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Masai Mara Balloon Safaris Kenya, Hot Air Balloon Safaris in Kenya, Balloon Safaris Masai Mara, Masai Mara Balloon Safaris, Serengeti Balloon Safaris, Balloon Safaris in Serengeti, Taita Hills Balloon Safaris, Hot air balloon, balloon Kenya
HOT AIR BALLOON SAFARIS
African Sermon Safaris 2005 -
2008. All rights reserved
© Copyright. Kenya House,
Koinange Street,
P.O. Box 51322 - 00200, Nairobi,
Kenya. Website:
www.continentalsafaris.com
tours@continentalsafaris.com
Tel: +254 20
244 068; Fax: +254 20 317 656; Mobile: +254 722 884 748
Masai Mara Balloon Safaris Kenya, Hot Air Balloon Safaris in Kenya, Balloon Safaris Masai Mara, Masai Mara Balloon Safaris, Serengeti Balloon Safaris, Balloon Safaris in Serengeti, Taita Hills Balloon Safaris, Hot air balloon, balloon Kenya.
African hot air balloon safari experience:
Hot air balloon flights take place in scenic beauty of Maasai Mara. A gentle ascent takes you well above tree-top level and the whispering light breeze soothes the hearts as you enjoy a panoramic view of wildlife drama unequalled anywhere in the whole wide world. Thrilling drama of nature’s battle of predators verses the preys, that is constantly displayed in the savanna grassland from time immemorial. It’s worthy your dollar!
Remember to put on practical clothes, preferably cotton, a sweater will shield
you against sometimes windy flights. Sturdy shoes are necessary. Sunglasses and
camera to catch the real drama will come in handy.
SERENGETI BALLOON SAFARI
An exclusive excursion over the Serengeti plains, offering unparalleled
panoramic views of the awe-inspiring landscape. A very popular excursion for
those of our clients willing to spend that little bit extra, and can be added on
to any safari that includes a night in the Serengeti, at any of the lodges. Only
two balloons fly each
Masai Mara Balloon Safari
Close your eyes, and for a moment feel your body lift up, with you having no
control over it, and there is a certain part of you, inside you, saying to
yourself, I am crazy for taking this balloon safari. This is what most people
feel, when the excitement of a Masai Mara hot air balloon safari crosses one's
emotion of self-control and independence.
You trip begins when you get your wake up call at your safari lodge or tented
camp in the early hours of the morning, as you yawn away, and thoughts about
your wildlife viewing from an elevated position begins to stir your mind. The
fresh Kenyan traditional hot tea and coffee quickly awaken you, in fact
preparing you for a "mission".
THE MASAI MARA MIGRATION OF WILDEBEESTS:
The Wildebeest arrive at the Mara River around July and cross over onto the
Masai Mara plains. The wildebeest remain here until October, when they return to
Tanzania. Gazetted in 1961, the Reserve is located west of the Rift Valley and
is a natural extension of the Serengeti plains. The Mara River, the reserve's
backbone, traverses north to south. This river course is the natural barrier
crossed every year by the large herds of wildebeest and zebra during their
migration.
May & June
In late May, the herds leave the Western Corridor for the northern Serengeti
plains and woodlands. The fresh, tender and mineral-rich pastures on the other
side of the humans' border, in Masai Mara, are the irresistible bait for the
animals to finally invade the Kenyan reserve, an event which usually starts in
late June to early July. The troops coming from the south meet here another
migratory contingent: the resident wildebeest herds of the Mara region. These
animals reside in the Loita Plains and Hills, northeast of the Mara, until the
dry season brings the tougher days and it is time to seek the evergreen Mara
basin.
July to October
Throughout the month of July, the herds cross the Sand River, a mostly dry
tributary of the Mara which roughly follows the boundary line between Kenya and
Tanzania. The parade takes the eastern sector of Masai Mara, surrounding the
Keekorok Lodge area. The trek follows westward, leading the herds to face the
major challenge along their quest: crossing the Mara river and frequently also
its tributary, the Talek. By then, the rains at the Mau Escarpment, where the
Mara rises, have fed the stream to its highest levels.
The steep banks are populated with trunk-looking basking crocodiles that
seem almost to be expecting their annual banquet. The operation of fording the
river is the most delicate along the migration, and as such seems to plunge the
gnus in a state of anxiety that only relieves when the whole herd has crossed.
The trekkers walk along the left (eastern) bank of the Mara looking for a
suitable point to cross. There are plenty of preferred crossings along the
course, which are easily identifiable by the lack of vegetation, the depressed
slopes and the deep grooves carved by the animals' hooves. These are the most
secure places to ford the river, those that ensure a minimal mortality.
Nonetheless, the apparent programming of the whole process sometimes seems to
collapse, and the nervous herds occasionally choose places where the banks are
too steep and many of the animals break their legs down the cliff or fall flat
into the waters. The herds gather at the suitable points and wander around
nervously, their grunts sounding loud in the air. Eventually, one animal takes
the lead and approaches the rim, scanning the opposite edge to analyze if any
danger awaits after the crossing. When it finally dives into the stream, this
seems to haul the rest of the herd. More animals follow in a single line across
the river, while the lagged ones throw themselves towards the stream until the
rearguard pushes the troops to a frantic race that ends up with some animals
trampled to death, lying aside the course. Along the boreal summer, the
crossings repeat over and over, and the survivors graze peacefully on the Mara
Triangle grasslands unless disturbed by the early-morning and late-evening hunts
of lion and cheetah, the latter preying on the calves.
By October, the rains are heading south back to the Serengeti. This is when
the pace of the march reverses, bringing the herds to face once more the quest
for the southern grasslands. The rite of fording the river is again part of
nature's call. In the last days of October, the migration heads towards the vast
plains of the southern Serengeti, where a new generation of calves will be born
to start the cycle of life all over again. Normally the route is down the
eastern side and the pace is fast. Quite often a million animals can be seen
stretched out.
Serengeti National Park:
Serengeti is easily Tanzania’s most famous national park, and it’s also the
largest, at 14,763 square kilometres of protected area that borders Kenya’s
Masai Mara Game Park. Its far-reaching plains of endless grass, tinged with the
twisted shadows of acacia trees, have made it the quintessential image of a wild
and untarnished Africa. Its large stone kopjes are home to rich ecosystems, and
the sheer magnitude and scale of life that the plains support is staggering.
Large prides of lions laze easily in the long grasses, plentiful families of
elephants feed on acacia bark and trump to each other across the plains, and
giraffes, gazelles, monkeys, eland, and the whole range of African wildlife is
in awe-inspiring numbers.
The annual wildebeest migration through the Serengeti and the Masai Mara
attract visitors from around the world, who flock to the open plains to witness
the largest mass movement of land mammals on the planet. More than a million
animals make the seasonal journey to fresh pasture to the north, then the south,
after the biannual rains. The sound of their thundering hooves, raising massive
clouds of thick red dust, has become one of the legends of the Serengeti plains.
The entire ecosystem thrives from the annual migration, from the lions and birds
of prey that gorge themselves on the weak and the faltering to the gamut of
hungry crocodiles that lie in patient wait at each river crossing for their
annual feed.
But it’s not just the wildebeest who use the Serengeti as a migratory
pathway. The adjacent reserves of Maswa and Ikorongo, the Ngorongoro
Conservation Area, and the Masai Mara Game Reserve in Kenya all allow the
animals and birds of the area a free range of movement to follow their seasonal
migrations. Indeed, in the wake of the wildebeest migration, many of the less
attention-grabbing features of the Serengeti are often overlooked. The park has
varied zones in which each ecosystem is subtly different . Seronera in the
centre of the park is the most popular and most easily visited area. The Grumeti
River in the Western Corridor is the location for the dramatic river crossing
during the wildebeest migration. Maswa Game Reserve to the south offers a remote
part of the park rewarding in its game-viewing and privacy, and Lobo near the
Kenyan border offers a change to see plentiful game during the dry season.
Aside from traditional vehicle bound safaris, hot-air ballooning over the
Serengeti plains has become a safari rite-of-passage for travel enthusiasts. The
flights depart at dawn over the plains and take passengers close over the
awakening herds of wildebeest and zebra, gazelle and giraffe. The extra altitude
allows guests to witness the striking stretches of plains punctuated only by
kopjes. Up in the sky, you have Africa all to yourself.