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Lamai Serengeti

If you were to visit only one place in the Serengeti, it should be here.

The story of a rock kopje in the northern Serengeti, and daily life in the Serengeti's best new camp hidden within it.

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Sun, Feb 12, 2012

Top Floor, Corner Office with a View

This is Matt. You usually find me blogging from Kiba Point down in the Selous Game Reserve, but this month I'm up in Lamai relief managing for Bas and Suzanne who are on a well-deserved vacation. It's great to spend some time up north at Lamai, especially now when all the mobile camps have moved south and we have the whole area, still teeming with resident game, virtually to ourselves. That said, my heart still lies in the Selous and at Kiba Point, with one exception; I cannot get over the office at Lamai.

One of the highest buildings on the kopje, the office has clear views of Kenya to the north, and great kopje habitat to the east and west. What follows is a collection of pictures that I took in 30 minutes yesterday morning.

First, to the north is the vista I see when I look up from my computer.

We also get some game running around the car park from time to time. One of the dwarf mongooses decided the dusty road actually made for a pretty soft spot to lie down and soak up the morning rays.

This one seemed to think we were hiding some tasty treats in the office and was getting ready to come right in.

Bas has written quite a bit about the the kopje's hyraxes who, just like the mongooses, like to warm up in the morning sun. This one spent five hours sprawled out on top of a boulder just out the east window.

We also have lots of Lion's Claw, a tall flowering plant, right around the office. It's pollinated by sunbirds, brilliantly-colored close relatives of hummingbirds. The kopje is full of Marico Sunbirds in particular. They are always perched or hovering around the Lion's Claw while they drink its nectar.

Best of all, we get them out both the East...

...and West windows.

A few other birds were hanging around this morning, including thisTawny-flanked Prinia.

Finally, I watched a European Spotted Flycatcher sally forth to catch some tasty insects.
 


By that point, the emails had started flooding in, but the work day isn't so bad when you have all of this to watch out the window.


Sat, Feb 4, 2012

Stuck for a reason


As we drove out, helping one of our cars that got stuck right in front of our mess, we were lucky enough to accidentally bump into this beautiful young leopard. 
 
 
Close to where we met our ‘stuck - on - the - road colleague’ (no name of course!) suddenly this leopard crossed the road. As we stopped for a minute, he obviously wasn’t too happy with us.
 
 
Encounters like this always happen unexpectedly! So one thing we learned – never leave without your camera!
 

Wed, Feb 1, 2012

The gypsy leopard


Yes there are similarities between them: both have a distinctive pattern, both are solitary and both are found in the Serengeti - but that is where it ends.
 
 
The Leopard Tortoise is certainly less sought after than the regular leopard, but not less fascinating! Part of the ‘little 5’ this reptile is common to the area around Lamai Serengeti. A strict herbivore,feeding mainly on mixed types of grasses it seems to provide the Leopard Tortoise with an exceptional health. It lives up to 100 years old!
 
 
Slowly wandering the endless Serengeti plains, the solitary tortoise is well approached. It’s known defence of retreating into its shell is a very interesting feature  to observe from close distance. Not many people know that, in doing so, often the Leopard Tortoise makes a hissing sound. Air is forced out of their lungs when all limbs and head make their way into the shell. As was the case with this little fellow.
 
 
Well worth to be added to your list of leopards!
 

Tue, Jan 31, 2012

Quicker than the click!

It’s always like that! You see something spectacular but you haven’t got it on camera. And its teh same here too! However, the remaining result is still worth showing.
 
 
As the fabulous Hamer kop or Hammerhead (...now that needs no explanation?) chooses a boulder on the banks of the river Mara to fish from,  we wondered ourselves how this bird managed to keep a grip in the moving water.
 
 
And as we were wondering it struck! Bang! A tiny little fish was caught & eaten before we could even click our camera...
 
Sitting on the banks of this mighty river is such a joy. Not once have we not seen interesting things!

Sat, Jan 28, 2012

Seeing is believing!

Some things you have to indeed see in order to believe it. So let me take you back in time a little, to December 4th, 2011 to be precise.

With the Festive season on the horizon, a group of four guest made it to camp. Introduced as Kevin, Kathy, Aaron and Monica we quickly figured out they had the most awesome safari already. And they had only made their way to Lamai Serengeti from the airstrip...!

Seeing leopard on most of their game drives, they had a thrilling experience. As most leopards are shy and elusive, some of them can be pretty investigating too. When they told us the story of the leopard cub approaching their vehicle we surely thought it wasn't THAT close. Wow!


And what about this one? A leopard observing the Lamai Serengeti rooms from his rock.



So sometimes you just have to wait with blogging! Would anyone have believed this?

To Kevin, Kathy, Aaron and Monica many thanks to all four of you of sending these great pictures. And sharing these great dinners together! 

Wed, Jan 25, 2012

Safari Tip No.1

What do you do when you are on amazing drive in the northern Serengeti and you spot this magical leopard sitting on top of a rock...and then your camera battery gives up?!

You make the very best of it and become creative!

And so Paul & Cathy Kalenian thought for a minute. Took out their iPad and made a shot using its camera.



Looking at the result, this is where inventiveness kicked in.

Paul grabbed their binoculars added and connected it to the Ipad with an empty toilet paper roll!

And see the amazing difference of this ingenuity!!



















 

Mon, Jan 23, 2012

A 180 degrees view


This is the Lamai Wedge, a 40 minute drive from Lamai Serengeti, yesterday late afternoon. When the sun sunk away ever further into the west, we stopped the car, stuck our heads out of the vehicle and simply gazed at the thriving activity in the plains. Left, right, so many things were happening. 
 
Have a look from left to right...
 
 
So what is it that happens to you when you gaze at this magical wilderness?
 
 
Is it the sense of another world? One in which we don't rule?
 
 
Whatever it is, being out there is such a great experience. 
 
 
Come and join the lucky few!
 
 
 
 

Sat, Jan 21, 2012

The rodent hoover


Beautiful and majestic, the Barn Owl is the most widespread of all owls and one of the most widespread of any bird species in the world. Found pretty much anywhere, it is often a very welcome guest just because of its diet.
 
 
Consuming more than one rodent a day, a nesting pair and heir young are known to consume over a 1.000 rodents a year! The main reason for its high volume diet is that the Barn Owl's metabolic rate is high, requiring more food than its counterparts.
 
Barn Owls consume more rodents than any other creature in theworld - you see the advantage of having it around?!
 
 
Fascinating to see, this bird out of a pair seem to have found its ‘barn’ on the veranda of one of our guest rooms. Often seen in the morning when it returns for resting, it’s seems not only to have developed a great taste for food!
 
 

Thu, Jan 19, 2012

All ears for 800,000 years

Known for its enormous ears, this woolly and very interesting little fox is a spectacular creature. Roaming the savannas of Africa since the mid Pleistocene era, the bat eared fox is equipped exactly for what it likes doing most. And that is hunting!
 
 
Though most of its diet consists of crunchy dung beetles, scorpions, millipedes and heaps of termites, this cunning little fox will eat small birds and rodents too. Since it prefers insects, often bat eared foxes are found close to herds of zebra and antelopes and feed on the insects that come along. And since we have plenty of those Lamai Serengeti offers a chance of seeing it!
 
 
But above all the bat eared fox is a very sociable creature and that makes it interesting to observe. Mated pairs interact all the time and are thought to be monogamous. Also bat eared foxes don’t mind sharing their territory with other foxes and often overlap. The highest density of bat eared foxes recorded is 72 in 1 square mile!
 

 
But ho! It’s not an easy animal to find. As in our case yesterday afternoon, it required a lot of looking out for an ear sticking out of the endless plain!


Rewarded with tons of interaction around their underground den, these two foxes ran, dug, played and jumped together.
 
A pleasure for the eye – and the camera!

Sun, Jan 15, 2012

Where time is non-existent

“Honey, what time did you say it is...?”
 
“It’s 1200 BC my dear”
 
Drive out a slight bit from Lamai Serengeti, or look out towards the north and east as you stand in your room on our kopje. We do guarantee you will have all the views you have ever wished for.
 
 
 
And even more than that.
 
Endless grassy plains keep rolling further only to meet distant mountain ranges that dot the far horizon. Views here reach up to anywhere between 60 and 80 km.
 
So striking and yet so unbelievable is the vast empty space that lies at your feet. Beautiful and wild as it has been ever before.
 
 
 
Now if you have managed to grasp all that, let us add someother unique qualities of this untouched place.
 
Herds of wild beasts roam these plains. No man made structures are in sight – anywhere. Night skies are littered with constellations and the moon can be as bright as you have never seen before.
 
 
Amongst all that nature, just a handful of lucky human beings that take the effort to visit this place. No masses, no lines of vehicles – only outright adventure.
 
Few places can capture that pre historic feeling. And even less, can make it come alive.
 
Meet you in Lamai Serengeti!
 
 

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