Saturday, July 13, 2024

 Serengeti Day 2 (29 June 2023)

This was the second full day in the Serengeti.  Today was more of the civilized side - lots more people, visitor center, flushing toilets (yesterday every time we had to go behind the land cruiser in the middle of the road for safety).  I especially enjoyed watching the hippos and giraffes fighting.  Probably the highlight was when we saw a group of maybe 5? lion cubs towards the end of the day.  That, and finally getting my luggage, which spent 2 days in Amsterdam, then went past JRO to Dar Es Salaam where it spent 2 more days before being flown back to JRO, then taken to the Arusha airport for a bush flight out to the Serengeti.  Despite all that, not all of my belongings were in there when it finally came, so, more on that later.  We got back to the camp a little before sunset, which was fun to be able to chill a while, take photos of the sunset, and enjoy the slower pace.  The food was good, but by this point JT was getting tired of the 3 choices of curry for dinner (2 more choices than we would get on Kili, mind you...)



She knows what you are thinking...

Impala

Dik-dik - the smallest in the antelope family.  You don't want to be one on the Serengeti.  Stay tuned to future posts...

Hippo fight



These ants made a crossing in our path that we had to jump over.  They were thick like the scarabs in the Mummy.




Fred?

Secretary bird (see the pencils stuck behind her ears?)

Topi

I enjoyed the KU Lizard. Mwanza flat-headed rock agama according to google.


Cats are all the same.

Baby elephants!

Zebras hiding in plain sight.  You don't see them, do you?



Mongoose

We could see this brushfire from our tent.


Probably beef?  It's been over a year.

I'm thinking pumpkin soup.

Closing the windows for the night.

Chilling on the ride.

I think Giraffe bone?  JT may have to correct me.

This is actually a picnic area - Watch out for the monkeys, they'll steal your food.

I have taught him well.

Our guide had to take a photo of the luggage to prove it arrived to his management.


I forget if I posted this already, but this is how they mod the Land Cruisers.  The top pops open so you can get pictures without glass, and we really enjoyed riding around standing up.

One of my favorite things is spotting the lions on top of the kopi- or rock piles


Monday, June 10, 2024

Serengeti Day 1 (28 June 2023)

28 June 2023

As it turns out, we planned the trip so far in advance, I had completely forgotten that I added an extra day in the Serengeti, but I'm so glad I did!  We began the day by roaming the roads looking for whatever wildlife we would find.  The wildebeest herd was just outside our camp, so we actually had to stop for a while to work our way through them.  Before too long, we saw a wildebeest carcass hanging in a tree - we actually came back to this spot later and found the leopard that put him there.  Then we went into basically the middle of nowhere and found several lions.  The first sighting was two male lions that were walking near the road.  They were so close that I was inching the windows closed... after that, we found a small pride of maybe 4 lions... then we saw some cheetah's perched at a distance.  At that point, we asked our guide if the lions ever jumped on vehicles, to which he replied "no, that's the cheetah's..." So, naturally we got very close to some of them at a point as well.  I can't believe the photos I took this day.  

For safety reasons, you don't really ever exit the vehicle.  For bathroom stops, you have to ask your guide in advance, and he'll find a nice patch of open road where he's surveyed for predators, then you go out and go behind the jeep (they all call the Land Cruiser's Jeeps. I know).  For lunch, you eat your boxed lunch inside (except for the rare instance of being near a picnic area).  For lunch, we pulled up under a tree for shade, and there was a lion who thought that was a good place for a nap.  Afterwards, we found a lion on a kopi (or rock formation), and on our way back to camp, we saw a huge pride of (we think) 13 lions.  At this point, we guessed that we saw about 32 different lions today!  

This night, we both slept better (one from sleep deprivation, and two, from the wildebeest herd was finally far enough away that we didn't hear the bleeting all night).  Not sure if I typed this, since my last entries were done over 8 months ago, but, I'm very glad we decided to do the safari.  I have been on them in other parts of Africa, but the Serengeti is something else, and lots of good bro time with the cousin.  Check out photos and video below!


 

I alternated between the Serengeti Lager and Kilimanjaro Lager.  They pretty much taste the same, but it's just cool.

This is our Land Cruiser.  I like that the top pops open, so you can see and take photos without the glass in the way.

Sunset by our camp.  JT felt the need to stand taller (this is before he grew to 6' in like a week).

Probably one of my favorite things was riding standing up in the jeep.  It's very surreal to just be riding and ZEBRA! TWIGA (Giraffe)! SIMBA!



This is iconic.



I really want a Land Cruiser.

Someone smell a hippo?

Camp at Sound of Silence.


Lions with a fresh kill.

These guys...

Wildebeests...

Sire, the herd's on the move!



Snake Eagle

Lilac-breasted roller - I'm not much of a bird guy, but I just really like this photo.

Vultures on the lookout.  Don't sit still too long.  These guys are actually protected, because a lot of poachers will kill them so that they don't give away their location by circling over a kill.

Below - There is NOTHING in the world that quite feels like locking eyes with a lion (or cheetah for that matter).  They're really amazing to see up close, if not a bit frightening!  I've camped a lot in Grizzly country, but wow, camping where these guys are running around is something else!





















I'll wrap up with an African sunset.  These are some of the most amazing sunsets I've ever seen.  More to come, hopefully sooner than 8 months! 




For those following the luggage saga, still no luggage at this point.  However, we DID have cell signal near the Serengeti airport and very weak and slow wifi in the breakfast tent at camp.  Airtags probably saved my trip at this point, as the luggage had gone to Dar es Salaam instead of Arusha.  The KLM flight we took did a point-to-point itinerary, AMS-Arusha-Dar es Salaam-AMS, so they were apparently not going to bring my bag backwards on their loop.