Baby Lion Jambo, Jambo
Hello in Swahili, the official language of Tanzania. We have recently returned and thought you may enjoy sharing in some of our journey and experience. Tanzania, south of Kenya on the African continent's Indian Ocean coastline, lays claim to the title Home of the Safari. The word Safari is taken from the Swahili word that means "journey."
There is no doubt that we went on an amazing journey. Tanzania offers one of the best environments in the world for an enriching wildlife experience. Its game parks are populated with many of the world's most exotic creatures, including all of the "Big Five" (Lion, Rhino, Leopard, Elephant & Cape Buffalo). As we traveled through the parks and game reserves we often found the animals right next to the road (or crossing it).
You can see our Safari vehicles (as a baby elephant walks between them). We are in the background taking pictures! (photo courtesy of our new friend Mike)
Our travel included time in Tarangire National Park, Ngorongoro Highlands, Ngorongoro Crater and Serengeti National part. Along the journey we stayed in semi permanent camps. As you will see later in the photos, our time was very comfortable yet very close to the wildlife. Going to sleep and waking up to the sounds of animals is pretty amazing. I am not sure totally about staring into the eyes of a wildebeest out the tent, but, hey it was all a part of the experience.
"Camping" in our tent wasn't too roughTargaine National Park was were we spent our first few days. It covers 2600km of grassland and flood plains along with acacia and baobab trees (the one without leaves). We saw herds of elephants and a great number of baboon in this park. Our camp overlooked this great river with animals all over the place.
We continue through the lush green foothills reaching a higher altitude where temperatures are cooler. We stop for our first look at the collapsed caldera of Tanzania's "Garden of Eden," gazing down into the Crater floor below. We then went down 2000-foot descent into this magnificent wildlife haven. Here, a nearly perfect balance of predator and prey exists within the 102 square miles of the Crater floor. We saw great African wildlife: a teeming world of elephants, rhinoceros, lions, hyenas, zebra, wildebeest, jackel, chetah, and ostrich to name a few. Our days started before sunrise (remember photo safari) which was ideal for the wildlife as well. We were greated at the crater with lion cubs with their Mom, while Mom quickly jumped across the creek both cubs fell in. Mother lions are a bit more harsh than humans she didn't even worry about the cubs. We were fortnate to also have a sighting of a very rare black rhino pair. They too needed to cross the road right in front of us! Cool!
Leaving the Ngorongoro Conservation Area, we stopped in a Maasi village and were greeted with a traditional dance by the highly energized kids and told about their lives. The kids go to school in their village between the ages of 4-6. Once they are older than that they then go to primary school 20km (12+miles) away which they walk to on Monday and stay until Friday. If they are fortunate they then go to secondary school.
Maasai Jewelry
We then stopped briefly at the famed Oldupai Gorge, where some of the earliest remains of our species were unearthed by the dedicated Leakey family. Here in these desolate gullies the jawbone of Zinjanthropus Man was discovered. The Gorge Museum explains the Leakeys' methods and their remarkable finds.
We then continued on our journey into the great Serengeti, traveling deep into the wilds of Africa. The sight of giraffe, lion, ostrich, zebra and warthog were amazing.
Snack time
The concentration of animals in the park reaches its peak during the annual wildebeest migration, with millions of wildebeest and their zebra friends on their endless migratory circuit to Kenya & back, following the rains and green grass. Millions of animals coalesce into a single massive herd, which we got to experience up close up and personnel. The migration was taking place around where our camp was, and for 4 nights we were entertained by these great creatures moving in large packs.
We went on a hot air balloon ride in the Serengeti. On our journey to the balloon launch site we encoutered our first leopard. The hot air balloon ride was amazing, we could see for miles and miles and the wildlife was incredibly rich!
Watching the wildlife provides ongoing entertainment with the behaviors not always predictable. We watched a cheetah with cubs vs a warthog with baby warthogs. Who would have ever know the warthog would win the showdown!
We left the Serengeti via plane. Sounds simple, but really it was another adventure. The runway was right in the midst of the migration. Our land rovers took about 4 passes to clear the wildlife out of the way. Then the plane had to make a couple more passes to clear them again! Off of the plane came the food for the next set of safari groups and on we went. Our new Canadian friends Kirsty and Tonya were dropped off in a different town as they were going to go help in the community for 2 weeks.
We said our good byes...they began with our guides in the Serengeti and continues for the next day as half of us traveled on the same flight out of Africa back to Amsterdam. We were no longer thought of as the "tree huggers" from the state of Washington. We had an incredible journey as well as several new buddies!
On our last morning in Tanzania we left the Seregenti on two small cessna planes. Our Tanzanian guides would take greater than a day driving the Land Rovers back to Arusha. Our plane took off from a grass runway in the middle of the Serengeti.
We learned on this photo safari that this is a "tourist view." It felt appropriate as our parting shot......