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Masai Mara National Reserve, Kenya:
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Location:
Located in south-western Kenya, bordering Serengeti National Park,
on the Tanzania border. Altitude: 1,500 - 2,100 meters.
The Masai Mara is Kenya's finest wildlife sanctuary. Everything
about this reserve is outstanding. The wildlife is abundant and the
gentle rolling grassland ensures that animals are never out of
sight. Birds too are prolific, including migrant birds and 57
species of birds of prey.
Fauna & Flora:
Open grasslands with patches of acacia woodland, thickets, and
riverine forests. In the dry season July-October) the reserve is a
major concentration area of migratory herbivores including
approximately 250,000 zebra and 1.3 million wildebeest. There are
also gazelle, elephant, topi, buffalo, lion (Kenya's largest
population), black rhino, hippo, hyena, giraffe, leopard, and
mongoose. The bird life is prolific, including 53 species of birds
of prey.
General:
The climate is gentle, rarely too hot and well spread rainfall year
round. When it rains, its is almost always in the late afternoon or
night. Between July and October, when the great wildebeest migration
is in the Mara the sensation is unparalleled. The wildlife is far
from being confined within the Reserve boundaries and an even larger
area, generally referred to as the 'dispersal area' extends north
and east of the game Reserve.
Maasai live within the dispersal area with their stock but centuries
of close association with the wildlife has resulted in an almost
symbiotic relationship where wildlife and people live in peace with
one another.
The first sight of this park is breathtaking. Here the great herds
of shuffling elephants browse among the rich tree-studded grasslands
with an occasional sighting of a solitary and ill-tempered rhino,
Thompson's and Grant's gazelle, topi and eland and many more species
of plains' game offer a rich choice of food for the dominant
predators; lion, leopard and cheetah which hunt in this pristine
wilderness.
In the Mara River, hippo submerge at the approach of a vehicle only
to surface seconds later to snort and grumble their displeasure. But
this richness of fauna, this profusion of winged beauty and the
untouched fragility of the landscape, are all subordinate to the
Mara's foremost attraction, the march of the wildebeest.
After exhausting the grazing in Tanzania's northern Serengeti
National Park, a large number of wildebeest and zebra enter Masai
Mara around the end of June drawn by the sweet grass raised by the
long rains of April and May. It is estimated that more than half a
million wildebeest enter the Mara and are joined by another 100,000
from the Loita hills east of the Mara. Driving in the midst of these
great herds is an unimaginable experience.
Whilst the eyes feast on the spectacle, the air carries the smells,
the dust and the sounds of hundreds of thousands of animals. There
is nowhere else on earth to compare with this wildlife marvel. Once
the Mara grass has been devoured and when fresh rain in Tanzania has
brought forth a new flush there, the herds turn south, heading
hundreds of kilometers back to Serengeti and the Ngorongoro plains.
There the young are dropped in time to grow sufficiently strong to
undertake the long march north six months later.
Apart from the better known species, there are also other rare ones
that can be added to the visitor's checklist. These include the roan
antelope, the Bat-eared foxes and thousands of topi. The combination
of a gentle climate, scenic splendor and untold numbers of wildlife
makes the Masai Mara National Reserve Kenya's most popular inland
destination.
Masai Mara Wildebeest Migration
Overview:
May & June
In late May, the herds leave the Western Corridor for the northern
Serengeti plains and woodlands. The fresh, tender and mineral-rich
pastures on the other side of the humans' border, in Masai Mara, are
the irresistible bait for the animals to finally invade the Kenyan
reserve, an event which usually starts in late June to early July.
The troops coming from the south meet here another migratory
contingent: the resident wildebeest herds of the Mara region. These
animals reside in the Loita Plains and Hills, northeast of the Mara,
until the dry season brings the tougher days and it is time to seek
the evergreen Mara basin.
July to October.
Throughout the month of July, the herds cross the Sand River, a
mostly dry tributary of the Mara which roughly follows the boundary
line between Kenya and Tanzania. The parade takes the eastern sector
of Masai Mara, surrounding the Keekorok Lodge area. The trek follows
westward, leading the herds to face the major challenge along their
quest: crossing the Mara river and frequently also its tributary,
the Talek. By then, the rains at the Mau Escarpment, where the Mara
rises, have fed the stream to its highest levels.
The steep banks are populated with trunk-looking basking crocodiles
that seem almost to be expecting their annual banquet. The operation
of fording the river is the most delicate along the migration, and
as such seems to plunge the gnus in a state of anxiety that only
relieves when the whole herd has crossed. The trekkers walk along
the left (eastern) bank of the Mara looking for a suitable point to
cross. There are plenty of preferred crossings along the course,
which are easily identifiable by the lack of vegetation, the
depressed slopes and the deep grooves carved by the animals' hooves.
These are the most secure places to ford the river, those that
ensure a minimal mortality. Nonetheless, the apparent programming of
the whole process sometimes seems to collapse, and the nervous herds
occasionally choose places where the banks are too steep and many of
the animals break their legs down the cliff or fall flat into the
waters. The herds gather at the suitable points and wander around
nervously, their grunts sounding loud in the air. Eventually, one
animal takes the lead and approaches the rim, scanning the opposite
edge to analyze if any danger awaits after the crossing. When it
finally dives into the stream, this seems to haul the rest of the
herd. More animals follow in a single line across the river, while
the lagged ones throw themselves towards the stream until the
rearguard pushes the troops to a frantic race that ends up with some
animals trampled to death, lying aside the course. Along the boreal
summer, the crossings repeat over and over, and the survivors graze
peacefully on the Mara Triangle grasslands unless disturbed by the
early-morning and late-evening hunts of lion and cheetah, the latter
preying on the calves.
By October, the rains are heading south back to the Serengeti. This
is when the pace of the march reverses, bringing the herds to face
once more the quest for the southern grasslands. The rite of fording
the river is again part of nature's call. In the last days of
October, the migration heads towards the vast plains of the southern
Serengeti, where a new generation of calves will be born to start
the cycle of life all over again. Normally the route is down the
eastern side and the pace is fast. Quite often a million animals can
be seen stretched out. Getting there:
The point of road access to this region is Narok, a 3 hour drive
from Nairobi. There are regular buses and matatus to Narok from
Nairobi and other destinations. Some people choose to Fly to the
Mara, which is serviced by 2 airstrips. There are daily scheduled
flights from Nairobi, and the coast. Private Charters also use these
strips.
Getting around
Accessing the Mara area is difficult without private transport. Most
visitors come to Maasai Mara as part of a Safari package from
Nairobi or in a Hire Car. The park has well established internal
roads and tracks. Accessing areas outside the reserve is only
possible using basic public transport, and finding your way around
can be difficult. Several Safari operators can arrange specialized
tours, treks or hikes in this area.
Lodges and camps in Masai Mara:
Masai Mara Safari Lodges & Camps in Kenya, Africa
Basecamp Masai Mara
Bateleur Tented Camp
Cottars 1920s Safari Camp
David Livingstone Safari Resort
Elephant Pepper Camp
Entim Camp
Fig Tree Camp
Governors Camp
Governors Bush Camp
Governors IL Moran Camp
Governors Private Camp
Ilkeliani Camp
Karen Blixen Camp
Keekorok Lodge
Kicheche Camp
Kicheche Bush Camp
Kichwa Tembo
Leleshwa Camp
Little Governors Camp
Mara Bushtops Camp
Mara Explorer Camp
Mara Intrepids Club
Mara Leisure Camp
Mara Porini Camp
Mara River Camp
Mara Safari Club (Fairmont)
Mara Serena Lodge
Mara Simba Lodge
Mara Sopa Lodge
Mpata Safari Club
Offbeat Mara Camp
Ol Seki Mara Camp
Olonana
Porini Lion Camp
Rekero Tented Camp & Cottages
Richard's Camp
Royal Mara Safari Lodge
Sala's Camp
Sarova Mara Camp
Saruni Lodge
Sekenani Camp
Serian Camp
Shompole Naibor Mara Camp
Siana Springs Intrepids Camp
Tipilikwani Camp