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Maasai Mara
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When it comes to
game-viewing, there is nowhere in Africa richer in
wildlife or more eventful in encounters than the
Mara. A pristine wilderness of haunting beauty, it
promises its visitors a profusion of wildlife,
prolific bird life and the unprecedented
opportunity of catching up with all the members of
the 'Big Five' in one morning. As to scenery, the
1,800 sq kilometres of this veteran reserve offer
the classic mix of African imagery; miles of
lion-gold grasslands, shoals of lilac-misted
hills, a meandering river, acres of thorn-bush and
mile upon mile of undulating wilderness.
The Miracle of the
Migration of the Wildebeest
Known as the 'greatest show on earth' the annual
migration of up to one and a half million animals
between the dry plains of Tanzania and the lush
grasslands of Kenya (and back again) has featured
as an annual event on Earth's calendar for the
past two million years. And it's still as
extraordinary, enlightening and exciting an event
as ever.
Taking place around the months of August and
September the migration is a spectacle, both comic
and tragic, that features the epic journey of vast
herds of wildebeest between the grasslands of
Kenya and Tanzania - flanked by a carnival of
other herbivores and stalked by a ruthless pack of
predators. As a vivid portrayal of the violence of
the concept, 'survival of the fittest', this is a
spectacle, not always for the faint-hearted, that
goes beyond memorable and into momentous.
The
Maasai Maara Landscape
The Mara is a
beautiful but sensitive environment that can
survive only if properly respected. Well-watered
by the Mara River, enjoying abundant vegetation,
wildlife and rainfall, its ecology would appear,
at first sight, to be relatively resilient. It
also appears to have withstood the erosive effects
of huge numbers of visiting tourists
extraordinarily well. There are signs, however,
that the delicate balance between tourist numbers
and wildlife populations cannot be properly
maintained for much longer as evidenced by the
reduction in the protective vegetation cover and
the emergence of a series of dust bowls.
Meanwhile, the Reserve is host to 95 species of
mammals, amphibians and other reptiles and 485
species of birds. During the dry season (July to
October) it also hosts a major concentration of
migratory herbivores including about 250,000 zebra
and 1.3 million wildebeest. Amongst the list of
easy-to-view species are: gazelle, elephant, topi,
buffalo, lion (Kenya's largest population), black
rhino, hippo, hyena, giraffe, leopard and
mongoose.
The
Maasai People
As its name would
suggest the Maasai Mara is the home of the fabled
Maasai peoples. Often strikingly tall and slender,
swathed in brilliant red cloth 'Shukas', hung
about with beads and metal jewellery, the young
men (Moran) favour long, plaited, ochre-daubed
hairstyles and have a formidable reputation for
glamour, prowess and ferocity. Traditionally the
Maasai live off the milk and blood of their
beloved cattle and believe that all the world's
cattle are theirs by God-given right. Their
nomadic and pastoral lifestyle, though
historically based on the pursuit of the migratory
wildlife, is slowly changing thanks to a
combination of education, Maasai MPs, votes,
favourable new laws, projects, jobs and cash.
Climate The coast is always hot with an average
daytime temperature of 27-31 degrees centigrade
whilst the average daytime temperature in Nairobi
is 21-26 degrees centigrade. Temperatures
elsewhere depend on altitude. July to August marks
the Kenyan winter.

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