Kenya January, 2025
Conservation, ecotourism and birding (avitourism) have a close relationship in Kenya.
The whole story sounds like a joyous one, its long and complicated, and growing!
Of course, being a conservation scientist, I find the experiance of visiting Kenya with Kenyan experts invaluable. This time we spent a wonderful six days familiarization trip and explored some of these important conservation aspects. We were participating in a project to explore citizen science promotion in protected areas and wetland areas. This work follows our first trip in Kenya in 2024 (which I detailed with 8 posts on this blog...use 'search' button - 'Kenya' - to find them on this blog...).
JANUARY 2025 TRIP
Some points on ecotourism development in this country that I find interesting:
- Birding
is amazing in Kenya (as it is in other East African countries I guess). Species diversity is high and fantastic-looking birds, many amazing non-passerines, are easy
to see espeically in open areas and wetlands.
- In my prespective, birding is not well promoted despite the presence of an excellent revised field guide book to East Africa, many eBird hotspots, many easy birds to see in combination with game spotting. Most tourism targets protected areas such as National Parks and private conservancies.
- Many
great birds are outside the NPs or other protected areas; but, there is no need to stay at the very pricey game lodges if you are on a budget. Tropical nature is everywhere if you can plan carefully.
- The open-cover (open habitat) protected areas and the typical game-spotting experiance also produce amazing bird lists. The vehicle is a 'hide' and you traverse extensive areas with constant stops; its a great birding introduction and incredibly easy to see lots of species up close. (Most people are looking mostly at large mammals; but they inevitablly see birds, some are shocked by the birds!). However, again, birds are not the main target...can this change?
Of course its not just birds and mammals, there are so many other biodiversity interests in this country, and the landscape and the agro-pastoral cultures. It is very interesting to me because in some way it the landscapes do have similarities to Mediterranean landscapes (i.e., goat/cattle grazing/ wood-gathering/ occupational wildfire influences).
Kenya Fam Trip 2025 details
First you may ask what a Fam trip is? A Familiarization trip for me is a field-based trip where me and my team participate in order to learn, collaborate, experience and think about what to do together with local experts on research items of common interest. It is like going ot a conference but with very specific targets on the research theme. This was my second trip to Kenya. Again we discovered that a self-guided trip of only 6 days can be extremely interesting for the naturalists involved. We found that a short-trip, a familiraization-educational trip like this can bequite easily done. However it needs a lot of preparation, pre-trip preparation.
These are the areas we visited this year:
·
Kuranguru
Coffee Estate near Thika (farm ponds and coffee plantations)
·
Chania
Falls at Blue Post Hotel and associated river habitats
·
Great
Sagana Resort (and the upper tributary of the great Tana River)
·
Naro
Moru Area (specifically near the Tree Hyrax Guesthouse and surroundings)
·
Ol
Pejeta Conservancy
·
Mount
Kenya National Park (Naro Moru Route Park Gate Area)
·
Nyahururu
Area
·
Lake
Nakuru National Park
·
Southern
Part of Lake Elementeita
·
Lake
Naivasha (northeastern shore only)
·
Mungo
Swamp (near Limuru)
·
Nairobi
National Park
Some snapshots follow:
| Lake Nakuru. This is near the airport landing strip where you can get out of the car and sit under the Yellow Fever Trees. Total bliss. |
| Lake Nakuru: African Harrier-hawk - Polyboroides typus, one of Africa's many amazing and unique raptors. |
| Lesser Flamingos at Lake Nakuru. |
| The morning scene at the southern edge of Lake Nakuru. |
| Inspecting agricultural wetlands at one of the coffee farm near Thika. Warmest thanks to the staff of Kuranguru Coffee Estate. |
| The Tree Hyrax Guesthouse on the lower slopes of Mount Kenya. This is a good base for the agro-pastoral and forest landscapes on the western slopes of the mountain. |
| Worldwide, there is no other place I know where a capital metropolis is so close to wildlife. |
| Lioness at Nairobi N.P. (We were so fortunate to find her on an intermittent stream-bed sunning herself). She was totally oblivious to the jeep. |
| Vassiliki Vlami and our researcher friends at Nairobi N.P. |
| Nairobi National Park. Of course we were interested in the landscape. Note the grazing patterns (and despite the lack of elephants here). |
| With our research friends at the Athi river in Nairobi N.P. |
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