Monday, October 10, 2011

SOUTH AFRICA & KENYA September 2011








                  KENYA

            The following photos are taken in the Samburu and Shaba game reserves

                                 "come on guys, before the lions arrive"

                                         Vulturine Guinea Fowl


Vulture feast

                                               Superb Starling


                   Strange plant "fruit" beside the pool at the Sarova Shaba Lodge



monkeys very much in evidence at the Sarova Shaba Lodge - this one is pinching food at breakfast



this one wanted to enter the room - windows had to be kept shut in day time

full time job for an employee firing pellets from a ging or catapult to frighten them away

inside the dining room - all of the Lodges served plentiful food with a very good selection of buffet style dishes


very relaxing for Lynne after a hard morning's "viewing" on the reserve... 

                         hot, dry and dusty village

 Owl, looking out for a meal


Ostriches
                                             Oryx (first one I saw appeared to have only one horn - thought I'd        spotted the fabled unicorn!)
 "How much longer are your family staying did you say??"


in both the above situations it was prudent for the vehicles to back up - no great effort for an annoyed pachyderm to flip a vehicle

"hey mum, look over here....."


very elegant as they nonchalantly stroll along

                                            Dik Dik (yes, really)

 more Dik Diks



spot the cheetah



"mmm, I'll need a step ladder to get those top leaves"


Grevy's Zebra (the biggest of the three zebra species; they are more ass-like than the other two which are more horse-like) 


Thompson's Falls


note the buckets of water - for a few shillings the local "physics gurus" will demonstrate the Coriolis effect (the direction water goes down the plug hole north and south of the equator (trickery of course as there is no difference. Anything for a dollar...)

hippos, Lake Niavasha (central west, Rift Valley)


African fish eagle swooping for a fish thrown by the boatman



hope they're using Listering

Lake Niavasha - waterbuck
giraffe, same place inthe Crescent Island wildlife sanctuary

Great Rift Valley Lodge

view from our room


"Naitiri"
site of the farmhouse and farm established by Lynne's parents in the early 60s. House and efficient farm now gone, replaced by shacks and small, desultory gardens supporting a subsistence existence... a metaphor for much of the activity in Kenya now















Kitale - closest town
Interesting shop - seems to stock one of nearly everything



Kitale "main"- street





tempted to enquire what a "Transmattress Supermarket" sold...?


don't forget to have your credit card with you if requiring mortuary services

good to see that all that's best from the West has found its way to Kenya - mission statements, core values, visions etc - no doubt backed up by awareness heightening sessions, working parties, focus groups...




stayed the night here - original old colonials club in its day - interesting that all the old trophies, committee members names, hunting trophies etc still remain








new colonials with tour guide Joshua. His father apparently remembered the Brits from years ago with mixed feelings




the golf course - littls has changed except the complexions



one of the original stores where Lynne's parents shopped - this is the original owner's son


potato sales by the road

view across the valley



back to the hospital - Lynne's brother and sister born in this room - looks as though little has changed over the years

Lake Nakuru National Park
White Rhino

"sure I buried a bone around here...."







Lake Nakuru National Park - Lion Hill Lodge





Impala



Impala




                                                             Grey Crowned Crane





                                                              Flamingos and Pelicans




                                                                        Flamingos







                                                                            Eagle




Baboons in the Lake Nakuru Nat. Park













these guys can be vicious and also steal, so no point in trying to use the picnic tables




these following photos taken in the Masai Mara Game? National park?







most of the safari vehicles are basic Nissan Urvans and Toyota Hiace and take quite a pounding over the course of the day chasing the best vantage spots to see the animals











waterbuck



family of warthogs - very timid - looked hilarious running, awkward, with their tails sticking up in the air

male warthog



vultures and their meal







Uganda Kob



rare species peering out of the top of his nest

Topi



Wildebeest

Thompson's Gazelle
 
in a Masai village. Very expensive to visit and we wondered where all the money went as they live basically in squalor - apparently much goes on schools and there are the usual issues with alcohol
(photo above that is a Secretary Bird -I think because they look smart and efficient))

fire lighting demo for the tourist using traditional means  
cooking facilities inside the very basic unventilated hut
nine year old being mum
plenty of cow dung to walk in, also for rendering the huts (the animals live in the same compound)

pathetic effort compared to the locals
Masai dancers in the hotel
learning to be like Dad
our room in the Lodge...even included a hot water bottle delivered in the evening, altho' hardly necessary!

lion cubs playing
"they promised me a juicy loin of Zebra if I wait here"
the blokes due this for much of the day whilst the ladies check out the hunting



very hard to locate leopard - and when we did, about 50 other vehicles were there too

Impala in the Masia Mara park 
rare example of   primitive Neanderthal species on its way out of Africa



Grant's Gazelle above and below



Goshawk


young elephant practising to use it's trunk - they have to learn and quite amusing to watch
crowned plover

Coke's Hartebeest
  one above and two below - cheetahs. The vehicle moved quickly, fearing the cheetahs would climb down via the rooftop







these three photos (above and two below) are poor quality; they were taken at dusk with a long zoom (beyond the camera's capability) but show the stalking, attack and then eating the kill. All happened very quickly






Buffalo
Black backed Jackal
Weaver birds' nests hanging down
probably  a Bustard
Cheetahs
they seem largely oblivious to human activity around them - not that anyone ventured out of vehicles...
Rift Valley panorama (runs through a large area of Kenya
Nairobi - inside the Stanley Hotel...these three photos show the interior which probably hasn't changed since the Brits left in the '60s
Jane, Jim and Lynne

lunch at old Swedo house (also below)

no, it's not an abacus factory, but where they make Kazuri Beads. The whole process is interesting - the factory provides employment for young women from poor backgrounds, single mothers, widows etc

above and below - Karen Blixen's house and garden ( the film Out of Africa was based on part of her life)


                                                                         towards the north of Kenya, and a high proportion of Muslems. Regarded as a dangerous area (towards the Somalian border)
                                                                                  

hard to get a good shot, but the women in this tribe shave one side of their heads...this lady was paid one apple to show us her "hairstyle"


Mt Kenya (highest in Kenya)

street scene, Nairobi

a little piece of Hyde Park in Nairobi

the people up on the left were walking around ordering the vagrants to arise after a night's sleep in the open. Those that didn't respond were persuaded more vigorously with canes

horrendous traffic - creating one's own lane on the wrong side of the double line!

probably Kenya's biggest problem - corruption. Wouldn't be a surprise if this government dept. was also corrupt!
most vehicles have polluting exhausts from poorly maintained engines - fumes in Nairobi cause quite a problem
above and below - roadside shops; some of the names are quite humorous






fairly common form of transport

poor roades and broken down vehicles are the norm



chaotic traffic in Eldoret

Prayer Palace - there are churches of every description with strange names, but mainly Christian in the south 



not sure what happens in a massage palour ...?









this shows a remarkable resemblance to examples of modern art I've seen in galleries





above and below - sometimes the road surface is so bad, it's safer to drive alongside




                                                                                 




SOUTH AFRICA: Cape Town to Port Elizabeth; "Garden Route"




                                                                             Cape Town
                                                                         
                                                              "Africa Restaurant", great place for a variety of food from different parts of Africa, served in a style of many small servings

above and below - Cape Town

Below - views of and from Table Mountain






                                            humorous topiary outside a vet clinic




                                         penguins - taken on our trip to the Cape of Good Hope  
                                                                            
                                                                           
                                                    
                                   on the wharf where the dolphin viewing trips depart

Lynne buying Angle (salted) fish for lunch with the help of our Russian tour guide -  a real character, not the more dour example we expect!


                                     above and below taken in a shanty town - some are reasonable with power, water etc


                                                                              


                                 precipitous roads on the way to the Cape







                                                            taken from the Cape

                                     bit corny, but a photographic "must"


above and four below - taken in the beautiful Kirstenbosch National Botanic Gardens near Cape Town




proteas












                               market day in Cape town, but a little saturated, as we were also
above and below - a folly in a planning exercise many years ago...the flyover was built so far, but then someone refused to sell their property that was in the way and the road works ground to a halt. But now used for a variety of purposes: bridal photos, film scenes for dramatic car chases etc



                                    Fantasy Safari Park, SA wine lands


                                   above and below: Stellenbosch, a very interesting and very Afrikaaner town in the wine growing region
                                 "oldest shop" in Stellenbosch; a mix of pold and new inside - one of everything on sale

taken in one of the four historical houses in the Stellenbosch Village Museum. The other houses represented the more austere Afrikaaner lifestyle, whilst this was an example in the "overdone" Victorian British (clutter) style of the day...
.....and don't forget the trophies, don't ya know, what...

view from Devon Valley Hotel, where we stayed, near Stellenbosch


wine tasting at Devon Valley hotel - the glass polishing took longer than the tasting...quite a showman and also doubled as waiter, porter etc



Franschhoek (wine area)

hides on sale at Franschhoek


Kleinpasie Living Open Air Museum, Worcester (Worcester ???)
Interesting place, making bread that was sold locally, eggs etc...this is a fencing style of logs used by early settlers




                                                                 wildflowers







                                                                                 we were very lucky with the wildflowers - our meerkat tour guide said they were the best he'd seen for years (not the same diversity of WA, tho')
                                                                                    






                                      had to get up at 4 30am to see these little fellows climb out of their burrows for the morning sun-facing warming routine   


Cango Caves near Oudtshoorn




                                     Outeniqua Pass near George (during the course of the Garden Route we travelled through many spectacular passes)




sign above refers to the shape being  similar to Africa (taken from a lookout near George)



                         not sure where this is, but verdant countryside and houses set amongst it
                                              above and below - views around Knysna







                                           kids spruiking - Knysna

                                Knysna tour - carriages towed up hill behind old diesel truck


                                                             Knysna coastline

nests at the Birds of Eden Bird Sanctuary near Plettenburg Bay

the entire sanctuary is netted, including the roof (er...of course) - these men are making repairs
















                                          Monkeland primate sanctuary near Plettenberg Bay
                                                 Lemurs (?)









Crop circles in South Africa...??? we are not alone...........!!