Trip Summary:
This is a short tour takes
you to visit Samburu National
Park a place of endless skies, dust-red plains and palm-fringed rivers,
Samburu National Reserve lies on the fringes of the vast and arid desert
once known as the Northern Frontier District, whose heat-scorched
scrublands extend all the way to the jade-green waters of Lake Turkana
and beyond. You will enjoy and experience nature, wildlife,
habit and habitat of fauna and flora in the natural area.
You will enjoy and experience nature, wildlife, habit and habitat of the
fauna and flora in the natural areas, also peoples and culture.
Availability 90%
Minimum Rate Per Adult: US$
Departing From: Nairobi
Duration: 3 Days / 2 Nights Samburu Budget Camping Safari Tour
Departure Time: 0800 Hrs (possible to leave earlier than)
Departures: Daily
Minimum Persons Required: 2
Accommodations: Budget CampBest Time: All round the year
3 Days Samburu Budget Camping
Safari Tours
A safari to the north via the high shoulder of Mountain Kenya to the
Game Reserve of Samburu. Here the Ewaso Nyiro River supports a wide
variety of game among them elephant, buffalo, cheetah leopard, lion,
grevy's zebra, reticulated giraffe, oryx and the long necked gerenuk.
This park is popular for the 3 cats.
Day 1. Nairobi - Samburu
Depart Nairobi and drive North past coffee plantations via MT. Kenya to
Samburu National Park. Picnic lunch and game drive en route Dinner and
overnight at the campsite.
Day 2. Samburu
Full day spent exploring the park. Morning and afternoon game drives are
offered .Dinner and overnight stay at a campsite. The highlights of
Samburu game reserve is the spectacular scenic beauty, rivers and
forests. It is an area where the local people have a rich and colorful
heritage. The reserves have numerous permanent springs and a wealth of
wildlife which includes leopard, hippo, elephant, lion, reticulated
giraffe, grevy’s zebra and crocodile in the Ewaso Nyiro River. Over 365
species of birds have been identified in the sanctuaries
Day 3. Samburu - Nairobi
Early morning game viewing, After breakfast proceed to Nairobi with game
drive en route out of the Park. arriving Nairobi late afternoon.
Price Per Person Sharing US$
Package Includes:
-Transport in a 9 seater custom made Tour van with a pop up roof - each
person is guaranteed a window seat
- Services of a professional English, Spanish, German speaking guides
- Game drives as per the itinerary
- Game parks or national parks entry fees;
- Accommodations in Tents
- Three meals per day whilst on safari, prepared by our cook
- 1 litre Mineral water per person per day
- Complimentary return airport transfers in Nairobi
Price excludes:
- Drinks
- Tipping
-sleeping bags
- Cultural visits to Samburu villages – costs US$ 25
- Personal effects
- Kenya Visas
- Hotel accommodation in Nairobi before and after the safari
Samburu is home to large herds of elephants and elusive leopards. It is also well known for providing the opportunity to see wildlife that only lives in the dry north of Kenya. Your safari wouldn't be complete without seeing a gerenuk - an odd yet distinguished gazelle with a long neck, which stands on its hind legs to feed.
Samburu
Safaris and Tours
Samburu, Buffalo Springs and Shaba National Reserves
Samburu National Reserve lies 325 km north of Nairobi in the hot and
arid fringes of the vast northern region of Kenya. The Reserve is within
the lands of the colourful Samburu people, close relatives of the Maasai,
and harbours a number of wildlife species rarely found elsewhere in any
numbers. These include Grevy's zebra, the reticulated giraffe and the
Beisa oryx all species found only north of the equator. The long-necked
gerenuk is a graceful antelope which spends much of its time in a
bi-pedal stance seeking succulence among the withered scrub which dots
this harsh terrain. Scenically and faunally dramatic, for most of the
year Samburu is sere under the unsympathetic equatorial sun. But relief
comes from the wide swathe of the Ewaso Ngiro River which rises some
hundreds of kilometres to the west on the foothills of the Aberdares and
which vanishes beyond Samburu in the recesses of the Lorian swamp.
The river is at its best in the Reserve, broad and sluggish with a large
population of crocodile seen on sandbanks at almost every bend. In the
lower reaches, where permanent pools have formed as a tributary joins
the river, are hippo. The river is fringed with giant acacias, figs and
doum palms all of which provide shade and sustenance to the wildlife
which comes to water. Elephant roam the gaunt hills which punctuate the
scrubland and where occasional clusters of the vividly coloured desert
rose challenge the arid surroundings. These elephant seek solace and
contentment in the shallow waters of the river and from time to time a
visitor finds herds bathing and drinking in a spectacle of unconscious
pleasure.
ANIMALS & BIRDS
The reserves are relatively small and animals are easy to find, with a
number of weird and wonderful species endemic to this area. Notably the
gerenuk - also known as the 'giraffe necked antelope' because of its
ridiculously stretched neck adapted for browsing high into the bushes.
Another local inhabitant is the Grevy's zebra, which resembles an ass
with wide stripes that don't quite go all the way under the belly.
Reticulated giraffes are different from their southern cousins in their
perfectly arranged pattern. A very common dwarf antelope in these parts
is the tiny dik dik, who is devoted to its mate for its entire lifetime.
Many other species exist in these reserves and large crocs and hippos
inhabit the river. Leopard, lion, cheetah and hyena are found here and
an unusual treat is that leopards are commonly seen in daylight.
Birds are numerous and 365 species have been recorded in Buffalo Springs
reserve.
SEASONS
Temperatures reach 104°F (40°C) in the day with a low of 68°F (20°C) at
night
Rainy Season: It may rain anytime during the hot months of April to
June, then again in November and December. November is usually the
wettest month.
Dry Season: January through to March are very hot and dry, and again
from July to October. July is normally the driest month.
SAMBURU-SHABA-BUFFALO SPRINGS SPECIALITIES
· Gerenuk 'giraffe necked' antelope
· Reticulated giraffe
· Grevy's zebra
· Riverside lodges
· Leopards in daylight
· Samburu people
FACTS
Location: Kenya
Area: 4,007,076 hectares (15,471 square miles)
Key features: Mt. Kenya National Park; Laikipia; Samburu National
Reserve; Buffalo Springs National Reserve; Shaba National Reserve
The altitude of this area is between 2,500-4,000 feet (762-1,219 metres)
This is a malarial area
Systems
Acacia-grassland savanna mosaic
Ewaso Nyiro River and watershed
Elephant migration corridors
Ecological Communities
Intact wet montane forest
Dry montane (cedar) forest
Loroki plateau grassland
Species Assemblages
Northern specialist species (reticulated giraffe, somali ostrich, oryx,
gerenuk)
Free ranging large predators (lions, hyenas, leopards)
Semi-endemic avifauna
Species
African wild dog
Grevy's zebra
Black rhino
Buffalo Springs
National Reserve
Buffalo Springs National Reserve is separated from the Samburu Reserve
by the river; less hilly and less dense than its neighbour it is equally
as attractive. The Reserve takes its name from an oasis of limpid
crystal clear water at the western end of the sanctuary. In addition to
the wildlife found in Samburu the common zebra is also an attraction
often marching with its cousin the Grevy, although they do not
interbreed. An unexplained phenomenon is why the common zebra is not
found on the north side of the river. Birdlife, too, is prolific with
the Somali ostrich dominating the plains. Larger than its southern
relative the Maasai ostrich it is more easily distinguished by its
indigo legs and neck. Next in size is the kori bustard who stands a
metre high. His behaviour is unpredictable, at times running or
crouching at the first sign of danger and at others completely fearless
of humans. The male has a remarkable display inflating his neck and neck
feathers until the head seems to disappear then raising his tail until
it lies along his back.
Shaba National Reserve
These two reserves, with Shaba which lies east of the road linking
Isiolo with Marsabit, form a trio of unusual and attractive game
sanctuaries very different from others in Kenya. Shaba has a particular
place in the history of Kenya game conservation for it was in this
reserve that the authoress, Joy Adamson, was murdered early in 1980, her
trilogy of books on the rehabilitation of the compliant leopard to a
wild environment unfinished. The reserve takes its name from a massive
cone of volcanic rock which dominates the region and evidence of the
intensity of its upheaval is demonstrated by the formidable lava flow
which the traveler has to cross to reach the reserve and the lodge. The
Reserve's northern boundary is marked by the wide, sauntering motion of
the Ewaso Ngiro on its way to Chanler's Falls and beyond to its final
destination at the Lorian Sw& the tall doum palms which mark its course
in silent contrast to the rugged and pitted tracts which make up much of
the sanctuary. Many small hills dot the landscape and with four springs
Shaba is better watered than its neighbours.
Heavy downpours during the rainy months may render the already rough
tracks accessible only for four-wheel drive vehicles. But this only
serves to make the 220 sq km reserve even more of a getaway delight. And
that is the essence of Shaba. It is a place for the connoisseur, where
the quality of the experience exceeds the quantity of wildlife.
Samburu has major activities like camel
riding walking single file along a dry
riverbed, you realise you are in a pretty parched area. The three
National Reserves of Samburu, Buffalo Springs and Shaba are at the
beginning of the dry north where camels become commonplace.
However, it is not a completely parched area as it is watered by the
Uaso Nyiro River or 'River of Brown Water' in Samburu. This is an
essential and sometimes erratic water source for all the inhabitants,
including a considerable amount of wildlife in the reserves and Samburu
cattle and goats.
Out of the north Kenyan tribes of Samburu, Rendille, Turkana and Borana,
the Samburu dominate this area. To the uninformed eye they could be
confused with the Maasai - for they are closely related and wear similar
bright clothing and jewellery and have the same cultural beliefs. They
continue their nomadic pastoralist lifestyle as they have done for
hundreds of years.
The scrub desert, desiccated savannah and small hills of this region
create overriding colours of muted greens, dusty creams, sand yellow,
earthen ochre and every shade of brown. Perfect camouflage colours for
the many animals that inhabit these parks.
Samburu the heart of Kenya
Located just north of the equator in the rain-shadow of Mt. Kenya, this
Heartland includes parts of Mt. Kenya National Park and Samburu National
Reserve, plus extensive ranch and communal lands. Important elephant
migration corridors exist in this Heartland, as well as northern
specialty species like reticulated giraffe, Somali ostrich, beisa oryx
and gerenuk. Free-ranging lions, hyenas and leopards live along side
avifauna, wild dogs, Grevy's zebra and black rhinoceros. Intact wet
montane forests, dry cedar forests, Loroki plateau grassland,
acacia-grassland and the Ewaso Nyiro River are part of the Samburu
Heartland.
TRIBES & PEOPLE GROUPS
SAMBURU
The Samburu are related to the Masai although they live just above the
equator where the foothills of Mount Kenya merge into the northern
desert and slightly south of Lake Turkana in the Rift Valley Province of
Kenya.
They are semi-nomadic pastoralists whose lives revolve around their
cows, sheep, goats, and camels. Milk is their main stay; sometimes it is
mixed with blood. Meat is only eaten on special occasions. Generally
they make soups from roots and barks and eat vegetables if living in an
area where they can be grown.
Most dress in very traditional clothing of bright red material used like
a skirt and multi-beaded necklaces, bracelets and earrings, especially
when living away from the big cities.
The Samburu developed from one of the later Nilotic migrations from the
Sudan, as part of the Plains Nilotic movement. The broader grouping of
the Maa-speaking people continued moving south, possibly under the
pressure of the Borana expansion into their plains. Maa-speaking peoples
have lived and fought from Mt. Elgon to Malindi and down the Rift Valley
into Tanzania. The Samburu are in an early settlement area of the Maa
group.
Those who moved on south, however (called Maasai), have retained a more
purely nomadic lifestyle until recently when they have also begun
farming. The expanding Turkana ran into the Samburu around 1700 when
they began expanding north and east.
The language of the Samburu people is also called Samburu. It is a Maa
language very close to the Maasai dialects. Linguists have debated the
distinction between the Samburu and Maasai languages for decades.
Generally between five and ten families set up encampments for five
weeks and then move on to new pastures. Adult men care for the grazing
cattle which are the major source of livelihood. Women are in charge of
maintaining the portable huts, milking cows, obtaining water and
gathering firewood. Their houses are of plastered mud or hides and grass
mats stretched over a frame of poles. A fence of thorns surrounds each
family's cattle yard and huts.
Their society has for long been so organized around cattle and warfare
(for defense and for raiding others) that they find it hard to change to
a more limited lifestyle. The purported benefits of modern life are
often undesirable to the Samburu. They remain much more traditional in
life and attitude than their Maasai cousins.
Duties of boys and girls are clearly delineated. Boys herd cattle and
goats and learn to hunt, defending the flocks. Girls fetch water and
wood and cook. Both boys and girls go through an initiation into
adulthood, which involves training in adult responsibilities and
circumcision for boys and clitoridectomy for girls.
Luxury
Accommodations in Samburu
Samburu Serena Safari Lodge
This safari lodge is situated on the fertile banks of the Uaso Nyiro
River, in the centre of the Samburu Game Reserve in Kenya's rugged,
semi-arid Northern Province.
Samburu Intrepids Club Samburu Intrepids Club
Samburu Intrepids is set in the semi-arid desert in the quiet western
section of Samburu National Reserve. The luxury-tented camp is shaded by
acacias at the Uaso Nyiro River and forms a cool oasis and creates a
romantic setting.
Samburu Sopa Safari Lodge
Samburu Sopa Lodge is built overlooking the wildlife-rich banks of the
Ewaso Nyiro river, and is comprised of 60 en-suite rooms, all with
balconies from which to view the hills, plains and river.
Larsen's Samburu Larsen's Samburu
Located north of Nairobi, Larsen's is a small luxurious tented camp set
in lush lawns on the banks of the Uaso Nyiro River.
Samburu Lodge Samburu Lodge
Samburu Lodge is situated on the Uaso Nyiro River bank with a backdrop
of mountains and its own indigenous animals, unique to the region.
Elsa's Kopje - Samburu
Elsa’s Kopje has been named after the famous lioness reared by George &
Joy Adamson from the movie fame "Born Free", as she frequented this area
often.
Sarova Shaba Samburu
Located in the Shaba National Park is Sarova Shaba. The park is home to
a host of wildlife, unique to the area, including the reticulated
giraffe, grevy's zebra, gerenuk, oryx and ostrich.
