Kenya
Kipsing

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    • Day 6

      Day Six

      April 19, 2022 in Kenya ⋅ ☁️ 77 °F

      Day Six: ///caravans.raptor.excludes. Up bright and early for breakfast and check out of the hotel. Arrive at Safarilink terminal for our flight to Samburu and the Sassab Lodge. A small but rugged plane awaits us and it's a great one hour flight North. Dirt Airstrip, dry African Savanna, people dressed for adventure or colorful traditional robes make the scene fit for any Hollywood African Safari Movie! A slow drive to the lodge affords several first animal sightings including a beautiful cluster of Reticulated Giraffe! Welcome drinks and a talk before we are escorted to our hillside "tent" overlooking the dry riverbed. The annual rains are one month late and everyone, especially the animals, need the river to flow. Crazy cool room with lots of open views that leaves no doubt that we are in Africa! A wonderful lunch is served at the main lodge before we head back to our place for an afternoon rest. You smell the rain and hear the thunder well before it starts to come down. But it did! A soaking rain that lasted about 30 minutes. The start of more to come we hope. A late afternoon snack and we load up the Land Cruiser for our first game drive. The rain has cooled it down some but it's still very warm. We see many animals and birds over the next two hours followed by a sundowner cocktail enjoyed down on the riverbed. It is my new favorite drink, the Dawa!

      'The dawa (medicine) cocktail, invented at the Carnivore restaurant in the Langata suburb of Nairobi, was inspired by the Brazilian caipirinha, a cocktail made with the cane-sugar spirit cachaça. Bartenders complained of morning-after headaches from the cachaça and started subbing in vodka. (Some Brazilians also prefer vodka with their muddled limes and sugar; the resulting drink is a caipivodka.) Carnivore’s bartenders began testing their new drink on guests; and one of them, who happened to be their landlord, was a fan. He asked for another, referring to it as his dawa (medicine). The name stuck and so did the cocktail, which is now found across Kenya.'

      Back on the drive using a spotlight to try and see animal eye shine. Right as we're thinking about coming in, the radio cracks with a report of a Leopard sighting. A 25 minute wild ride in the dark with interjecting radio busts telling us "to hurry up, or miss it" complete the realization that we're on Safari! The Leopard eventually appears right in front of us and poses for photos to everyone's delight! Back to the lodge for a candlelight dinner under the stars. We are escorted to our tent in the blackness by a guard loaded for bear! We are exhausted and though it is hot and sticky, sleep comes easily.
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    • Day 7

      Day Seven

      April 20, 2022 in Kenya ⋅ ⛅ 77 °F

      Day Seven: ///caravans.raptor.excludes. 5:00AM Comes early and in the dark! 5:15AM Brings a man with coffee and cookies. 5:40AM We begin the 6 minute walk up to the main lodge under a moonlit sky. We're loaded up and rolling by 5:45 heading into the Westgate Community Conservancy to find some wild animals. Elephants, Giraffe, Lions, Zebra, and many more are spotted before we break for breakfast. While we eat many herds of cattle are being led over the dry riverbed by local Samburu tribesmen. They are as interested in us as we are in them and greetings are exchanged if they are close enough. After breakfast we continue to find animals at every turn! After over 6 hours of game driving we return to the lodge hot, tired and happy. A bit of a rest before lunch and then back to our tent for a cool down in the plunge pool. We're ack out at 5:00PM for another game drive that ends way above the river valley on a rocky bluff! Amazing views and best of all, a cool breeze! We head back to the lodge in the dark and after a quick rest, meet up for another amazing meal! Everyone wants to stay up, but sleep is a precious commodity! Good Night.Read more

    • Day 8

      Day Eight

      April 21, 2022 in Kenya ⋅ ⛅ 73 °F

      Day Eight: ///caravans.raptor.excludes. Get to sleep in a little bit, because today we head to the local village to learn about the day to day lives of the people. It was very warm last night and I found myself dreaming about diving into a snowbank. I imagine by the end of this trip we will acclimate a bit, but right now it's pretty darn warm! A beautiful drive to the village and a tour given by our driver really opens your eyes to how life is here in Samburu. Nomadic herders who live and die by the land and the health of their flocks. Afterward we drive back to the lodge for a wonderful breakfast. Later we drove to the landing strip where we arrived from Nairobi (only just two days ago!?) to browse the local handicraft. You all know by now that I'm a sucker for that kind of thing and let's just say ... purchases were made! A slow drive back looking for animals before we get a rest before lunch. It's a lazy afternoon and we do some prepacking for our journey tomorrow morning to a different lodge. We change up the Sundowner by riding ATV's down to the dry riverbed.

      We were then very fortunate to be invited to watch a very special National Geographic moment! Because the rains are now over a month late in arriving, the local tribes are having a difficult time. Only during times of hardship, do a group of matriarch women from several villages get together and do a dance to pray for fertility. In this case, fertility of the land through rain. We were allowed to stand in the dry riverbed and watch the ceremony!

      Drinks while watching the sunset follow the amazing dance before we head back to the lodge for our final dinner here at the Sassab Lodge. We pack up and hit the sack.
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    • Day 8

      By The River

      April 21, 2022 in Kenya ⋅ ⛅ 79 °F

      We were then very fortunate to be invited to watch a very special National Geographic moment! Because the rains are now over a month late in arriving, the local tribes are having a difficult time. Only during times of hardship, do a group of matriarch women from several villages get together and do a dance to pray for fertility. In this case, fertility of the land through rain. We were allowed to stand in the dry riverbed and watch the ceremony!Read more

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    Kipsing

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