When I last
signed off from the Maasai Mara, we were headed off on another game drive. But
the surprise for the day was to be found in the lobby of the resort camp. Sue had
seen what she thought was one of her relatives and when she called Eric’s name,
sure enough, he turned around. I knew Eric O’Connor very well from the days he
was my son Tyler's scout leader. Eric had joined the Department of Foreign Affairs
and was now posted to the Canadian High Commission in Nairobi. He was just
visiting for the weekend with his new wife Rhona and a couple of friends. What
a coincidence!! We had a great visit together over dinner and lots of stories
from the past to the present.
Another day
another adventure.
We are headed to the Serengeti but first we had to say
goodbye to David our guide. We had to take two short flights with a number of
stops in between. One flight lasted a total of three minutes and Waren
commented that it was the shortest flight any of us had probably ever taken. Both
flights were in Canadian built Twin Otters. Powerful planes with room for about
20 passengers and weight limitations set at 30 lbs per person. No security
check in and no passenger flight manifest. On our second segment the first
officer was just looking for 16 souls to board. Her uniform was filthy and her
epilates extremely worn and in need of replacement. 10 minutes into the flight
she turned around from the cockpit and started to count heads. She looked
concerned, did another head count, then did another, conferred with the pilot and decided all was
in order and we didn’t have to turn around. I wasn’t too concerned until one of
the two pilots decided to take out her cell phone and started to text her FB
friends. Geez. So much for African air carriers but we made it safely.
A short
transfer to the Tanzania border, a check of our visas and yellow fever cards
and we were good to go. At first I was concerned when the border officer had
swiped my passport and said to me that I was a repeat offender. Then a big
smile came across his face when he said that I had been a previous visitor to
which I replied “guilty as charged”.
The
Serengeti is over 700 square miles and the horizon stretches to the limits and
then some. Home to millions of animals and hundreds of different species of
birds and wild life, this reserve is world renowned, especially for the seasonal
migrations and the Big 5. Clear blue skies and towering clouds, combined with a
lack of human presence and a completely different landscape makes for a unique
safari experience. No other 4 x 4 jeeps or people to be seen anywhere in this
vast territory.
The grasses
are tall and green which makes sighting wildlife difficult to the untrained eye
but our new guide and driver Adam, knew where to go and how to find what we
have come to see. The migration of the wildebeest in this region is in its
infancy but Adam knew where to track down a herd of many thousand of the homely
looking beasts. They mingled with hundreds of zebras and an equal number of
gazelles.
Of
particular note was a sighting of two families of cheetahs, one of which had
five young siblings and another had two. Lions are sprawled out over the entire
region. Many were just sunning on rocks and others were nursing their young
down by the edge of a stream. One of our sightings saw a jackal, which had just
killed a young Thompson gazelle. It was trying to take it away to safety for
consumption, avoiding the overhead vultures and the ugly and reprehensible
hyenas. One herd of elephants we saw had to have had at least 60 – 70 members
along with their new born. Giraffes towered high into Acacia trees and the
colourful birds were everywhere. Hippos were sloppily waddling in a filthy
watering pond and the familiar odour of ammonia was recognizable to anyone who
has been around farms.
One thing
we didn’t count on was being the center of attention ourselves. David made the
executive decision to cross a stream where he thought the ground was stable
enough to cross. Wrong!! We got stuck up to the running boards, with hippo excrement
flying everywhere, which even a Land Rover 4 x 4 can’t get out of. A fellow
jeep hooked us up and eventually got us unstuck and rescued but not before
another 8 or so jeeps showed up with all of their drivers offering advice and
direction. Embarrassing I’m sure to Adam, but I assured him we had all been
stuck in a snow bank at one time or another. Jambo from the Serengeti
Sue has a nack of finding people she knows wherever she is in the world. Good for for you guys.
ReplyDeleteGive's new meaning to 'being in deep shyt'.
ReplyDeleteStill wish I was there!
;-)
Amazing pictures. Can’t wait to see all the pictures of your adventures. Jennifer let me know what you got at the local lululemon.
ReplyDelete