mouth rhinos

African water buffalos

Nakuru Giraffe

Blacksmith plover

Yellow-billed stork(has red at top of yellow beak)

Spoonbills

Maribu stork

Lesser (more pink)and greater(less pigment) flamingos -the pelicans used to be more pink a few years ago but because of the amount of rainfall has been so great, making it more alkaline. It has diluted the water. It not only has affected the colour of flamingos, it has also caused the trees to die.

Egyptian goose

Sacred ibis

Stork swimming by

Baboons

Grebe crane

Cormorants

Hamerkop … likes big home/nest

Fish eagle

Common eland…. Biggest of antelopes

Warthogs (pumbas)

Black and white colobus monkeys in tree

Colobus monkeys

Bushell starling

Lilac-crested roller…. Beautiful

Male lion killed a pumba feeding in the grass

I must say that the temperature here was much more comfortable. There is at least 5 C difference between here and Samburu. After arriving back from the safari drive the skies opened up. Got a really good downpour.

Earlier in the day with the help from one of the other people on the tour, we had wifi so we were able to get out messages that we were all safe. We were not able to post anything since Nairobi.

Sept 5/23-Nakuru Nat’l Park….more pictures added Oct 10

Horse riding training centre as we leave the camp around 7:15 this morning.

Nakuru zebra… the common zebra has wider stripes that go through from one side to other side under the belly.

We see quite a number of yellow fever trees. The trunks are “yellow” and people in the past believed that they were the cause of fever. The actual scoop is that they grow in swampy areas where mosquitos breed.

Thomson gazelle

Impala

A lion pride of 2 brothers, one female, 2 cubs plus 2 females coming down from higher up… pretty exciting

Defassa waterbucks

Lesser (more pink)and greater(less pigment) flamingos -the pelicans used to be more pink a few years ago but because of the amount of rainfall has been so great, making it more alkaline. It has diluted the water. It not only has affected the colour of flamingos, it has also caused the trees to die.

Sacred ibis

Stork swimming by

Hamerkop … likes big home/nest

Male lion killed a pumba feeding in the grass

I must say that the temperature here was much more comfortable. There is at least 5 C difference between here and Samburu. After arriving back from the safari drive the skies opened up. Got a really good downpour.

Earlier in the day with the help from one of the other people on the tour, we had wifi so we were able to get out messages that we were all safe. We were not able to post anything since Nairobi.

I keep trying to add pictures and this is as far as I got

Sept 4/23 Heading to Nakuru National Park-more pictures added Oct 10

I had sent this posting before but now that I am home and have wifi, I am adding more pictures. I have tried this way, I am finding adding one at a time very frustrating so will try another method. Bear with me.

Vervet monkeys in camp

Giraffes

Common waterbucks -male & female

Oryx

Helmeted Guinea fowl

Gerenuk standing up

4 children on back of motorcycle

School children waving like crazy

2 goats besides 2 people on motorcycle… going to market…. Lots of overloaded motorcycles

Isiolo….1 of 4 largest cities in Kenya

Houses with highway frontage- companies will pay owners of homes/shops if they can use their building to advertise.

Stopped at the equator ….. got a certificate and had lunch made by our own chef. Artist coop similar to others we has seen and like the others, the sales people are relentless

Most of food for the country is grown in the Rift Valley.

Tea 1920 introduced …3years cuttings grow into producing plant. Pruning/cutting every three years. Cut 3 leaves, process together…. Smal top is best quality, second is second quality and 3rd…3rd quality. Tea plant can produce for 70 years.

Coffee arabica

September 3 Samburu National Park

We leave for camp at 6:45. The skies are clear. I had the best sleep I’ve had since coming here. We slept in tents on the ground with just a foamy underneath us. We were told to bring sleeping bags but that was pointless. It was too hot to get into a sleeping bag. The “washrooms” are rustic to say the least. The doors are like the opening of tents. If the zipper is down all the way, it’s occupied. The showers are in the “toilet” room…. No temperature control. They are very pleasantly cool.

4 cheetah cubs and a mom. They chased after a dikdik and killed it. You could see blood on their mouth.

Reticulating giraffes galore

Grants gazelles

Female lions on the bank of the river…..later we saw 3 laying on the sand in the dry river. On the afternoon drive in the shade of a tree in the scorching heat, laid a male lion panting. You could see that he was blind in one eye. There was another not too far away but couldn’t see him very well.

Lots of elephants… some digging for water in the very dry riverbeds. The cattle egrets follow the elephants because when the elephant lifts it’s hoof, there are flies that fly away. That’s what the egrets are after.

Giraffes have no noise cuz “by the time it is expended from their chest to mouth, the sound would have disappeared”… lol!

Olive baboon… only in Samburu. Gerenuk …. Giraffe gazelle- stand up on hind legs

At one point there must have been 20 safari vehicles chasing an elusive leopard across the Savannah. One person had seen it jump down from a tree and then the search was on racing here there and everywhere. It was reminiscent of a sports game…..”he’s got the puck, down the ice he races, he shoots, ooooh….he misses”.

We asked about what the law was around gun ownership. Strictly controlled. No one is allowed to own just because.

We have wifi right at this moment but I’m having a lot of difficulty downloading pictures to this phone. I may send less at a time.

Sept 2/23 ….Safaris here we come

Up at 5:30. How to shower in scolding hot water? We were barely able to stand it. Then it’s down for breakfast for 6:30. We are supposed to leave at seven but we’re actually on the road at 7:15. Pretty good I’d say.

There 6 million people in Nairobi… huge! Part of the reason there as many people as there are is that there are lots of migrants that come from the villages because they don’t have employment at their home villages. They come in search of work. They come into the city and then compete with the locals. The locals that have been educated and professions can’t find work in their fields, work at the menial jobs the the migrants work at, for a lower pay… just to survive. There are lots of pop-up “car washes” with just a bucket and hose, along the the highway. Anyway to make a buck.

We noticed many trees along the highways. John says that they are eucalyptus …..used for power poles. They are absolute poker straight. If somebody has a large piece of property they will grow them as a way of making money. The problem with growing eucalyptus is they will suck any moisture there is out of soil. They need lots of water. Some village chiefs will say “no” to growing them at all cuz they will deplete the water supply.

As we get further out of Nairobi you see vegetable stands, nursery plants. A little further they are sell charcoal for cooking.

At several rest stops where they had art co-ops …..unbelievably beautiful carvings of all different mediums stone, ebony, teak….you name it.

At one point we passed by Mt. Kenya (5199 metres) but unfortunately it was shrouded in clouds. The further we travel, the warmer and dryer it gets. Hydro power it the source of electricity here in Kenya. We stop near the equator (at Nanyuki) for snacks and drinks …..enough for next 2 days.

Potatoes being sold along the road. Huge number of massive greenhouses used for growing flowers for export. Lots of sheep and goats grazing along the road.

Huge wheat fields like in Canada.

At one point our driver pulled over…. Said he had to “check the pressure”. What he and our CEO (guide) wanted to do was take a pee…… good one, lol!

In Isiolo there was a medical college, airport, huge outdoor market. Gas is cheaper here… about 1.82/L. In Nairobi I think it was 1.97. Still very expensive I would say for here. There is also a school of military engineering.

We stopped at a “Samburu” tribal village. The Samburu are nomads. They live on the blood that they milk from the animals mixed with milk from their animals and meat (no camel blood or donkey).

Usually they spend only 2 years in one place but they have been here for 6 year cuz there is a school nearby. The women “build” the homes, the men use the spear and knife to protect the village and their animals. Some leave the village for other work.

They have now been 6-8 months without rain. There are about 250 in village…..most don’t speak English. Only men are allowed to light fires. The women can then use that single fire to start their own to cook, etc.

the village is very close by, from where we enter the Samburu national park. It’s late but do an afternoon safari drive.

We see:-

-Digdigs, spring-loaded tiny antelope. It’s hard to get pictures of these.

-Giraffes

-Lions can have 4-6 cubs. They have a 3 month gestation period. We spotted 2 females laying on the sands of the “River” …..that has not a drop of water in it.

Females live to 20 years, males only 15 years.

Sept 1/23 travelling to Nairobi

It is actually Sept 6th today. I am going to try catching up on my blogs

We said goodbye to everyone this morning. They were all so very nice and accommodating. We gave Mfaume all the wine we had not consumed including one unopened. We left the hotel around 8:45 heading to the airport arriving at just after 9.

Our driver told us that schools are painted white and blue for primary like their uniforms are and white and black for secondary.

We arrived at the airport in plenty of time but the hoopla that goes along with check-in, showing passports and visas, security, forms to be filled in for immigration….. OMG a little nerve-racking but still in good time (about 10am, for the planes scheduled departure at 11:05…. “On time” it says as we sit down on the departure lobby. It still said “on time” at 1:30pm and no plane in sight. Finally ……we are on “a” plane…. one they chartered that apparently has 2 less seats. (I guess two people had to stay back). The time is 3:30pm. OMG…. it’s been an exercise in patience. I wonder what happened to the other plane.

Sorry but no pictures today. It’s hard to take pictures when you only get to see the inside of a departure “lounge”.

We got a van taxi …..after all we are 5 plus luggage. We were driven to the Heron Portico Hotel. It looks quite a bit better than the last one. Of course we are late for our “briefing” with our CEO (chief experience officer John) and the rest of the group we will be travelling with. Some are still there in the dining room so got to introduce ourselves. Terrible food and very slow service.

There are 2 gals from Idaho, 1 from Oregon, 1 guy from New Jersey byway-of Jamaica , 1 from Ghana, 1 gal from Bulgaria living in Frankfurt, 1 man from India, 1 from the UK and us 5 gals from Victoria, Canada. The first 7 will only be with us for the Kenya camping part. When we get to Uganda there will probably be others joining us to see the chimpanzees and THE MOUNTAIN GORILLAS.

Kenya interruption

We are all okay. Nothing bad has happened to us. I just want to let everyone know that we have had no wifi for several days and won’t for a few more days. Someone let me use their data so was able to post this.

Incidentally we have seen mega animals… OMG! Wish you we here to see them all.

Aug 31/23 a day of swimming and snorkelling off Zanzibar

Our guide met us at the hotel just after 8:45. Then we were walked through the crazy maze of alleys to the car which was short distance away. It was amusing watching I don’t know how many cars, maneuver out of this extremely difficult spot.

We motored out on a traditional dhow, to Kwale Island, an uninhabited island. It is one of the many that dot these gorgeous turquoise seas.

We snorkelled around this island for a couple of hours (I was unable to take any photos of the undersea life…..the water was murky) plus stopped at a sand bar for a while. While there I noticed a very small starfish floating in the water. When I turned it over I noticed that its tiny “tentacles” we moving so I threw it back. Originally I thought I would take it because it was unusual. Our guide later found a couple more very unusual ones.

The guides took the boat to a lagoon that could not be entered until the tide had reached a certain level. As we sat in the lagoon, the waters just poured in. It was very cool with all the rocky foundation of islets. On one rock someone had put a giant clam……a little too far to see it clearly. Apparently the lagoon is surrounded by mangroves but I could not see them.

From there we went to another small island to have lunch. After lunch we were taken to see the apparently oldest Baobab tree in the world. It is 500 years old but 72 years ago it fell but has since continued to grow. What we saw initially, which was huge, were its roots. The tree has since grown at right angles to the trunk.

On the return journey, the guys put up the sail. What a nice way to end the day out on the ocean. Because it was very choppy when we returned (perfect for sailing, we had to come ashore at a different spot. It was interesting trying to get out of this dhow to a smaller motor launch to the rocky (like lava rock) shore.

We returned to the hotel somewhere around 5 and just relaxed after getting cleaned up. Tomorrow we fly to our next stop….the first of our real adventures. The last 4 days were to recover from the flights getting here, in an amazing place on the ocean.

In yesterdays post I mistakenly said the Sunset Bar was at Indian House. It was at the African House