Days Six-Eight: Serengeti and Ngorogoro.
While sitting beside my tent on the rim of the Ngorogoro crater the
first night after a full day of travel, I realized our journey
("safari" in Swahili) had already provided me and my travel partner –
Western Heads East intern Meaghan Horgan – with more than we could have
hoped for. We were blessed with clear weather as we traversed various
topographies – flat, dry savannah, tropical forests, lush mountains and
short scrub – making animal sighting easier. We were greeted almost immediately by giraffes and a herd of
approximately 13 elephants, crossing in front of us. Three hours in, we
had already seen thousands of antelope, gazelles and zebras. Water
buffalo and baboons made their way through the grass at every turn.
Hippos resembled clumps of grey rocks floating in the water; warthogs
and ostriches scampered about. We had also crossed paths with our first
big cats, including a pair of lions, a leopard climbing out of a tree
and a cheetah enjoying its freshly-killed Thompson gazelle – while
fending off a flock of vultures. All of this happened within a few feet
of us, which was surreal, especially considering there are no fences.
This is the wild. We were reminded of this as we came across the female lion, lazily
lying under a tree near a pond. We watched as a gazelle sauntered over,
separated from its mates. It fell over, possibly sick, then continued
to the water hole. The lioness tensed on her haunches and sprang into
action, catching herself a meal. Seemingly unimpressed, a male appeared
from the tall grasses and decided to challenge a water buffalo. Without
the female’s support, he ended up backing down, tearing off a piece of
the gazelle as a consolation prize instead. During the trip to Ngorogoro, too, we passed a number of Massai,
their easily distinguishable red or purple garments contrasted against
the dry grass. Their villages, surrounded by fences of stick and brush
to keep predators out, dotted the mountainous climb. Acacia and Baobab
rose randomly from the vast terrain, but passing hollow, bleached bones
served as a reminder that this is one part of the world over which you
have very little control. The Ngorogoro crater – the largest unbroken caldera in the world,
and considered by many to be the eighth wonder of the world – was
breathtaking in its beauty, though clouds and fog washed in over it in
the morning. It is also considered by some to be the birthplace of
civilization. The crater’s walls rose high and were scarred by the
switchbacks that took 20 minutes to traverse to the bottom. The
backdrop was stunning, with cascading hills, vast plains and the large
Lake Magadi. We had our drive interrupted briefly as a large herd of
wildebeests crossed the road in a perfectly straight line and, toward
the end of the day, we completed our ‘Big 5’, spotting one of the very
few remaining black rhinoceros in the crater. The second night, we camped in the Serengeti and went to sleep to
distant calls from lions and hyenas. I was bitten on my achilles by a
tsetse fly, but though it really stung, I don’t think it has made me
sick. It was an amazing and surreal night to look up at a partially-lit
sky, pinpricked to let the heavens shine through the silence. Lit light
blue, it was as though darkness should never completely fall over the
sky, depriving us of the Serengeti’s beauty. I couldn’t believe I was
standing in the middle of it at night, surrounded by all I had seen
during the day. Today, Meaghan and I rose at 5:45 to watch the sun rise over the
park and to begin our trek home to Mwanza. We awoke to zebras, antelope
and gazelles visible from our tent door; we passed lions as we exited
the camp. On the way out, we saw many more animals and actually had a
chance to get out of the car to take a rope bridge across a river in
which a crocodile swam below. I didn’t want to lose my sandal. Or my
footing. The most amazing experience came toward the end of the day
when two long lines of elephants came together in a V, heading to the
river to cool off. In all, more than 150 elephants of all sizes passed
within feet of us. It pretty much summed up the trip for us: we were
very fortunate to see all that we did; many people spend far more time
and see far less.
The goal of the modern safari seems to be to shoot as many as you
can of the ‘Big 5’ – lion, leopard/cheetah, hippopotamus, water buffalo
and elephant. Only now, you do it with a camera instead of a rifle.
Posted by Douglas Keddy on October 22, 2007 | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
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