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Days: Day
1: Days 2 & 3: Days 4 & 5: Days 6 &
7: Days 8 & 9: Day 10:
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Location: Arrive
Nairobi. Tsavo West National Park. Amboseli National
Park. Lake
Nakuru National Park. Masai Mara Game Reserve. Back
to Nairobi.
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Accommodation. Fairview
Hotel. Kilanguni Serena Lodge. Amboseli Serena
Lodge. Sarova Lion Hill Lodge. Mara Sarova Tented
Camp. Flight
back home.
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Introduction. This
is a lodge and luxury tented camps based safari, covering
all aspects of general wildlife including watching both
mammals and birds but with more emphasis on wildlife.
We
will visit totally different areas from the expansive
Tsavo National Park with it’s unique wildlife and bird
life as well to the famous Masai Mara Game Reserve with
great game viewing area, surrounded by yellow barked
acacia’s and the red clad Masai’s people dotted across
the plains, vast herds of antelopes to Lake Nakuru Park
with its zebra and prides of lions share their home
with hundreds of birds species including the famous
pink wash of flamingos.
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Itinerary.
Day 1:
Nairobi Upon
arrival in Nairobi you will be meet by our airport representative
Ms. Lucy Wanjiku and be transferred to Fairview hotel
at the outskirts of the city. Overnight at Fairview Hotel, bed
and breakfast.
Days 2 & 3: Tsavo West
National Park. This morning
we will make the long drive to Tsavo West National Park,
arriving around lunchtime. We will then check into the
luxurious Kilanguni Serena Lodge, our base for the next
2-nights of the tour.
Tsavo
West, when combined with Tsavo East, covers over 20,000
square kilometers creating one of Africa's largest conservation
areas. This is a classic East African park watched over
by the distant snow-capped peak of Mount Kilimanjaro.
Tsavo is a place of wide horizons and undulating acacia
covered red earth plains dotted with graceful parties
of Giraffes and herds of Elephant and Zebra. It is cut
by only two permanent rivers and so has a more arid
feel to it than the other reserves we will be visiting
on the holiday, but is nevertheless a wonderful area
for mammals, birds and other wildlife.
Tsavo
is also home to the Ngulia Rhino Sanctuary. The decline
of the Black Rhinoceros has been both rapid
and shocking and, not too long ago, there was a real
fear that this amazing animal may become extinct. For
example, in the 1970s the Tsavo ecosystem alone supported
an estimated 6,000 to 8,000 Rhino, but by 1989 poaching
had reduced this to a mere 20 individuals! Today, an
estimated 540 Eastern Black Rhinoceros remain in the
world and 85% of these are to be found in Kenya. The
Ngulia Rhino Sanctuary has played an important role
in the advancement of this work and helped develop many
of the monitoring and conservation methods now employed
in other parts of the country. The sanctuary itself
was established in 1985 and protected 3 Rhino in an
area of less than 1 square mile. Today Ngulia Sanctuary
covers 38 square miles (62 square kilometres) and is
home to 57 Rhino, more than half of which were born
there. This has been a fantastic success story and Rhino
numbers continue to grow. During our stay in Tsavo we
will visit the Ngulia Rhino Sanctuary to try and find,
one or two of the Rhino that live here, as well as a
host of colourful birds such as Lilac-breasted Roller,
Superb Starling and Beautiful Sunbird.
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We
will also head out on game drives into Tsavo West National
Park itself to enjoy the wealth of mammals, birds and
other wildlife that abounds here. Tsavo is home to Kenya's
'red' Elephants and herds of these red-earth dusted
giants are a familiar sight, along with Impala, Thompson's
Gazelle, Masai Giraffe, Buffalo and perhaps even our
first Lion or Cheetah. Indeed, the Lions of Tsavo are
descendants of the legendary man-eaters (the Ghost and
the Darkness) who brought the building of the Nairobi
to Mombassa railroad to a standstill at the beginning
of the last century. Friendlier inhabitants, however,
include a wealth of birdlife - an amazing 600 species
have been recorded here - including Ostrich, Kori Bustard,
Saddle-billed Stork, Black-breasted Snake-eagle, Magpie
Shrike, Carmine Bee-eater, Woodland Kingfisher, Scarlet-chested
Sunbird and many many more.
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Other, less frequently seen
mammals include Gerenuk, Fringe-eared Oryx, Hunters
Hartebeest and Leopard. An
undoubted highlight of our stay at Tsavo will be the
opportunity to visit the crystal clear waters of the
Mzima Springs. Here underground spring water, filtered
by the volcanic rock of the Chyulu Hills, has formed
a series of forest-fringed freshwater pools into which
an underwater glass observation tank has been built.
From this uniquely aquatic viewpoint we can watch Hippos
swimming underwater along with crocodiles and various
fish.
Lunch,
dinner and overnight for the two days at Kilanguni
Serena Lodge, full board.
Days
4 & 5: Amboseli National Park. After breakfast
we will move west to Amboseli National Park. Amboseli
sits beneath the towering snow-capped peak of Mount
Kilimanjaro, Africa's highest mountain, and is one of
the country's most scenic reserves. Its acacia-dotted
plains and dry rolling grasslands support a wealth of
game including plenty of Elephant, Masai Giraffe,
Burchell's Zebra, Cape buffalo and Waterbuck. Indeed
it is here (weather and dust permitting) that we hope
to see that classic East African scene of Elephants
and Giraffes striding across the plains backed by the
snowy peak of Kilimanjaro; this is one of Kenya's most
sought after photographic
destinations so bring plenty
of film (or memory cards!). Other mammals to look out
for include White-bearded Wildebeest, Thompson's Gazelle,
Warthog, Black Rhino and Spotted Hyena. Predators such
as Cheetah and Lion do occur in Amboseli but are somewhat
wary as they are still persecuted by the surrounding
farmers.
Birdlife is once again abundant and we will
no doubt find a wide selection of the 400 species that
have been recorded here. Some to look out for include
Bateleur, Red-billed Hornbill, Greater Blue-eared Glossy
Starling, Tacazze Sunbird, Bare-faced Go-away Bird,
Diederic and Black Cuckoos and White-fronted Bee-eater.We
will explore Amboseli on morning and afternoon game
drives from the Amboseli Serena Lodge, our base for the next
two nights of the tour.
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Days
6 & 7: Lake Nakuru National Park. Today
we move to East Africa's geological wonder, the Rift
Valley, for two nights at the flamingo fringed Lake
Nakuru National Park. It is a long drive that will take
us back to Nairobi for lunch before heading north west
into the Rift and past Lake Naivasha (one of only two
freshwater lakes in the rift, the other being Baringo)
and the soda lake of Elmentaita. On arrival at Nakuru
we will check in Sarova Lion Hill Lodge for two nights,
beautifully situated on a hill above the lake. The park
is a wonderfully atmospheric place, where you can really
enjoy the sights and sounds of the Rift Valley in a
classic bush setting. Indeed, Lake Nakuru National Park
was the setting for the award winning classic film ‘Out
of Africa’.
Lake
Nakuru is a soda lake and host to one of the great ornithological
spectacles of the world. Hundreds of thousands of Greater
and Lesser Flamingoes (occasionally up to 2 million)
traditionally form a carpet of shimmering pink that
stretches as far as the eye can see around the lake-shore.
Pink-backed and White Pelicans swim in the shallows
and feeding amongst them are Yellow-billed and Marabou
Storks, Sacred Ibis, African Spoonbills, and an almost
complete range of east African ducks, waders, terns
and gulls. The piercing call of the African Fish Eagles
is a familiar sound at Nakuru and just one of numerous
birds of prey that patrol the park. Mammals too are
plentiful, particularly Bohor Reedbuck, Waterbuck, Buffalo,
Warthog and the rare Rothchild's Giraffe, whilst anyone
tiring of the lakeside spectacle will find more than
enough birds and other wildlife in the surrounding scrub
and woodland. Nakuru is one of the better places in
Africa to find Leopard and the park is also a very important
Rhino sanctuary.
It
has a population of over 60 Black Rhino, although these
are very hard to see, and a healthy breeding population
of White Rhino which includes a large number of young
animals.
Dinner
and overnight for the two days at Sarova Lion Hill
Lodge, full board.
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Days
8 & 9: Masai Mara Game Reserve. We leave
Nakuru for the Masai Mara Game Reserve, driving through
some lovely bushland scenery en route. Our journey takes
us across the floor of the Rift Valley and then up and
over the Mau Escarpment. Continuing through Masai land,
past open plains and steep hills, we will pass through
the busy Masai market town of Narok, a riot of colour
as the red cloaks of the men and the bright colours
of the women's clothes mingle with the many shop fronts,
goats and piles of fruit and vegetables for sale. From
here we will complete the drive to our comfortable,
tented camp in the Mara, Mara Sarova Camp. Here we will
be based for three nights and this evening head out
on a game drive to enjoy the wildlife of Kenya's top
game reserve.
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The
Masai Mara Game Reserve is probably the most famous
in all of Africa. It is raising grassland, watered by
the Mara River and covering an area of 1,680 square
kilometres. The Mara region has been inhabited by humans
for at least 2,000 years, the last 200 years by the
Masai. The area is part of what is now referred to as
the Serengeti - Mara Ecosystem,
being joined to the huge Serengeti National Park in
Tanzania. In the local (Maa) language Mara means 'spotted',
a reference to the patches of bush and trees that dot
the plains.
The
Masai Mara holds some of the largest concentrations
of animals in the world, especially in August when huge
herds of White-bearded Wildebeest and Burchell's Zebra,
pursued by their attendant predators, migrate into the
reserve from the adjacent Serengeti. This is another
of Africa's great wildlife spectacles and, whilst nothing
is certain in the world of wildlife watching, we hope
to have timed it just right and witness the breathtaking
sight of the Mara grasslands filled as far as the eye
can see with huge herds of Wildebeest and Zebra. Topi,
Coke's Hartebeest, Impala, Eland, Thompson's and Grant's
Gazelles, Bohor Reedbuck, Bushbuck, Kirk's Dik-dik,
Masai Giraffe, Elephant and Buffalo feed amongst them
stalked by all 3 big cats, Lion, Cheetah and Leopard,
along with a variety of other predators and scavengers
such as Bat-eared Fox, Serval, Spotted Hyena and Black-backed
Jackals.
The
birdlife is equally diverse, although often takes second
place to the spectacle of the mammals. Huge Ground Hornbills
and elegant secretary Birds stride across the grasslands
along with Kori Bustards, Grey Crowned Crane and smaller
species such as Temminck's Coursers, Wattled Lapwing,
Rosy-breasted Longclaw, Yellow-shouldered Widowbird
and Capped Wheatear. Lone bushes or dead trees provide
lookout perches for a variety of bee-eaters and rollers,
including the beautiful Carmine Bee-eater, whilst above
them soar Martial Eagles, Lappet-faced, African White-backed,
Hooded and Ruppell's Vultures, the latter four always
on the look out for a recent kill. In the camp grounds
and acacia woodlands we should find a plethora of barbets,
finches, weavers, turacos, go-away-birds, glossy starlings
and kingfishers.
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Our
days in the Mara will start with an early morning wake
up call, and a cup of tea or coffee, before we head
out onto the plains shortly after dawn. After enjoying
the animals and birds we will return to camp late morning
for brunch and a siesta before heading out again for
an afternoon game drive. There are additional activities
on offer for those who wish, the most popular being
a hot air balloon ride or a Masai Village visit, a truly
magical experience.
The
costs are not included in the tour cost, however, and
must be booked in advance so please contact the Mbango
Safaris office on 00 254 20 211 24 33 / 4 for a price and more information.
Day
10: Nairobi. After a final morning's game
drive we must leave the Masai Mara and start the long
return drive to Nairobi.
We
will
then take our last evening meal in Kenya at world famous
Carnivore restaurant, before sadly
making our way to the airport to catch the late evening
flight back home.
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Weather. During our tour we can expect most days to be dry and
fairly sunny, temperatures ranging from 20- 30oC, depending on
altitude. Overcast weather, particularly in the afternoons, may not be
infrequent, but rain is unlikely except on high ground such as Lake Nakuru,
where afternoon precipitation is a possibility. Here the weather can be chilly
between sunset and sunrise.
Grading. This tour is ideal
for a couple, honeymooners or family and it has mind blowing views,
wildlife, big cats, privacy
and intimacy, set amidst a vast expanse of wilderness.
Entry requirements. Certain
nationals do require visas in order to enter
Kenya although there are no visa requirements
for citizens of the Republic of Ireland
and Commonwealth countries. Citizens of
the following countries are obliged to carry
visas: Antigua, Bermuda, Eritrea, Ethiopia,
Guyana, India, South Africa (for visitors
staying more than 30 days), Sri Lanka, San
Marino, Turkey, United Kingdom and Uruguay.
You can complete and print a Visa application
form online from www.kenya.visahq.com
Visas can be readily obtained at JKIA and
Moi International airports on arrival as
well as from Kenya High Commissions abroad
prior to departure. There is a fee to process
a visa, usually between US $ 20 - US $ 100
depending on the category required.
Food & accommodation included
in the price. All meals and accommodation are included throughout this
holiday as indicated in the itinerary with the exception of dinner on the first
day and lunch on the last day.
How
to book your place. In order to book a place
on this holiday, please call us now on 00 254 20 211 24
33 / 4. Alternatively, fill our online
booking form or
you may email us: safaris@mbangosafaris.com
giving us your
contact we will get
back to you to reserve the safari for you.
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