
My Experience of Kenya
Forthcoming from DeeAnn Pederson
The Nature of Kenya
By Bradford Glass
Abundant and unique wildlife, scenic beauty, and wild variety -- from the lush slopes of Mt. Kenya, to the deserts of Samburu, to the vast plains of the Maasai Mara; this is Kenya, the jewel of Africa.
The richness of this land is truly remarkable: grand mountains, rolling hills, grasslands, vast savannas, expansive plains, rich valleys, lakes and rivers, all nurturing a multitude of diverse species of wildlife and birds. Many of these amazing animals and birds are found only in Africa, and some are so rare that they exist only in Kenya. Add to this the unique native human cultures and this is a land of delicately woven tapestries of life.
The "Soul of Africa" quickly becomes an intimate and everlasting part of you, with its primitive beauty, vast unspoiled vistas, and glorious but vanishing wildlife. I felt that I stepped back in time to the place that all of us originally came from. I did. The powerful, earthy smells of Africa, are exotic and overwhelming. Imagination becomes intoxicated with lifes essence, and transports you to a world that is rapidly vanishing.
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"Purrrfect Huntress"

"Masai Mara Sunrise" |
The immense power, grace, and intelligence of wild elephants are expressed with such tender loving care in the rearing of their young. Lion, leopards, and cheetahs bring into sharp contrast the intense focus of the hunt and the joyous respite of a long nap. Affectionate and social creatures, zebras in herds create patterns of black and white that are so appealing to our eye, yet so effectively confuse predators -- safety in numbers. Rainbows of avian plumage color over 1300 species of birds, fully 15% of the worlds population.
If one is content to sit quietly, wildlife seems to approach from all directions, transforming what appeared to be a barren scene into a full color spectacle -- giraffe, zebra, ostrich, and gerenuk. A leopard strolling through low-lying shrubs, pausing only at her destination: a leap onto a comfortable limb in the shade of a large Acacia tree; a sight many visitors only dream of seeing. At 7,300 ft. on Mt. Kenya, The Mountain Lodge offers close encounters with Cape buffalo, waterbuck, Maribou Stork, elephant herds, and the inquisitive Sykes monkey. Shrieking hyenas and bush babies will keep you up at night.
Perhaps the best way to describe this land is to simply allow the "Images of Kenya" to tell their own story.
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