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NAIROBI NATIONAL PARK
Just a lion's roar away from the city, this was among
the first parks to be established in Kenya in 1946 and covers
an area of just under 120 square kilometers. Its biggest advantage
is its easy access just 15 minutes or so from the center of
the city. On a good day you can see Lion, Giraffe, Rhino,
Buffalo, Cheetah and many plains game roaming freely within
the park. Hippos are to be seen at the Hippo Pool, which is
on the eastern part of the park. Crocodiles may also be sighted
in sections of the Athi River, which is also a very good location
for watching many species of birds. At the entrance of the
park in an orphanage for sick and abandoned animals- a favorite
haunt for the younger tourists as well as many Kenyan students
of all ages.
HELLS
GATE NATIONAL PARK
Located in Naivasha, just over an hours easy drive south west
from Nairobi, is the Hells Gate National Park which is famous
for its walking safaris among stark cliff walls jutting up
almost perpendicularly from the floor of the rift valley and
the hot steam jets rising many feet into the air. The park
is home to herds of zebra, giraffe eland and rock hyrax. Bird-life
is plentiful including the rare Lammergeyer Vulture which
nests on the rock cliffs. Because of its close proximity to
Nairobi, the park is a good day-trip getaway although those
who wish to spend the night have plenty of first class hotels
and lodges as well as good quality home stays to choose from.
Nearby is Lake Naivasha, itself an attractive and highly relaxing
holiday location as well as a birdwatchers paradise. In the
background stand Mt Longonot.
LAKE
NAKURU NATIONAL PARK
On a good day you can easily find one million flamingoes on
the shores of Lake Nakuru. Undoubtedly one of the best run
parks in Kenya, Lake Nakuru is home to Lion, Leopard, Buffalo
and Rhino which can all be easily sighted within a space of
one or two hours making a visit to this park one of the most
rewarding. Day trips or overnight stays are equally popular
with visitors. There are excellent lodges in the park.
LAKE
BOGORIA NATIONAL RESERVE & LAKE BARINGO
At Lake Bogoria, the power that was behind the formation of
the Rift Valley is most evident, with steam jets and boiling
geysers burbling at regular intervals and giving evidence
of the strong volcanic activity that is still taking place
under the surface of the earth. Inhabited by beautiful pink
flamingoes swimming in the warm waters as well as hundreds
of bird species, Lake Bogoria is a peaceful place to feel
at one with nature. On the shores live plenty of zebras, gazelles,
dik dik and the rare Greater Kudu .
Further
north just twenty minutes from Lake Bogoria is another of
the Rift Valley lakes- Lake Baringo. A major tourist destination,
visitors to Lake Baringo enjoy many relaxing activities including
boat trips, windsurfing and water- skiing. Island Camp on
Lake Baringo is an ornithologists paradise. In the backdrop
are the Kamasia Hills- a block of ancient rock left standing
when the rest of the Rift Valley sank.
KAKAMEGA
FOREST NATIONAL RESERVE
Kakamega Forest is the single largest indigenous forest and
a true remnant of the Tropical Rain Forest, which once spread
across the whole of Central and Eastern Africa. Visitors to
these forests are enchanted by the many varieties of indigenous
trees and the unique animals that are found in it, including
large reptiles, different species of birds including the rare
Blue Turaco, different families of monkeys and many thousands
of butterflies.
MT
ELGON NATIONAL PARK
Sitting astride the western border between Kenya and Uganda,
Mt Elgon is the second highest mountain in Kenya. A climber's
favorite because of its relatively easy terrain and spectacular
scenes, Mt Elgon is also famous for its centuries old caves
that are inhabited by herds of elephants.
MAASAI MARA NATIONAL PARK
By
far the most visited park in Kenya, the world famous Maasai
Mara National Park is a northern extension of Tanzania's Serengeti
Plains. Covering an area of just over 1600 square kilometers,
the park's rolling plains is home to Kenya's Big Five as well
as thousands upon thousands of plains game, and a visit at
any time of the year is guaranteed to yield excellent viewing
results. During the migration months of August to November,
over a million wildebeest crowd the Mara offering the visitor
one of the world's most unforgettable experiences.
Accommodation
is plentiful and varied ranging from basic tented camps where
visitors remain almost at one with nature, to top rated five
star camps and lodges designed to recreate the same sense
of easy luxury as existed during the old hunting safari days
of the rich and famous.
AMBOSELI
NATIONAL PARK
Covering an area of just under 400 square kilometers, Amboseli
National Park is Kenya's earliest game sanctuary and is well
known for its large herds of elephant seen grazing back and
forth against the backdrop of the world famous snow capped
Mt Kilimanjaro- the highest mountain in Africa.
TSAVO
NATIONAL PARK
This is Kenya's largest park covering a total area of just
over 20,000 square kilometers split into two areas- Tsavo
West and Tsavo East. Tsavo West is the most visited of the
two with its huge herds of elephant, buffalo and rhino and
always with Mt Kilimanjaro in the background. A visit to the
clear waters of the dramatic Mzima Springs is a must. Eternally
fed by the melting snows of Kilimanjaro, Mzima boasts of many
crocodiles and hippos, as well as varied species of fish.
The rest of the park consists of a wide expanse of red earth
where tall grass and thorn shrubs make your stay in any of
the camps as close as you can possibly get to the authentic
feel of the African bush.
ABERDARE
NATIONAL PARK
Inhabited mainly by buffalo and elephants and colobus monkeys,
the Aberdare National Park is part of a mountain range and
forest reserve that sits at the edge of the Rift Valley and
is home to Kenya's famous "tree hotels". One of
the lodges, Treetops, gained world fame as the place where,
in 1952 while a guest at the lodge, Queen Elizabeth II learned
of the death of her father King George VI and ascended to
the British throne. Other tree lodges are the Ark and the
Mountain Lodge. Also at the nearby town of Nyeri lies the
tomb of Lord Baden and Lady Olave Powell, the founders of
the world Boy Scouts and Girl Guides movement.
Below
the Aberdares range, lie the fertile and beautiful valley
of Subukia, spread like some woven tapestry and commanding
one of the most beautiful scenery to be found anywhere in
Kenya.
MT
KENYA NATIONAL PARK
Mt Kenya National Park is a high altitude park lying at an
altitude of between 3100 and 5300 meters and is home to a
wide variety of exotic Kenyan plants as well different species
of wildlife. Most famous as the home of Mt Kenya, the second
highest mountain in Africa, many visitors return here each
year for the excellent climbing opportunities this park offers
and the breathtaking scenery that includes moors and glaciers
and tarns and glades and peaks. According to local legend,
Mt Kenya, also known as Kirinyaga, is the hallowed abode of
Ngai, the God of the Kikuyu ethnic group.Many different types
of climbing expeditions, some amateur and others professional,
take place here each year from the base camps of Naro Moru,
Timau ,Sirimon or Chogoria. Some of the routes are more difficult
than others and it is always recommended that visitors consult
and seek more professional information from the Mountain Climbing
Club of Kenya or be accompanied at all times by professional
guides. At the lower ranges of the mountain are some of Kenya's
most fertile farmlands lush green and laden with coffee and
tea, wheat and maize and bananas and green vegetables , making
a trip to these parts well worth a visit for the splendid
scenery that it offers.
MERU
NATIONAL PARK
This is the park made famous through the pioneer work of Joy
and George Adamson who raised and lived with Elsa the Lioness,
then later taught her and son Boy to hunt and get rehabilitated
them back to the wild. The park has been the scene of a number
of such epic films as "Born Free" and "A Walk
with Lions." The park is also home to the rare Reticulated
Giraffe, the Grevy's zebra with its tiny stripes and the Gerenuk.
Of all the parks on the Northern Tourist Circuit, Meru National
Park is currently the least visited.
SAMBURU,
BUFFALO SPRINGS AND SHABA NATIONAL RESERVES
These reserves lie in the hot and dry northern part of Kenya.
A significant feature of both Samburu and Buffalo Springs,
is the Uaso Nyiro River which runs across the park. Along
the entire length of this river are many different species
of wildlife and birds some only found in this hot and dry
habitat. The park is also home to many lions, leopards, giraffe,zebras
and the Beisa Oryx. It is in this park that recently a lion
captured the attention of the whole world by repeatedly adopting
baby Oryxes.
As
a cultural destination, Samburu is home of the Samburu ethnic
community, the closest relatives of the Masaai who are to
be found concentrated near the southern borders of the country.
Both the Maasai and the Samburu have a rich and colourful
lifestyle that has inspired research and the writing of many
books on African culture.
LAKE
TURKANA NATIONAL PARK & SIBILOI NATIONALPARK
The world's largest concentration of crocodiles, nearly ten
thousand of these man-eating beasts are found in Lake Turkana
alone. Known also as the Jade Sea, because of the jade colour
of its waters, Lake Turkana has gained world fame as the "Cradle
of Mankind". Here on a stark and windswept island inhabited
by birds and snakes and crocodiles and giant fish in the semi
alkaline waters of its lake, lie the Sibiloi National Park,
created to preserve the many archeological treasures that
have been dug in this place. Here at Koobi Fora archeologists
have found fossil remains of prehistoric elephants and the
petrified remains of large forests which once stood in this
now desolate place, and the footprints of Homo Erectus, the
closest ancestor of Man which confirms Kenya's claim that
this place is the true origin of man. To reach Turkana you
have to travel for miles on end on very harsh terrain, itself
an unparalleled adventure not recommended for the fainthearted.
For
more information please contact us at:
Raydoll Tours & Travel,
Lower Ground Floor,
Ambank House,
University Way
Tel: (011)254 2 212791/213436
Fax: (011)254 2 214361
E-
mail: raydoll@africaonline.co.ke
Airline Booking site: www.travelgalileo.co.uk/raydoll |

Warrior |

Giraffes against the city skyline
- Nairobi National Park |

1,000,000 flamingoes!
- Lake Nakuru National Park |

Baboon Rehabilitation Project
-Sweetwaters National Reserve |

Large reptile at Kakamega Forest |

Maasai Mara Kenya |

Bull elephant at Amboseli National Park |

Giraffes at Sweetwaters National Reserve |

Cheetah and her cubs
-Samburu National Reserve |

Balloon Safaris
-Maasai Mara |
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