Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Stepping back for one more moment: The spectacularly unique Serengeti and Ngorogoro Crater, Tanzania -- Part One


I have been putting off posting anything about the Serengeti and the Ngorogoro Crater -- simply because it was such an incredible experience and I very much doubted I would have the adequate words to describe it.
What I have finally decided to do is rather post some of the many photographs I took. They are not brilliant quality, but I do believe this is a still a case of a picture says a thousand words.
Unfortunately the groups of pics are 'upside down' now! So you should go to the bottom and scroll up to see the sequence!
Happy viewing!


At last -- the gazelle is in the highest branches. So after a little rest, we can enjoy our dinner.

Come on kids -- let's get this gazelle to that tree over there
OK -- let's climb down and go try another tree.

Oh0oh............ and there it comes again!
Oh no! not again Mom! Can't we just eat it down there??
Then we came across a leopard mother with her two almost grown cubs in a tree -- trying to get a Thompson's gazelle into the top branches. Three times the mother pulled the gazelle right up to the top, tried to sling it over a branch, and three times the gazelle fell right down to the ground again.
I know the feeling -- when there is so much on the menu to choose from, you sort of lose your appetite...
Each scene asks to become a painting.


Everywhere the giraffes were feeling frisky and there was a lot of necking going on...
Hello! Welcome!
That's better -- I will just hold on to mom's tail then I can't get lost!
Darn it! All I want is to drink more milk and now we have to move again! And they take such big steps! How am I supposed to keep up?
Hey! I want some more! Don't walk away!
Yum -- lip-licking good!!
Mmmmmmmmm -- why are you watching me???
And then the baby decided it was feed time!
Speaking of which -- this little elephant was the youngest in a family of at least fifty or sixty elephants. Still completely wonky on its legs and having to be helped upright again every now and then by a solicitous aunt or big sister or its mother! Not easy to walk through those big holes and over those big grass pods!!
The gracious Impala -- and a baby that could not have been more than a few days
We saw many hippos in the various water holes. These ones seemed to be as interested in us as we were in them!
The always beautiful Lilac Breasted Roller
I have so many photographs of the trees of the Serengeti. Mostly the Acacia thorn trees of Africa, many of them were in blossom. I just loved this ones quirky personality!
The dainty little Dik-dik -- the smallest of all antelopes.
After a night camping in the bush, listening to the hyenas outside our tents and the distant roar of the lions, we were ready to get going again well before dawn. When the sun came up as we started driving again, we could not help but wonder, once again, why we don't always wake up before dawn to see this spectacular sight every morning!
Serengeti = endless = and the light so very beautiful
I am sure there is no need to explain why there was a red button left on the side of the road!


We then sat watching them enjoying their feast -- all we could see most of the time though for four little tails sticking out above the grass!
There was a flurry of grass and dust and then she sat up and looked towards the cubs. They immediately responded and ran through the grass towards her and their dinner. The communication between the mother and her babies was even more amazing to witness than the actual kill itself!
We first saw the four very young cheetah cubs sitting on top of the termite mound. When we then looked for the mother, which had to be close by, we saw her stalking a Thompson's gazelle. She stalked, started running and within a matter of no more than three seconds had brought down the gazelle.
A Thompson's gazelle is unperturbed by the hyena. We saw so many hyena. They seemed to be everywhere -- waiting for the tasty meal left by the many other predators. As it happened, it was only five minutes later that we came across the cheetah chasing and killing a Thompson's gazelle, and fortunately for the cheetah, there were, for once, no hyenas around and she and her four cubs had ample time to enjoy their feast.

Zebras -- different from the South African Burchell's zebra, the Plain Zebras have no brown stripes in between the black and white and the stripes go right around the body and down the legs. No matter -- still beautiful!
A pink ostrich! Just when we all thought there must have been something stronger than coffee in our mugs that morning, we were told the pink colour of the male ostriches is due to the fact that it is mating season and, apparently, female ostriches are quite taken with this pink colour!

The 'official' entrance to the Serengeti National Park. Before one gets to the 'gate' where the fees are paid, it is still at least another two hours' drive from here. In this area there are many wild animals, but there are also still Masai villages and Masai cattle. They live in perfect harmony.
'Serengeti' means 'endless', or, probably a better word would be 'infinity'. Coming down from the crater rim onto the vast savannah is breathtaking. The horizons seem to stretch to over the edge of the world. It is utterly beautiful.
We had to climb the escarpment - 600metres-- to the top of the rim of the Crater to get to the other side where the Serengeti plains are. This was our first view of the inside of the Ngorogoro Crater -- an absolutely stunning sight! Later there will be more photographs of when we went down the crater two days later -- so this pic is just a taste...

1 comment:

  1. Red button all over !! These pics are simply stunning, I have to remind myself to keep on breathing !
    Thank you for sharing these precious moments, Wilna,
    rgds, Inga

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