(This is the fourth in a series of posts about my just-completed Kenya safari.)
From
Lake Naivasha, we headed out early for the next leg of our safari—with a
dispassionate send-off from the resident troop of black-tie-attired
colobus monkeys (the only primates, we're told, without thumbs).
It’s
just an hour’s drive northwest to Kenya’s fourth largest city, Nakuru,
and nearby Lake Nakuru National Park—one of the country's smallest and
best game parks. Along the way, especially at higher elevations, we
could clearly see the broad sweep of this stretch of the great,
3,700-mile-long Rift Valley, flanked here by the 10,000-foot Mau
Escarpment on the west and the highlands and mountains of the Aberdare
Range on the east.
The number and range of animals we
were spotting continued to amaze us.
Lake
Nakuru is a soda lake, one whose highly alkaline waters support a
distinct range of organisms, among them, certain algae that just happen
to be irresistible to flamingos. Depending on the season and a number of
more immediate conditions, the lake’s shallows can be swathed in pink
as anywhere from thousands to more than a million of the showy birds
congregate, methodically straining the water.
Though we
saw far fewer flamingos than we'd hoped for, what they lacked in
numbers these flamboyant birds made up for in the splashes of color and
elegance they threw against the backdrop of the lake's calm, gray-blue
waters.
MANE ATTRACTION
With
the top of our safari van raised, and Eric, our knowledgeable guide and
driver, at the wheel, we cruised the park for the rest of the day. Both
the number and range of animals we were spotting continued to amaze us.
It
started with our first lion sighting, a big male walking through tall
grass nearly a hundred yards away. It was uphill all the way from there:
rhinos—both white and the critically endangered black; water buffalo;
hundreds of zebras, two varieties of gazelle; impala; waterbuck;
giraffes; velvet monkeys…and more lions.
Besides
the flamingos, we saw white pelicans and spoonbills, hovering
black-and-white kingfishers, a variety of gorgeous songbirds, imposing,
five-foot-tall marabou storks, a couple of ostriches and the showy,
snake-eating secretary bird.
Around mid-day, we wound our way up to the
top of Baboon Cliff for a spectacular overview of the lake and
parklands below. There we met some more amazing birds, some red-headed
rock agama lizards and the engaging rock hyrax.
The best place to spot a leopard is
draped over a lower, horizontal branch
of a tree.
PRESSING ENGAGEMENT
That
afternoon, we’d stopped to admire one of those marabou storks standing
by the water’s edge when we noticed something moving in the grass not
ten feet away. A better look, through binoculars, revealed the sad
truth; it looked like a dying flamingo.
At first, it
appeared the poor bird lay on its side, writhing. But, on closer
inspection, we could see that a rock python, and not a very big one at
that—maybe seven or eight feet long—had caught the big bird unawares,
squeezed the life out of it and started ingesting it head first.
With
fascination slightly outweighing revulsion, we watched as the ambitious
snake unhinged its jaws and began stretching its mouth around the
feathery
pink carcass.
LEOPARDS WERE NOT SPOTTED!
As
we slowly cruised the park, besides looking for animals grazing in the
open, we were constantly scanning the trees on either side for as far as
we could see. It seems the best place to spot a leopard, especially
mid-afternoon, is draped over a lower, horizontal branch.
Now
and then, Eric would stop, pull out his binoculars and check out some
dark mass on an acacia limb two hundred yards away. And, though we never
did spot a leopard, this technique paid off in other ways, including
being able to sneak up on a young lion resting languidly in the crotch
of a tree.
GOOD NIGHT, HIPPOS
When
we got back to Lake Naivasha Resort that evening, the wildlife wonders
continued. Sally and I were rounding a corner on our way to our
second-floor cottage when we saw the giraffe leisurely trimming the
hedge up there next to our door. We stopped and watched with renewed
admiration for this majestic creature.
Just before
going to bed, we decided to take one last look out our patio doors onto
the dark lawn below. There, munching away on the grass just below our
deck were no fewer than eight huge hippos! We watched a while, quietly
closed the doors and drifted off to sleep, smiling.
Thursday, August 8, 2013
LAKE NAKURU – An All-consuming Day for a Python
Labels:
Africa,
flamingo,
Kenya,
Lake Nakuru,
lion,
predation,
python,
rhino,
Rift Valley,
safari,
wild animal,
wonder
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment