On previous trips to Kenya, my game viewing was confined to national parks and national game reserves. Early this summer (2014), I returned with a press group.
We did some of our game viewing in the Maasai Mara National Reserve and Amboseli National Park, but we did more of it on adjacent private property. The land is owned by members of the Maasai tribe; the government only fairly recently deeded the land to the Maasai although the area has been their home for centuries.
Private conservation organizations have leased large chunks of the private lands, creating conservancies that guarantee rental income to the Maasai, who then make the land available for game viewing and help protect the wildlife.
It’s brilliant.
The idea is to assist in the survival of endangered and the not-so-endangered species by expanding protected areas for wild animals while enlisting the active support of local communities.
Maasai cattle may at times be seen grazing on conservancy land; they are as much a part of an ages-old ecosystem as are the wilder creatures.
It also is typical that tourists, for a nominal fee, visit a Maasai village and, in this way, provide still more support for the system when buying the beaded and other goods that the Maasai produce.
All of which is a long way to get to the No. 1 reason Americans visit Kenya — watching the big mammals and a lot of smaller species do their thing largely unfettered by human hands.
Accepting that a photo is worth a thousand words, the attached shots tell the rest of this story. The animals are compelling (I saved my favorite, the cheetah, for last in the lineup below), but get a load of their human neighbors and the scenery, too.
For more about Kenya, we offer at BestTripChoices.com the following, under the headline: Of movies, and animals on the move https://besttripchoices.com/international-countries/kenya/
This blog and its photos are by Nadine Godwin, BestTripChoices.com editorial director and contributor to the trade newspaper, Travel Weekly. She also is the author of “Travia: The Ultimate Book of Travel Trivia,” which was published by The Intrepid Traveler; it can be purchased at https://intrepidtraveler.com/travia-release/