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KENYA & TANZANIA--October,
2001

MONDAY
–Oct 8 - NEWARK / AMSTERDAM
We had planned to leave on Tues., but the airline
rescheduling in the wake of Sept 11 left us with a Mon. departure. We had 3
checkouts at the motel. All of them left early to help us out and we were on
the road by 11:30. The
www.airportparkinglots.com site I found was terrific. Vista parking was
just before the airport exit at the HoJo’s. It was $7 per day (long-term
parking is $8) and they took us directly to KLM. We were in the departure
lounge by 1:30 Long sleepless flight to Holland, five long hours at the airport
there (the 2nd floor, east end, has comfortable chairs for napping),
then off at 8 am for an 8 hour flight to Nairobi. Flying over the Sahara was
awe-inspiring—nothing but sand, sand, sand.
Depart Newark NW8658 4:45 pm—seats 21 A&B
Arrive Amsterdam 6:20 am; Change planes
Depart NW8565 11:00
am—seats 33 A&B
Arrive Nairobi 8:15 pm
The flight was only about half full, so we were each
able to grab a whole middle section to stretch out. Got about 1.5 hours
sleep. We zipped through customs and were met by Thomas, a representative of
2AFRIKA, INC, Vintage Africa Safaris, and Henry, our driver for the Kenya
portion of our safari, and transferred to our hotel. Slept fitfully.
HOLIDAY INN MAYFAIR; Parklands Road,
Westlands, Nairobi
The Holiday Inn Mayfair in
Nairobi is set on 12 acres of lush, landscaped gardens and only 20km. from Jomo
Kenyatta International Airport. The hotel was originally built in 1945, and
although it has been extensively refurbished, to provide all the modern touches,
it still retains the understated charm and elegance of yesteryear. It is
located seven minutes drive from the center of Nairobi in the leafy suburb of
Parklands.
After a good buffet
breakfast, where Thomas came and briefed us (don’t drink the water, let your
driver arrange any photos of people, tipping hints), we drove via Narok to the
Masai Mara National Park. The Masai Mara lies about 270 km (180 miles) from
Nairobi and takes about 4.5 hours by road (3 over very badly potholed roads and
the rest horribly eroded clay). The route is scenic and the Masai Mara is
perhaps the only region left in Kenya where visitors may see animals in the same
super abundance as existed centuries ago. Everywhere, little boys stood by the
side of the road begging for pens or sweets. Desperate poverty everywhere.
Jerry says it makes Bali look middle class. Today is President’s Day and the
streets are lined with rickety salvaged-tin shacks where people are selling
everything. Most children attend primary school, but few families can afford
high school. Everyone comes from a tribe: Thomas’s is Luo, near Lake Victoria
and they are fishermen; our guide,Henry’s, is Kukura and they are farmers and business
people. We are going to the land of the Masai—herders of cattle and goats (they
say warriors, but Henry says the women do all the work and the children do the
herding—the men are lazy). They slash their earlobes and hang things from
them—it makes them more attractive when they dance. We stopped for a stupendous
views over the Rift Valley. We saw some animals, but Henry didn’t
stop—I found out why later, when we realized the tremendous number of animals in
the park.
Our hotel for the
first 4 nights is MARA SOPA
LODGE--MASAI MARA NATIONAL PARK
Set in the Oloolaimutia
valley, the Mara Sopa Lodge blends in perfectly with its surrounding hillside
landscape. The accent here is on the Masai people and the fabulous wealth of
wildlife, birdlife, and natural flora to be found in the fabled Masai Mara
National Park. The Mara Sopa Lodge is located in one of the world’s most
celebrated game reserves, the Masai Mara. Situated on a hillside, the lodge lies
on the eastern boundary of the Masai Mara National Park, which stretches for
1120sq km and borders the Serengeti National Park in Tanzania. The lodge was
opened in 1986 and houses 100 rooms of which 13 are suites. Each room and suite
has a breathtaking view of the Oloolaimutia Valley, and each is furnished with
queen size beds and full en-suite bathrooms. Each room and suite has its own
private balcony where wildlife and birdlife can be viewed in comfort. The lodge
itself is of a rondavel design where the interior design of the public areas and
rooms are a reflection of the rich Masai culture and art. One thing we noticed
was the smell of burning charcoal everywhere. The vegetation is very similar to
Florida—jacaranda and bougainvillea everywhere. Also acacia marching across the
hilltops like the cypress in Tuscany. We have a nice room with mosquito netting
over the bed. Had a decent lunch and took a nap. First game drive at 4 pm.
The Masai Mara is a northern continuation of Africa’s
most famous National Park, the Serengeti in Tanzania.
Together, the Masai Mara and Serengeti make up one ecosystem; and animals pass across the political border between the two areas
freely, as instinct and the seasons dictate. The greater conservation area of
the Masai Mara consists of about 700 square miles, with an inner Reserve of 200
square miles in which wildlife interests are paramount and there is no human
habitation (except for a few lodges). In the outer Reserve, the pastoral Maasi
are allowed to coexist with wildlife; and the circular manyatta (village
community) of the Maasai are seen throughout this outer
Reserve area. Here, the Maasai warrior remains a picturesque figure, dressed in
his flowing russet cloak, standing guard on the cattle
herds that are his wealth and nourishment.
The Mara receives a high rainfall as a result of the
altitude and humidity of nearby Lake Victoria, just 100 miles to the west. This
predictable and beneficial climate of ample rain means that there is a continual
growth of new grasses to support large herds of animals. Frequent showers at
night not only keep the plains green but also keep dust to a minimum. By and
large, the Mara is an area of breathtaking vistas with vast rolling plains
stretching to the horizon. Occasionally, there are rounded hills with
intermittent groves of acacia trees; and dense riverine forest hugs the banks of
the Mara and Talek Rivers, which have many seasonal tributaries.
The Masai Mara is Kenya’s finest wildlife sanctuary.
Everything about this reserve is outstanding. The wildlife is abundant and the
gentle rolling grasslands ensure that animals are never out of sight. Birds,
too, are prolific. Including migrants, well over 450 species have been recorded,
among them 57 species of birds of prey. The climate is gentle, rarely too hot
and well spread rainfall year round. Rain, when it falls almost always chooses
the late afternoon or night.
The first sight of this
natural wonderland is breathtaking. Here the great herds of shuffling elephants
browse among the rich tree-studded grasslands with an
occasional sighting of a solitary and ill-tempered
rhino. Thomson’s and Grant’s gazelle, topi and eland
and many more species of plains’ game offer a rich choice of food for
the dominant predators; lion, leopard and cheetah which
hunt in this pristine wilderness. In the Mara river,
hippo submerge at the approach of a vehicle only to surface
seconds later to snort and grumble their displeasure.
Seemingly drowsy crocodile sunbathe on the river banks, mouth agape, waiting
with subtle cunning for prey at which to strike with
lightning swiftness.
But this richness of fauna,
this profusion of winged beauty and the untouched fragility of the landscape, are all subordinate to the Mara’s foremost
attraction, the march of the wildebeest. Each year, far
south in the great vastness of the Serengeti, the
wildebeest raise their dignified but quaint heads,
sniff the air and, as if by one accord, start the long trek to the Kenya border and the Masai Mara. After exhausting the grazing in
Tanzania’s northern Serengeti a large number of wildebeest and zebra enter the
Masai Mar. around the end of June drawn by the sweet grass raised by the long
rains of April and May. It is estimated that more than half a million wildebeest
enter the Mara and are joined by another 100,000 from the Loita Hills east of
the Mara Driving in the midst of these great herds is an unimaginable
experience.While the eyes feast on the spectacle the air carries the smells,
the dust and the sounds of hundreds of thousands of animals. By July the
countless herds have amassed along the swollen Mara River - a final barrier from
the short sweet grasses of the Masai Mara. Sometimes the crossing place they
have chosen is shallow allowing the majority of animals to pass safely. In other
areas the waters boil with drowning wildebeest and slashing crocodiles. Between
July and October the wildebeest reside in the Mara. There is nowhere else on
earth to compare with this wildlife marvel. But the trek
is costly. The herds draw ravening packs of predators,
especially hyenas and lions, and thousands of the lame,
laggard and sick never complete the cycle. More die, by drowning or by the teeth
of the cunning crocodile, whilst trying to cross the
swirling muddy waters of the Mara and Talek rivers.
Once the Mara’s grass has been devoured and when fresh
rain in Tanzania has brought forth a new flush there, the herds turn south,
heading hundreds of kilometers back to Serengeti and the Ngorongoro
plains. There the young are dropped in time to grow
sufficiently strong to undertake the long march north
six months later.
SUNDAY – Oct. 14 –
MASAI MARA NATIONAL PARK / LAKE
NAKURU NATIONAL PARK
Today we left the Plains of the Masai Mara and drove the
journey through the Great Rift Valley to the Lake Nakuru National Park in
central Kenya. Lake Nakuru is home to thousand upon thousand of greater and
lesser pink flamingoes—it’s a site to behold. This park also provides sanctuary
for the Rothschild Giraffe, rhino and leopard.
LAKE NAKURU LODGE—LAKE
NAKURU NATIONAL PARK
The Lake Nakura Lodge is
situated in a wonderland which lies in the heart of one of Kenya’s most densely
animal populated wetland national parks (Ramsar Site--The Convention on
Wetlands, signed in Ramsar, Iran, in 1971, is an intergovernmental treaty which
provides the framework for national action and international cooperation for the
conservation and wise use of wetlands and their resources. There are presently
124 Contracting Parties to the Convention, with 1072 wetland sites, totaling
81.75 million hectares, designated for inclusion in the Ramsar List of Wetlands
of International Importance), only two hours leisurely drive—on first class
roads—from Nairobi through some of the most exciting scenery to be seen anywhere
in Africa. Situated in the southeast ecological niche of the park, the lodge is
an oasis of comfort and excellent service, with commanding views of the lesser
flamingo for which Lake Nakuru is justly famous. The lodge blends well with its
surroundings and the animals often browse peacefully close to the lodge and
environs, much to the fascination of the visitors. There is accommodation for
120 people, either in family rooms, cottages or suites. The service is
unmatched anywhere in Kenya, a country renowned for its hospitality. There is
excellent cuisine, which includes outside catering, Bush Barbeque, African night
dinners and sundowners.
(The earliest introduced
species in the Lake is the saline tolerant tilapia )Tilapia, several species and
their hybrids of Oreochromis, are one of the major groups of farm raised fish in
the world. Tilapia farming and consumption are rapidly increasing in the US. In
fact, in every year since 1995, retail sales of tilapia surpassed those of
trout. Sarotherodona calicus grahamii) in 1956 from Lake Magadi to curb on the
rising malarial menace in Nakuru town. As a result, fish-eating birds came in.
They include: the Cormorant, Great white pelicans, African fish eagle etc. The
fish is in direct competition with the Lesser flamingo feeding on the Blue
-green algae. We don't care for the taste of tilapia, and we had ample
opportunity to try it. )
The history of Lake Nakuru
National Park (LNNP) started in 1961 when the Southern Part of the lake was
designated as a Bird sanctuary under management of the Kenya National Park.
Present park size is through various land acquisitions and boundary alterations
supported by the then World Wildlife Fund (WWF) and the Kenya Government. In
1964, the bird sanctuary was extended to include the whole lake and a strip of
land around the Lake. Incidentally, the present park Headquarters reflect this
acquisition. In 1968, further extension of the park boundary was made and
officially gazetted as a National park. 1973 saw Netherlands WWF sign a
conservation agreement with the Kenya Government that was instrumental in the
acquiring of more land for the park in 1974 with further boundary alterations
resulting in present size. In 1976, the park boundary
was fenced with a chainlink, and then reinforced later in 1986 with a high
powered solar fence through funds raised by Rhino Rescue Trust (U.K.). This was the precursor to
the declaration of the park as a Rhino Sanctuary in 1987 and the first 16 black
rhinos were translocated from Solio ranch, adding to the two resident ones. Four
more black ones were brought in from Nairobi National Park in 1990 and two white
rhinos were introduced from Lewa Downs. Further 10 white ones were brought in
from South Africa in 1995. Both black and white rhinos total over 75. Rothschild giraffe was
translocated in 1974 from Soy plains in Eldoret having invaded the wheat farms.
Many leopards have been released in the past into the park from various
problematic areas in the region. Similarly, lions have been brought in and now
number about 40. All these animal introductions have developed viable
populations. Lake Nakuru was declared a
Ramsar site in 1990 - a wetland of international importance; Kenya having been a
signatory to the convention. The lake has diversified
plant and animal life at the production level of the food chain. Blue-Green
algae (spirulina platensis) thrives in the alkaline lake waters. Lake Nakuru is alkaline and
has a fluctuating area depending on seasons of between less than 5KM2. to about
40KM2 in wet season. The lake is a natural “waste-sink” of lake Nakuru Ecosystem
that covers an area of 1800 KM with diversified human economic activities
ranging from arable farming, industrial production in Nakuru town to forestry
activities at higher altitudes of the catchment.
Today we returned to Kenya’s colorful capital, Nairobi,
arriving about an hour early, so we had a short tour of the city. We saw the
site of the American embassy and the Stanley Hotel, where Teddy Roosevelt
spotted for game and Hemingway stayed. Then we had lunch at the internationally
renowned Carnivore Restaurant.
If ever a place in the
world is worth a visit, it’s Amboseli National Park with its awesome backdrop
towering 19,340 feet toward the African sky.
AMBOSELI SERENA SAFARI LODGE--AMBOSELI NATIONAL PARK
Beside Acacia trees and a natural spring, amidst more
big game than almost anywhere else in Africa, stands Amboseli Serena Safari
Lodge. Influenced by Masai Manyatta architecture, the lodge is in total harmony
with its environment. Guest rooms are appointed with authentic Africana. Named for the trees under which it is
built, Acacia tortilis, this luxury lodge surrounds guests with luxury. Enjoy the view of the highest mountain in
Africa. Awaken early in the morning to the scent of grass and bush, redolent
with the essence of untouched wilderness. Dine in style, discover the delights
of bird-watching—over 300 species of colorful birds live here, including
waterfowl which inhabit the year-round springs. Amboseli (“salty dust” in the
Maasai language) is an oasis—a place of peace, a place of solitude. The
mountain is omnipresent, even when covered by clouds and sets the stage for your
stay. I had a facial to get rid of the salty dust.
Amboseli National Park, at the foot of Africa’s highest
mountain, 5895m Kilimanjaro, is
one of Kenya’s most popular parks. It lies some 240kms.south-east of Nairobi
very close to the Tanzania border. The snow capped peak of Mount Kilimanjaro,
the world’s tallest freestanding mountain, rising above a saucer of clouds
dominates every aspect of Amboseli. Gazetted as a national park in 1974 it
covers only 392 sq kms but despite its small size and its fragile ecosystem it
supports a wide range of mammals (well over 50 of the larger species) and birds
(over 400 species). Nearby is the border town of Namanga, overlooked by
Oi-Doinyo Orok (Black Mountain) sacred to the Maasai tribe. This a good place to
stop off and buy Maasai handicrafts from the stalls along the road.
Years ago, Amboseli was the
locale around which such famous writers as Ernest Hemingway and Robert Ruark
spun their stories of big game hunting in the wilds of Africa. It is also the
home of the Maasai people, those tall, proud nomads whose legendary prowess in
battle and single handed acts of bravery in fights with wild animals has spread
across the globe. The Maasai have learned to live in harmony with their
environment and the wildlife which surrounds them.
A part of Amboseli National Park is composed of a
dried-up lake bed which in the
shimmering heat produces a fairly spectacular site; there is an extremely
convincing mirage which shows an expanse of water, complete with birds and
animals drinking from and reflected in it. We’d have been quite happy to go
birding along the lake shore before we were told it was a mirage. Probably the
most famous inhabitants are the elephants. Swamps and springs, fed by underground rivers from Kilimanjaro’s melting snows, form permanent watering places for wildlife
throughout times of drought. The lake bed is subject to sporadic floods and
noxious salts in the gravel bed are dissolved to serve as a deadly poison for
what is left of the local woods; very few of the fine acacias, once a feature of
this region, remain.
The snows of Kilimanjaro,
white and crystalline, provide a majestic backdrop to one of Kenya’s most
spectacular displays of wildlife - lion, elephant, leopard, rhino, cheetah,
buffalo and hosts of plains’ game, creating Kenya’s most sought after
photographer’s paradise. But the Park’s popularity is also causing serious
concern. The combination of wildlife, tourist vehicles and Masaai cattle are
destroying the delicate but precious grassland. Park rules now insist that
vehicles stick to roads and tracks. The Park’s best game runs are around swamps
and there is a fine lookout on Observation Hill which offers views over the
whole of the Park and beyond.
Bird life in Amboseli is
variable, to get the most from it you need to be there when parts of the park
are still flooded or Lake Amboseli actually exists. For the (fool?)hardy
traveler this means the rainy seasons (March-May and Oct-Dec). If you don’t mind
getting wet and maybe getting stuck in the mud this can be the best time to
visit Amboseli. We were lucky and didn't have rain. Several parts of the park (including Lake Amboseli)
become flooded and large numbers of wildfowl and other wetland birds move in.
After lunch, we continued our journey south toward
Tanzania. Left Henry at the border, after clearing customs, bargaining for a
giraffe, and fixing a flat. Selim took us into meet our new guide, Godfrey,
with Predators Safari Club, in Arusha, a journey that lasts about 2 ½ hours via
the Tanzania border town of Namanga. We had a picnic lunch en route, and
entered the Lake Manyara National Park.
KIRURUMU TENTED SAFARI CAMP
It is difficult to imagine
a more spectacular setting for this camp—near the edge of the Mto Wa Mbu
escarpment overlooking the Great Rift Valley and the stunning Manyara soda
lake. There are daily excursions into the Great Rift Valley as well as into the
national park as well as walking safaris and nature walks with experienced
escorts. The swimming pool, bar and public areas all boast dramatic views of
the landscape. In the evenings, traditional dance presentations are featured. Lake Manyara
National Park includes the northern half of Lake Manyara,
with a thin strip of land sandwiched between the lakeshore
and a spectacular wooded escarpment to the west. The lake situated along the
impressive escarpment of the Rift Valley, takes its name from the Maasai word
for “euphorbia tirucalli,” a bush that is used to make a thorny hedge to protect
their cattle. Lake Manyara National Park,
which covers an area of 330 sq.km. of which 200 sq.km is lake, was made a game
reserve in 1957 and registered three years later as a National Park. The park is
located between the 600 m high escarpment of the Great Rift Valley and Lake
Manyara and is 130 km from Arusha so can be visited on a day excursion from this
centre. At the Southern end of the park are hot Sulphur Springs called Majimoto,
further along the forest opens up into woodlands, grassland, swamps and beyond,
the soda lake itself. In general the park is
small, because two thirds of the park is covered by the lake. Incredibly, that
one third harbors a variety of wild animals, which are supported by open
savannah grassland with rocky outcrops, marshes and acacia woodland.
Masses of pink flamingos
and many other aquatic bird species such as pelicans and hornbills along with
tree-climbing lions (lazily resting on the branches of an “Acacia tortillas”
tree), herds of elephants, hippos, giraffe, buffalo and other large animals all
serve to make this one of the most beautiful little parks in Africa. Due to the
high concentrations, this is also one of the best places in Africa to observe
elephants at close quarters. At the entrance, there is a hippo pool that will
capture your attention if you enter the park for the first time. The park is
considered to be one of the best places for bird watching: over 400 species of
bird including flamingo, pelican, red billed quelea, storks, sacred ibis,
cormorants and Egyptian geese. Other species of birds are African spoonbill,
lesser flamingo, white pelican, white faced duck, bee-eater, forest-dwelling
crowned eagle, heron, water fowl, crowned crane, snipes and pratincoles.
Wildlife interest at Lake
Manyara is not confined to birdlife only, many game animals such as buffalo also
inhabit the park, elephant, giraffe, impala, hippo and a great variety of
smaller animals also inhabit the park. The park contains the most pachyderms per
km sq. in Tanzania. Most famous spectacle in the Lake Manyara National Park is
the tree-climbing lions that spend most of the day spread out along the branches
of acacia trees six to seven metres above the ground. Nestling at the base of
the Great Rift Valley escarpment the park is noted for its incredible beauty. As
visitors enter the gate they pass into the lush forest, home to troops of
baboons and blue monkeys. Include the hippo pool where you can see a lot of
gregarious hippos in big numbers.
FRIDAY – Oct. 19 –
LAKE MANYARA /SERENGETI NATIONAL PARK
Godfrey prefers all day drives, so we take a picnic
lunch and stop for an hour in the middle of the day.
We left in the morning and drove slowly to the world
famous Serengeti National Park via the Olduvai Gorge, the famous archeological
site where the Leakeys discovered remains of Australopithecus, Homo Habilis and
Homo Erectus, bringing crucial understanding to the study of the evolution of
the human species. Undoubtedly the most famous wildlife sanctuary in the world,
Serengeti is unequaled for its natural beauty and the greatest concentration of
plains game anywhere. Looking over the seemingly endless Serengeti plains, the
hillside Serengeti Sopa Lodge is a tranquil oasis set in thousands of square
kilometers of National Park. The Serengeti Plains are host to a dramatic annual
migration of hundreds of thousands of wildebeest and numerous other species of
game indigenous to the area. We will be here 2 nights.
SERENGETI SOPA LODGE
It was 1913 and great stretches of
Africa were still unknown to the white man when Stewart Edward White, an
American hunter, set out from Nairobi. Pushing south, he recorded: “We walked
for miles over burnt out country... Then I saw the green trees of the river,
walked two miles more and found myself in paradise.” He had found Serengeti. In
the years since White’s excursion under “the high noble arc of the cloudless
African sky,” Serengeti has come to symbolize paradise to many of us. The
Maasai, who had grazed their cattle on the vast grassy plains for millennia had
always thought so. To them it was Siringitu - “the place where the land moves on
forever.”
The Serengeti region
encompasses the Serengeti National Park itself, the Ngorongoro Conservation
Area, Maswa Game Reserve, the Loliondo, Grumeti and Ikorongo Controlled Areas
and the Maasai Mara National Reserve in Kenya. Over 90,000 tourists visit the
Park each year. Two World Heritage Sites
and two Biosphere Reserves have been established within the 30,000 km² region.
Its unique ecosystem has inspired writers from Ernest Hemingway to Peter
Mattheissen, filmakers like Hugo von Lawick and Alan Root as well as numerous
photographers and scientists. The Serengeti ecosystem is
one of the oldest on earth. The essential features of climate, vegetation and
fauna have barely changed in the past million years. Early man himself made an
appearance in Olduvai Gorge about two million years ago. Some patterns of
life, death, adaptation and migration are as old as the hills themselves.
It is the migration for
which Serengeti is perhaps most famous. Over a million wildebeest and about
200,000 zebras flow south from the northern hills to the southern plains for the
short rains every October and November, and then swirl west and north after the
long rains in April, May and June. So strong is the ancient instinct to move
that no drought, gorge or crocodile infested river can hold them back. The Wildebeest travel
through a variety of parks, reserves and protected areas and through a variety
of habitat. Join us to explore the different forms of vegetation and landscapes
of the Serengeti ecosystem and meet some of their most fascinating inhabitants.Another interesting feature
are the “Kopjes,” massive islands of granite standing in a sea of grass, which
provide shelter to a great variety of plants and animals, from the elusive
leopard to the tiny dik dik.
The Serengeti is a sense of seeing to the ends of the
earth, the sunburnt savannah shimmering to the horizon. Yet, after the rains
this golden horizon is magically transformed into an endless green carpet
flecked with wildflowers. But there are also wooded hills, towering termite
mounds and rocky kopjes, rivers lined with elegant stands of trees, ebony and
acacia, stained orange by the dust. It is so vast you may be the only human
audience when a pride of lions masterminds a siege, focused unswervingly on
their next meal.
SUNDAY – Oct. 21 –
SERENGETI NATIONAL PARK / NGORONGORO
Drove today from the Serengeti National Park, Nearly 3
million years ago, Ngorongoro towered alongside Mt. Kilimanjaro as one of the
highest peaks in Africa. Forged during the tumultuous birth of the Great Rift
Valley, its volcanic top erupted at the time that ancient man first walked the
plains. Onward to the largest intact caldera in the world – Ngorongoro. Its
enduring charm stems from its overwhelming physical beauty and the abundance of
wildlife permanently resident on the crater floor. Today, Ngorongoro’s caldera
shelters the most beautiful wildlife haven left on earth. Some of Africa’s last
black rhino are protected within its rim, black-maned lions stalk the
grasslands, flamingoes crowd the soda lakes and giant-tusked elephants wander
the forests.
NGORONGORO CRATER SOPA LODGE
Spread out along the upper most rim of the site, the
Ngorongoro Sopa Lodge offers breathtaking views of the crater floor far
below.Accommodation is arranged for a 2-night stay in a double room with private
en-suite facilities on a full board meal basis.
Today, we spent an entire day game viewing in the Ngorongoro crater enjoying a picnic lunch en-route.
Its a short drive back to Arusha today where we had a
picnic lunch at the Park Village Restaurant, then visited the Cultural Heritage
Centre next door and bought three beautiful pieces of Tanzanite. Then
transferred to Kilimanjaro International Airport at 3:30 for our 9:15 pm return
flight to Amsterdam with onward service to the United States.
Depart Kilimanjaro NW8481 9:15 pm—seats 41 F&G
Arrive Amsterdam 8:15 am
Change Planes
Depart Amsterdam NW67 10:40 am—seats 43 H&G
Arrive Detroit 1:05 pm
Depart Detroit NW 362—seats 14 A&B
Arrive Newark 5:11 pm
WELCOME HOME!!!!!!
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