Рет қаралды 333
#buffalo #lioness #nakuru #lakenakuru #rhino #twohornedrhinos
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On day three of the Great Mara trip, we set off with Ali to Nakuru National Park.
Lake Nakuru is one of Kenya's most famous Rift Valley lakes.
We could observe three of the Big 5 for which the Mara is famous, at close quarters.
Sandwiched between the buffaloes and the warthogs, the rhino has sensed our presence.
Look at the massive horns of this prehistoric animal, the two horned rhino.
At the Lion Hill, two lionesses are on the lookout for prey.
The African Buffalo. The Oxpecker birds have a symbiotic relationship with the Buffaloes, meaning
both benefit from each other.
The birds eat ticks, dead tissue, etc. They also clean buffalo's ears and nostrils. Free service by birds, but sometimes they are too bothersome.
This male ostrich came strutting out proudly.
Lake Nakuru is famous for the gathering of millions of flamingos, but this year the rising waters have made the flamingos go away to shallower waters in Lake Elementanta.
Pelicans, storks and Eagles outnumbered flamingos.
Here is a marabou stork, a scavenger bird, surrounded by yellow-billed storks.
The spotted hyena is a great scavenger too. His role in keeping the park clean
is unmatched. Here, a pack of hyenas are busy, polishing off the remains of a kill.
Behind the zebra is the endangered Rothschild giraffe. The Masai giraffe is also there.
The Eland looks on gracefully. The light is excellent.
The wildebeest has also sensed our presence.
Boys Club of Impalas.
In the day's Safari, we have seen three animal species that are difficult to hunt. The remaining two of the Big Five are reserved for tomorrow.
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