MASAI MARA GAME RESERVE - Is situated in south-west Kenya and is one of Africa’s Greatest Wildlife Reserves together with the Serengeti National Park in Tanzania it forms Africa’s most diverse, incredible and most spectacular ecosystems and possibly the world’s top safari big game viewing eco-system. 3 DAYS 2 NIGHTS MARA click here |
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AMBOSELI THE LAND OF MT. KILIMANJARO - Is located in Loitoktok District, Rift Valley Province of Kenya. The park is famous for being the best place in Africa to get close to free-ranging elephants among other wildlife species. Other attractions of the park includes opportunities to meet the Maasai people and also offers spectacular views of Mount Kilimanjaro, the highest free-standing mountain in the world.
AMBOSELI THE LAND OF MT. KILIMANJARO - Is located in Loitoktok District, Rift Valley Province of Kenya. The park is famous for being the best place in Africa to get close to free-ranging elephants among other wildlife species. Other attractions of the park includes opportunities to meet the Maasai people and also offers spectacular views of Mount Kilimanjaro, the highest free-standing mountain in the world.
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SAMBURU GAME RESERVE - Is located on the banks of the Ewaso Ng'iro river. In the middle of the reserve, Ewaso Ng'iro flows through doum palm groves and thick riverine forests that provide water to the reserve. Samburu Reserve was one of the two areas in which conservationists George Adamson and Joy Adamson raised Elsa the Lioness (made famous in the best selling book and award winning movie Born Free). The Reserve is also home to Kamunyak, a lioness famous for adopting oryx calves and a wide variety of animals and bird species including reticulated giraffe and the long-necked gerenuk. Lion, cheetah and leopard can be found here, as well as elephants, buffalos, rhinos and hippos. Other mammals frequently seen in the park include Grant's Gazelle, Kirk's Dik-dik, Impala, Waterbuck, Grevy's Zebra, and Beisa Oryx. |
NAIROBI NATIONAL PARK - has acquired the nickname ‘Kifaru Ark’, a testament to its success as a rhinoceros (kifaru in Kiswahili) sanctuary. The park is home to the world's densest concentration of black rhinoceros,
Lions and hyenas are also commonly sighted within the park; You’ll need a bit of patience and a lot of luck to spot the park’s resident cheetahs and leopards. Other regularly spotted species include gazelle, warthog, zebra, giraffe, ostrich and buffalo.
Lions and hyenas are also commonly sighted within the park; You’ll need a bit of patience and a lot of luck to spot the park’s resident cheetahs and leopards. Other regularly spotted species include gazelle, warthog, zebra, giraffe, ostrich and buffalo.
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TSAVO EAST NATIONAL PARK - is one of the oldest parks in Kenya, located South East of Kenya near the Town of Voi in the Taita-Taveta District of Coast Province, inland from the Coast, Tsavo East is generally flat, with dry plains across which the Galana River flows. Other features include the Yatta Plateau and Lugard Falls. |
ABERDARES NATIONAL PARK - Picturesque, steep forested ravines and open moorland characterise the Aberdare National Park. The park provides a habitat for elephants, black rhinos, leopards, spotted hyenas, olive baboons, black and white colobus monkeys, buffalos, warthogs and bushbucks among others. Rare sightings include those of the Giant Forest hog, bongo, golden cat, serval cat, African wild cat, African civet cat and the blue duiker. Visitors can indulge in picnics, trout fishing in the rivers and camping in the moorlands. Bird viewing is rewarding, with over 250 species of birds in the park, including the Jackson's Francolin, Sparrow hawks, goshawks, eagles, sunbirds and plovers. |
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LAKE NAIVASHA - is a beautiful freshwater lake, fringed by thick papyrus. The lake is almost 13kms across, but its waters are shallow with an average depth of five metres. Lake area varies greatly according to rainfall, with an average range between 114 and 991 sq kms. At the beginning of the 20th Century, Naivasha completely dried up and effectively disappeared. The resulting open land was farmed, until heavy rains a few years later caused the lake to return to existence, swallowing up the newly established estates.