Thursday, 31 August 2017

AFRICA!!!!


 Bird Watching in East Africa

Another family connection; my Uncle George spent his adult life travelling and painting birds. He mended his pots with metal buttons to save money for his passion. So when I travel now, I feel him with me, peering through my bird books and reveling in the incredible creatures I have the honour of seeing. Many of the photos to follow were taken from a moving boat, so please forgive a little softness in the focus. 





Cormorant, Nile River, Uganda




Malachite Kingfisher, Nile River, Uganda

Night Heron, Nile River, Uganda

African Snake Bird (Darter), Nile River, Uganda










Open Billed Stork, Nile River, Uganda
Sacred Ibis, Nile River, Uganda
Shoebill, Ziwah, Uganda. This isn't a great picture, but it was taken at dawn from quite a distance. The Shoebills are extremely rare; they live only in very specific areas in Uganda.
Shoebill, Ziwah, Uganda


Shoebill, Ziwah, Uganda




Ziwah, Uganda
Ziwah, Uganda
Black Headed Gonolek, Uganda


Common Ringed Plover, Murchison Falls, Uganda

Goliath Heron, Murchison Falls, Uganda



I couldn't figure out what this little guy was, Uganda


Lake Bunyoni, Uganda



Black Headed Weaver, Lake Bunyoni, Uganda. I was paddling a canoe on my own; one of the most peaceful times of the trip. 





I can't remember the name of this guy; I took his picture while cycling through Hell's Gate National Park in Kenya.

Superb Starling, Lake Naivasha, Kenya

Ruby Throated Bee Eaters, Murchison Falls, Uganda








African Fish Eagle, Murchison Falls, Uganda


 


Pied Kingfisher, Murchison Falls, Uganda



Sunbird, Nairobi, Kenya

Sun Bird, Nairobi, Kenya

Maribou Stork, Kampala, Uganda

Hadada Ibis, Nairobi, Kenya









Wednesday, 30 August 2017

AFRICA!!!!



For as long as I can remember, I have wanted to see the mountain gorillas in their natural habitat. This summer, as I was between jobs, seemed like the perfect time to embarked on this long fantasied-about journey. Not only did I get to finally visit the gorillas, but I saw elephants, chimpanzees, lions, giraffes, hippos, lions, zebras, and so many birds. Throughout the trip, I could feel how happy my Mom and my Dad would have been for me. There were times when they were tripping along with me. 




My trip began in Nairobi, and from there I travelled with 19 other people from various countries through Kenya to Uganda, to Rwanda, and back through Uganda to Kenya again.  The trip was booked through Dragoman, a British company that specializes in 'overlanding.' 



Overlanding means that you travel in a truck (never never ever call it a bus) that is basically self-sufficient. It has tents, cooking gear, and purified water. We camped in National Parks, and in hotel grounds. There were often opportunities to 'upgrade' if we were using hotel land. My tent-mate objected to me snoring, so I upgraded whenever there wasn't a spare tent available. 



My first day in Nairobi, I went to visit the David Sheldrick Wildlife Foundation. The amazing people here have been caring for and rehabilitating orphaned elephants for decades. Visitors are allowed to visit during the noon-hour feeding time. 








I 'adopted' an elephant named Luggard, who was found with a seriously injured leg. When I returned to Nairobi at the end of my trip, as an adoptive parent, I was allowed to visit him and the other orphans when they were settled for the night in their stalls. 




Luggard's next-door neighbour is an orphaned giraffe. While the giraffe was otherwise engaged, Luggard slipped his trunk into his feed dish and stole his goodies. A keeper sleeps with the orphans every night. The orphans will stay at the David Sheldrick Wildlife Foundation until they are old enough to be transported to Tsavo National Park.  There they are slowly introduced to wild elephant groups, until they are eventually accepted. The process takes many years. 


The orphanage is on the grounds of Nairobi National Park, and wild warthogs make a habit of wandering in and out at will. 



In Murchison Falls National Park in Uganda, I got to see elephants where they are supposed to be; with their families, in the wild.