Nigel's tales from the Marshes

A family blog from Cyprus, via Africa

Sweetwaters tented camp – worth going to? 21 April, 2008

Filed under: africa — nigeltale @ 11:32 pm
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Yes, it is. Unless you hate animals, the big outdoors and resting. If you’ve followed the last three days’ blogs you’ve already got some of the reasons why.
There’s the fact you’re in a luxury tent (really, really try not to think about scout camps, beach holidays or any other nasty childhood canvas experience). You’ve got top hotel-standard staff and more good food than you can possibly eat in a day. There are open fires, card tables, bars, coffee and tea all day (OK, maybe not hot all day, but if you time it right …) And there are the animals.

More interesting still, there are birds. The birds take you by surprise – we had pleasant hours trying to work out which varieties of starling we were looking at, and still longer distinguishing between the African grey and crested hornbill (not particularly crested).

starlings, hoopoe, crowned crane

Whether you want a night’s break out of Nairobi or a couple of days as part of a longer tour, we recommend this place highly.

A Marshtales review of a thing to do

 

Elephants on the path 19 April, 2008

That’s twice then. Twice we’ve been in parks, once in South Africa (Pilanesburg) and once here, where we’ve gone out early in the day to find elephant, had a great day seeing lots of other animals and birds, given up on the elephants in sorrow, and had them literally block our passage within half a kilometer of the park exit.

You don’t get elephant in Nairobi Park down the road from where we live, which is why it’s so important to make the effort when you are in a park to try to find them. After a few hours you assume they are actively hiding from you, that several-thousand-tonne elephant herd.  So it’s peculiar when you do suddenly run into dozens of animals – the largest land mammals, remember – and they simply wander round you, as though you might be a termite mound. They aren’t hiding, they don’t care that you’re there, they just carry on doing their stuff.

Elephant and baby, amid euclea

“Their stuff” is destruction. We sat open-mouthed watching the elephants simply rip a swathe through an acre of euclea, smashing down branches, ripping off leaves. That’s why they don’t fit in Nairobi Park, and why they make bad neighbours for farmers. These are animals who need a lot of vegetation and that means a lot of space.

 

Sleepy rhino, protective chimp 18 April, 2008

Second day at Sweetwaters, and a superb game drive.

We woke at first light (or, more specifically, Anisa woke at first light, as she always does, and quickly spread her field of wakefulness over the rest of us). After admiring the top of Mt Kenya – usually mist-wraithed, even this close – we had breakfast and went for a game drive.

Morani, the tame, and somewhat sleepy, black rhino

One of the first things we did is go to meet Morani the tame black rhino. Sweetwaters is a rhino breeding and conservation centre and has eight rare white rhino and 77 of the even-rarer black rhino. For children the star and poster-child among these black rhino is Morani who, by virtue of three periods of remedial care at the Daphne Sheldrick elephant (and rhino) orphanage, just down the road from us at home in Langata, has become tame. Maybe you couldn’t say he ‘loves’ people, but he can ignore them like a champion.

We found him taking his morning nap. This, as far as we can discern, starts pretty much as soon as he wakes up, and carries on into the late morning or afternoon. Then, sun-warmed, he gets up and eats massively and continuously until it’s time to sleep again. This means that our photographs all look as though he is dead, but he isn’t – he’s resting, huffing and sighing occasionally, barely flinching when patted or even when Anisa accidentally stuck her elbow in his eye.

Joel pets Morani, who enjoys (or ignores) any amount of attention

His horns were removed a couple of years ago. Our friends the Guitons have a photo of him with his horn, a beautiful slim dagger, and a dark suspicion forms that the sawn-off stumps might indicate that Morani does have a less-tame side to him, but the official story is that they were cut off when he got them tangled in a tree. It’s probably safer to stick to that line.

In the afternoon we reached the chimp sanctuary. There are no wild chimps in Kenya but, over the years, Sweetwaters has taken in a variety of orphaned, abused or imprisoned chimps from Rwanda, Burundi, the DRC and other places where they do still live in the wild. These extraordinary creatures, each with a sad story and probably psychological damage, have nearly 300 acres in which to roam.

Ezo the southern Sudanese orphan chimpWe meet three chimps chasing each other around doing roly-polies and our three kids are delighted. Then two of the chimps clear off leaving Ezo, a male saved in southern Sudan. His mood changes and the most important thing to him is to mark his territory and threaten us, which he does very thoroughly, running up and down the length of the five metre electric fence between us, beating it with a stick. Needless to say, after a little hesitation, our kids are even more impressed with this display. Kira spends the rest of the day imitating Ezo, despite our warnings that the warders may think she has escaped and return her to a cage.

 

 
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