Serengeti shall not die! So said the movie. Yes, it has changed but still mesmerizes. As I ramble about our Safari.
I am narrating from memory as I did not make any notes.Tara helped with the editing and a few insights. A few pictures are mine and I suppose they are adequate for my blogs. But luckily I could borrow pictures from Raxit's website, who you will think is a professional. You can see the whole album if you click on it. In fact, you should!. Especially to see the many close-ups of the birds and the beasts.
. I have heard people rave about Masai Mara, but Nandini chose Serengeti. She was told that Serengeti was not as crowded as Masai Mara.We landed at Arusha on July 9th and stayed overnight at a lodge which itself would be an enjoyable experience. But we were on our way early on 10th morning and after a briefing by the head of the tour company, headed to Tarangire, a two hours ride.
We stopped at the gate of the park as our guides had to get the paper work done at the game park office. It was also the time to stretch our limbs and eat our packed lunch. Our safari had already begun as we saw some gazelles and many` birds welcoming us right there.
While Tarangire appears small in the map it covers an area approximately 4.4 times that of Nagarahole in Karnataka. And Serengeti, at 17430 sq kms, is 8+ times larger than Tarangire is huge.
Soon we were churning up a dust as the road was not tarred and were clicking away at Impalas, Zebras, Giraffes, a few Wilde beast and many Elephants. Thank god for digital cameras which let you do this and then delete the bad ones at leisure.Which in my case are many!
The elephants digging the dry river to find water, And other animals benefit once they are done. |
Photo Raxit |
Almost at the end of the day, we sighted two lions male and female sitting on the river bed. The guide said it was the mating season, but this couple appeared to be unaware of this. Suddenly the lady got up and entered the tall grass along the river and the male, it seemed reluctantly, followed after a while. I guess the guides brought us here as a finale for the day. It was quite thrilling. My first wild lions! Though a bit disappointed to see the lion king meekly following the lady! A roar was in order and be more picturesque and dramatic.
Photo Raxit |
Frankly we could have stayed in Tarangire for another day. The terrain was varied and beautiful. The safari lodge, within the park itself, was wonderfully located at a height. We could see a number of elephants ambling along right below us. It was a fitting end to a great day of safari.
A view from our lodge. It is almost dark |
Sunset. A bonus! |
We slept in tents with a number flaps which we could zip in. Tara gave the tents a 3 or 4 star. We zipped ourselves in, practically entombed ourselves and had a fitful sleep. We took this extra care as we were warned not to walk alone as wild animals could come in anytime of the night.
Woke up early had shower and were all set for a good breakfast and the next leg of our journey.
We continued for a while at Tarangire and saw a line of elephants heading towards a small lake near the road.An impressive sight as they crossed the road to get to the lake.
The pictures below give you an idea of one of the Jungle laws! You survive only if you have discipline. You could see that babies were invariably between adults and the adults were also ever watchful.
The elephants troop in |
This little fellow was tardy in keeping up and lifted his trunk to announce he is approaching us to cross. Photo Raxit |
Others in the lake quietly make way as the elephants walk in! |
Photo Raxit |
The matriarch trumpeted and walked out and the rest obeyed and followed. Tara had heard the trumpet and as a mother and teacher she was duly impressed with what followed. |
Peace and tranquility |
Photo Raxit |
Photo courtesy Raxit |
Photo Raxit |
Ever watchful the vultures take their job of keeping the park clean very- seriously |
It is not fair but we were no more interested in monkeys |
As we cruised along looking for game I saw a broad line of white stretched along as far as I could see. I knew we would see birds, was not expecting this amazing view |
You see birds on flight on the horizon and I guess if you could fly you could see tens of thousands of birds from the sky. |
Our next stop was central Serengeti. Nandini had changed plans a bit as the migration had started a little early and the wilde beasts had moved from western Serengeti. Serengeti in Maasai means endless plains and it was no exaggeration! Even though we had seen Giraffes earlier. They really stood up in the plains and we did see many lions.
Suddenly the driver took a turn on what seemed to be an endless plains and soon we were in touching distance to these lions.
Photo Raxit |
Photo Raxit |
The next three days were all in Serengeti and the plains stretched as long as the eye could see. I guess the drive had become a bit tedious, specially for the kids, as we drove around looking for new experiences. We saw more lions, thousands of Wilde beasts and Zebras (not so many) who as per our guide formed a team with the wilde beasts.
I did not mind the gap between discovering new prides of lions as I could sit down and watch the plains go by. Each succeeding day the numbers of wilde beasts we saw went up.
A lesson learnt:
We all know that fellow passengers on an aircraft pay different fares. It is not good to ask how much as either it will make you or them miserable, depending on who had paid more! Similarly do not ask fellow lodgers what they saw during the day. I learnt this lesson after Tara spoke, she is the friendly one, to a girl she met in the evening. The girl had seen a leopard kill and go up a tree to enjoy her kill and god forbid she had seen lions mate.The game lodges also have logbook wherein you can write what you saw.
Then we met another person who had waited at the river Mara the whole day to watch the crossing and did not see any. The reason was that it had rained on our side of the river and there was enough grass for the thousands w.b's that had arrived and waiting. This conversation influenced us and we were not too energetic the next day after lunch and were late and thus missed a crossing of the wilde beasts across the river Mara. In fact, this crossing is the selling point and the highlight of a safari to Serengeti.
I had imagined the crossing was something similar to our kumbh mela. That all the beasts would congregate and camp and at an allotted time they would commence crossing by jumping into the river. I wondered whether the first beast to cross was selected by the group. I know it is all by instinct, but still thought there could be a method. In fact they cross both ways depending on which side looks greener. I suppose the beast which crosses first is the hungriest of them all.
Obviously a bridge would help them, but that would be interfering with nature and also make a big dent in the tourism revenue for both countries. In fact we saw a causeway across the river. But it appears that the beasts do not use them. May be it is too narrow and would create a stampede (again reminiscent of kumbh mela) and prove more harmful. Many would fall into the water and be attacked by the ever present crocs. I was told that the casualty was four in the crossing we missed. Some sixteen hundred had crossed.
For some reason this carcass of a wilde beast was not attacked by crocs |
This emigration of the wilde beasts is truly phenomenal as each season upwards of a million and a half beasts cross the river. As they swim across the river in a frantic hurry, there are crocodiles waiting, a few die of heart attack and some weaklings get pulled in by the crocs. I have seen the videos and it is exciting or heartbreaking depending on your nature. Around 150000 of them do not make it to the other side each year and provide food for the crocs. Also we hear lions prefer w.b's and one reason for the lions flourish in Serengeti.
It appears the gods knowing our nature, we are known as pulichar (read veg) brahmins, did not let this killing happen in front of us. Sad that the others in the group also missed it because of us. In fact, most of the wild animals we saw were mild or contented beings. As if one was a rishi and brought peace and tranquility for the day. But I am not complaining. We had a great time.
The chase: But it was not all dull, we had our share of excitement. We saw a chase! As we waited and almost gave up a cheetah which was seen hiding in the distant grass, Neil and Nandini saw, suddenly sprang and gave a chase to grab an infant gazelle and luckily the infant escaped.
Hope you can see the infant on the left. |
Spot the leopard! |
I thought it was a small rock in front |
It surely is not a bridge of rocks. But the dangerous hippos |
The kids in our group, Neil, Nikhil and Sanil did wonderfully well and we are very proud they managed some long rides which seemed endless. We did about 2000 kms in all. Some roads were rough. I am sure it would not be half as fun if they were not there with us.
Our guides Cosmos and Adriano of Easy Travel in Arusha were very good. Good drivers and good attitude. They had a lot of experience and spotted birds which I would have surely missed. They say a safari of this nature depends a lot on them. They can make it or break it. And they did well.
Here are more pictures of Lions, Hippos and many many Wilde beasts.
As we continued our journey we saw her sitting under a tree right next to the road. She looked tired. Cosmos our guide said she was pregnant and would probably deliver in two weeks.
Photo Raxit |
Here are a set of pictures borrowed from Raxit which pretty much covers the three lovely days in north serengeti and Ngorongoro. It is a flat caldera, the lid of a collapsed volcano seemed to be specially made for the photographer. The animals stood out against the horizon.
The tents and services were excellent and right in the forest. However I and Tara decided to zip in every part of the tent.
Lucky for us that they decided to walk towards us |
This one looked at me and said I will remember you! |
Our grandchildren Nikhil and Neil. Sanil their cousin in the middle. And we are proud of them. They did very well through out the safari! |
Three cheers to Raxit, Nandini's husband for his very professional Photographs and for doing it with such dedication and thoroughness |
Three cheers for Nandini, our daughter, for making this memorable trip happen and for including us seniors. |
Is it wishful thinking?
I read that there are now about 30,000 lions in Africa. Compare this to about 1780 or so tigers scattered around the many designated tiger parks in India. When we saw our first and only tiger in Kanha about 30 years ago the person who spoke to us from the conservation project claimed there were 3000 tigers.
While in teens I had seen a tiger (or a leopard?) cross the road as we came down from Nandi Hills just 60 kms away from Bangalore. I still remember it was blinded for a second by the car light and then took a leap towards the woods. A memorable sight. And tigers could be seen at Naama chilume in Devaraayana Durga hills (around 90 kms away).sixty odd years ago. But today there is no mention of wild life in these areas. Hopefully there are few leopards or cheetahs which have managed to survive.
It reminds me of a story in our family how my uncle found a tiger cub, may be the mother was killed and he adopted it. It was a pet and as it grew big it started to attack hens and other domestic animals, soon it was going after dogs. So my uncle decided to give it to the Mysore zoo. I have seen the tiger when my cousin pointed it to me at the zoo. I was quite small at that time. He said the tiger still recognized my uncle whenever he visited the zoo, which of course was not often.
It was however encouraging to read about Hazzah and her efforts to conserve lions in Africa. I was shocked when I read that there were almost half a million lions in Africa 60 years ago. I cannot imagine how our safari would have been then. She is using Maassai warriors as Lion Guardians in Kenya. So Serengeti has changed, but still mesmerizes us. I wish there was less poaching and senseless killing. I wish her all the best.
I said to myself we also have our National parks. We surely seem to be making an effort to preserve our wild life but only time will tell how successful! I read in TOI today that we spend 150 crores of Rupees per year on tiger preservation in 46 different reserves. In 2011 only 16 tigers were poached and it had increased to 59 in 2013. No reasons given why. We also read about the constant conflict between the wild animals and us.
While we owe it to ourselves and to the future generations to maintain wild life and make it grow, I have no clue how this will be really achieved. I hope others do.
Comments
Nice photos and nice photography!!!
Ramesh.
Shobana
I enjoyed reading your Safari blog as it was a replay of all the documentary specials I have seen on National Geographic Channel many a time. I would imagine the experience in person is exhilarating with nature when compared to a professionally edited broadcast. You have done an excellent job capturing it.
Thanks for sharing it with us and, my best wishes & regards to all.
Hari Gopalan
and make a similar trip. Obviously there are many questions such as budget etc.
Do you want me to liaise with Nandini directly?
By the way Rama and I toured SA and Zimbabwe, Zambia, and Botswana in Feb / March this year.
Hema and Balu were to join us but couldn't make it.
Planning was done by me and everything worked to the last detail without any hitch.
Main points of interest were Cape Town, Vic Falls and Chobe NP in Botswana.
We saw a pride of Lioness at close quarters. Elephants galore. No Zebras.
Tourists are few in Botswana.
Vic falls is a must in one's lifetime. So you can discuss with your family and plan accordingly.
Did you take the Yellow fever shot for your trip? Which were the countries visited and the visas
you had to secure. If Hema and Balu are to go with us, same visas that you obtained would be
needed by them as well. Singapore passport is exempted by many countries re: tourist visas.
Await to hear from you.
Regards. // Prasad
Loved reading your blog. No experience like being in wild Africa! It's been a while since I went on Safari, seeing the beautiful pictures I so want to go now!
Safe travels back! Hope to see you in Bangalore over Diwali.
Love
Mohini
Thank you very much. Real nice photographs and. Excellent commentary.
Kittu
That rather detailed account was a virtual tour I just took. Some stunning photos followed! Very Nat.Geo. material in visual content. We have not done this yet. One destination that has been on our wish list for a very long time. The way you have captured it, sounds that much more inviting. So Serengeti now moves upwards to my 'Must do' list. Thanks for that nudge.
Hi to Tara.
Praneeta
This was indeed a very special blog with so many great photographs of your African Safari nicely woven into the narrative. This will inspire us to make the effort to go as well.
Ram Shakku
I always enjoy Nidhi's blogs and this one is special as it is almost like a pictorial book. I thoroughly enjoy his sense of humour and the way he has given day to day events. Thanks so much for sharing!
Got the blog at last.\! Great pictures very professional. As Vatsala puts it "Very much like a National Geographic feature!".
I sent a comment on the blog, wonder if it reached.
Raghu
- Raxit
We went through the beautifully scripted narration of your visit to Tanzania embedded with pictures of professional quality. Thank you for giving us a great tour . (We felt as thought we were there!) without the travel hassles and lightnening our purse!
Thanks again.
With regards,
P.V.R.RAO
the trip hugely.
Take care
Varad
I enjoyed Nidhi's blog thoroughly! Great account of your unforgettable experiences!
Beautiful pic of your grandsons!
Love
Tara
Indira Bharadwaj
It was great seeing the photos, I felt as if I went on another Safari.
It is Amazing Indeed.
B Regards
Ravi
Bala
Thanks so much.
Anupama
This is truly amazing. Thank you for sharing!!!
Aruna
Love, Raji
Love, Parul.
Shaku
Just finished going through the blog posts and pictures, it was so fun to read!! Looks like an amazing trip and a must do for all of us! we will totally get advice from Nandini when we get around to planning it sometime :) Went through Raxit's pictures as well, they were stunning!! totally looked like a NatGeo album :)
Thanks for sharing and good luck with the move Rohini!
Love,
Aditi
When do we see you now ? Do inform us re. your programme. Love. - Manju.
All of you must have strong backs to cover 2000 kms.
Thanks for sharing
Rama
Thanks for sharing , Prakash .
Wonderful pictures of your family on Sertengeti park. Congratulations !. We (Kumud and I) have been on a safari in Kenya and saw the same wildlife in thousands as they were migrating to Tanzania (Serengeti)
Cheers
Anandu
Sachi
Thanks for the message about "FW: serengeti, our safari".
Dai here.
Beautiful pics from the wild.
It beats looking at buildings and such man made designs.
Thanks a lot for sharing them. It makes us want to go there.
All well here. Hello to Nidhi.
With lots of love,
Dai.
Thanks for sharing your experiences at Serengeti. The article is very well written and the photos exquisite. Great you all had a time of your lives!!!
One suggestion/question : who are Raxit, Neil and Nikhil?
Take care and here's to many more such trips! !!
Deepa
So I decided to send to most of my and Tara's contacts.
None complained except this person! Not surprisingly even Tara does not remember how she got his email address!
"Hi don't know how I was on this list serve. Kindly let me request to excuse my self from this.Thanks"
Obviously he did not open the blog!
Would love to visit there one day..
Arabhi
Great pictures. A visit to Africa is very enchanting and you witness nature at it best.
Thanks a lot for sharing the pictures with us.
Best wishes
Raghu
Geetha
Very nice article .very well written and photography is too good.we want to go, give me details of the travel agent and other details .we will plan it.
Very useful and informative. keep on update your tour and visit places.
We can plan easily.
Thanks for sharing the information.
Sujatha.
I enjoyed the lovely photographs admired them so much that I have forwarded the same to Seshu ,my eldest son in usa.
I shall enjoy the descriptive script sometime later. Greetings and regards to your husband and all other members of the family.
Besrt wishes,
dr S S Badrinath.
Sri is really gifted as a writer, looking forward to his first hard cover fiction/non-fiction..
His narration & pictures by your son-in-law has really inspired us to plan this kind of a trip in coming future.
Being a nature lover myself with lots of spare time on national geographic & discovery channels, its always my dream to experience such an adventure.
Thnx for sharing.
Hemant.
We took Kavita"s children to Parambikulam wild life sanctuary on the Kerala side. It was small and good. More of spotted deers, wild buffaloes, elephants and monkeys. Though tigers were there we could not see them as it was raining throughout and they come out only in summer to the river bed for drinking water.
You have kindled the interest in us to go on this safari.Let us see, how it goes.
Hope all well at your end. Geetha.
Padmini
It was wonderful to see this pictures and even more of a delight to know that you and your family are well. I think of you often and wish you all the best.
Take great care
Andrea
Pleasantly surprised to see your enthusiasm for a physically difficult trip! Inspiring!
Best wishes,
Alpa
P.s. I too would love to do this sometime. And yes, more likely the Serengeti than Masai Mara.
Gerat pictures and thanks for sharing
Chitra and Prakash
Best wishes and regards,
Parthasarathy
wonderful.
Thanks for the lovely blog
kavitha
Anitha
I went with a bunch of doctors two years ago . It was right on top of my bucket list and immensely enjoyed not only the Safaris but the Lodges we stayed in and the variety of vegetarian food that was available!
Nice to see your family. How many grandchildren do you have? How are you both keeping?
.................
I just read your Blog. I had just seen the photos before my last mail. You are a great narrator. Have you published anything? Can I forward your blog to Shanthi and Balu?
Cheers
Shubha