Waking up at 6:00am
is a lot easier when you are waking up to the sun rising brilliantly over
majestic Mt. Kenya and your own personal watering hole scene. Waking up this
way set the tone for a whole day of awesome sights.
By 6:30 we were
heading out across savannah roads on a second game drive.
The day's amazing
moments started with stumbling across a family of elephants feeding along the
roadside. We originally only saw three little baby elephants munching away
until momma elephant emerged from the bushes and began marching slowly and
intensely toward our car, flapping her ears as a not-so-subtle warning to back
off.
Other amazing
moments:
- Taking time to
watch a family troupe of baboons as they wrestled, danced around, and groomed
each other, eager for picked-tick snacks.
- Visiting Kenya's
only chimpanzee sanctuary that was started by Jane Goodall herself. We were
introduced to a major portion of our hairy genetic relatives by one of their
caretakers who explained each chimp's name and often tragic story prior to
sanctuary days. We stared at each other through electric fence bars which
really drove home the point that these guys are refugees from war, ripped from
their home in the Congo due to poaching and logging. The most amazing thing
happened, however, when Connor got out of his wheelchair on to the ground in
front of the chimps. Two chimps, Poco and Safari, began playing with us,
excitedly rising to their back feet, puffing out their chests and running back
and forth along the fence with Connor, Matt and Nicole. Even our guide whipped
out his camera to take a video, telling us that they never do this with
visitors.
- Feeding sugar cane
to Baraka, a full-grown black rhino who has gone blind from his fighting days.
Baraka is Swahili for blessing.
- Eating lunch at the
Trout Tree, a restaurant that grows, grills, and serves its own trout and is
built around the trunk and branches of a tree. This eclectic place is complete
with several kinds of monkeys, one of which decided to add to our meal by sending
some monkey-poo down through the branches and next to our table.
After a full day of
safari and lunch at Trout Tree, we continued on our way back to SACDEP to
prepare for our last week at Joytown.
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Mama elephant giving the eye |
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Joseph rolling the tire back to the van |
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Can you feel the love tonight? - Lions about 50 yds from the tire spot |
|
Poco |
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Poco and Matt |
|
Off they go |
Did you see any giraffes????
ReplyDeleteNo, actually! But next weekend we are going to a giraffe reserve so keep your blog-reading eyes peeled. :)
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