Until next time... almost as if to bid as farewell, a last magical moment as the sun lights up the beautiful Lake Nakuru in the distance
Shani and Emy cuddling up on the floor of our NEW truck to watch a movie
This one is for Shani
Like a Garden of Eden
The pelicans floating on the thermals
Quite strange and incongruous to see the town of Nakuru in the background as this must surely be the most placid and serene lake anywhere. You feel as if you are in a lost world and the first humans to stand on its edge, overawed by the glass-like stillness, the crystal clear reflections, the wonder of the beautiful birds everywhere
Wherever you looked, more species of bird. We tried to see who could get the most species in one shot!
Of course! -- I am sure you would agree this was most definitely
yet another Red Button Moment
bird tracks on the side of the lake -- looks almost prehistoric
Three oxpeckers having a chat on the back of the rhino
One would have said this white rhino thought he was on a photoshoot -- he showed us every one of his angles. This is the one I liked best!
Why he gave me such a dirty look is not clear. Perhaps I should have offered to pay him for the photograph? So similar to the agamas we have seen ever since Mali, and yet a little more ferocious looking
Dassies (Hyrax) lazing in the sun
not sure whether the sky was reflected in the water or the water in the sky...
Bird of Paradise Shani
See no evil (but David peeked), hear no evil (but Rebecca giggled), speak no evil (but Emy spluttered)
A waterbuck bull - proud and regal
The baboon pictures are for Zara...
For Zara
For Zara
Big herds of healthy looking buffalo roam the plains around the lake
Lake Nakuru lies in Central Kenya, 140km north-west of Nairobi, in Nakuru district of the Rift Valley Province. The ecosystem comprises of the lake, surrounded by mainly wooded and bushy grasslands. The park supports a wide ecological diversity with Flamingos (Greater and Lesser) and other water birds being the major attractions of the area. The ecosystem provides for about 56 different species of mammals including the white rhino and buffaloes and a variety of terrestrial birds numbering nearly 450 species.
The vegetation is mainly wooded and bushy grassland with a wide ecological diversity and characteristic habitats that range from the lake waters to the escarpment and ridges.
The normally water-covered surface of the lake occupies about a third of the park. The lake water supports a dense bloom of the blue-green Cyanophyte Spirulina platensis from which it derives its colour and which is the major food source for the flamingo.
The lake is fringed by alkaline swamps with areas of sedge, Cyprus laevigatus and typha marsh along the river inflows and springs. The surrounding areas support a dry transitional savanna with lake margin grasslands of Sporobolus spicatus salt grass moving into grasslands of Hyparrhenia hirta and rhodes grass Chloris gayana in the lower areas.
More elevated areas have dry forest with Acacia xanthophloea, olive Olea hochstetteri and Croton dichogamus; Euphorbia candelabrum forest; and bushland dominated by the composites, Mulelechwa Tarchonanthus camphoratus and Psiadia arabica
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