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Meru national park
Kenya
Meru National Park is wild and
beautiful covering 870 Sq. Kms, 348 Kms from
Nairobi. It stands on the equator and watered by 13
rivers and numerous mountain-fed streams, it is an
especially beautiful area of Kenya, and safaris into
Meru national park is of good value. It has diverse
scenery from woodlands at 3,000 feet on the slopes
of Nyambeni Mountain Range, northeast of Mount
Kenya, to wide open plains with wandering riverbanks
dotted with doom palms. Opened in 1968 the park
accommodates lions, elephants, cheetahs, leopards
and some of the rarer antelopes like Lesser Kudus,
duikers and Dik Diks, one of Africa's smallest
antelopes.
Large prides of lions can be seen
on safari and some of Kenya's largest
herds of buffalo. The rivers abound with hippos and
crocodiles, fishing for barbus and catfish is
permitted at camp sites and along the Tana River. In
the mid 1980's, the Park suffered from poaching,
however Kenya Wildlife Service armed wildlife
security patrols have driven out the poachers.
The elephant populations has
stabilized with breeding herds settling down.
The park is 1.000 -3,400 Ft.
above sea level and over 300 species of birds have
been recorded including, the Peter's Finfoot which
inhabits the Murera and Ura Rivers, the Pel's
Fishing Owl, kingfishers, rollers, bee-eaters,
starlings and numerous weavers. It is this Park that
is the famous setting for Joy Adamson's "Born Free"
book, the story of the Adamson's life and research
amongst lions and cheetah. "Elsa" the lioness was
the most well-known and her grave is marked here.
One lodge and two tented camps are planned inside
the Park. There are eight special campsites which
must be pre-booked, one public campsite, Kenya
Wildlife Service self-help banda and Leopard Rock
bandas (total 120 beds).
On the border of Meru National
Park is
Bisinadi National Reserve. Known as 'Kinna',
the border between Meru and Bisanadi Parks is the
traditional division between the Meru and Boran
tribes. The Reserve was opened in September 1979 and
occupies an area of 606 square kilometers. A true
wilderness area without any accommodation it is only
accessible by 4WD vehicles. There is an airstrip at
Korbessa. Another area made famous by the Adamsons
is Kora National
Park. Opened in October 1989, 280 kilometers
northeast of Nairobi, it is an easy outing from Meru
National Park.
Covering an area of 1,787 square
kilometers, bounded by the Tana River, George
Adamson's camp was here until he died. A feature is
the sudden appearance of lush green "oases",created
by the lines of doum palms which shelter the banks
of the Tana River. Striking are the Inselbergs -
isolated rocky outcrops covered in vegetation which
create random islands above the plains. Kora is home
to diverse wildlife with more than 20 species of
fish being recorded, 500 species of insect, 33
molluscs and 40 reptiles. Species on display
includes elephants, Lesser Kudus, wild dogs, striped
and spotted hyenas, leopards and cheetahs.
Other regional Parks include
Rahole National Reserve, offering a wide variety
of plains game, hippos, crocodiles and excellent
bird viewing. Also Mwingi National Reserve,
formerly North Kitui has hippos, crocodiles,
buffalos and warthogs among other species.
• Accommodation
options at The Meru national park are:
Elsas kopje lodge
Leopard rock lodge
*Budget accommodation at Meru national park would be
the public camp site.
*See
other relevant
general information on Kenya
tour.
Nairobi hotels
Mombasa Kenya
Safaris in Kenya.
List of
budget camping safaris in Kenya
Africa safaris.
Accommodation in Kenya
The masai mara
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Lamu island Kenya
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