Lake Bogoria Safari
LAKE BARINGO: Hippo footprints at the land that skirts Lake Baringo more pictures of Baringo.
Lake Baringo is part of the Great Rift valley, the earth’s great scar, which in Kenya is fringed by a number of lakes. After the very big Turkana, Baringo is the northern most and second to none in area, having 130Km2. And with Naivasham, Baringo provides the only fresh water shallow in the Kenyan Rift.   Lake Baringo Lodge Safari - Lake Baringo Camping Safari

   
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Lake Baringo national park

The lake is not officially graded as a conservated area, but it is the home for over 400 bird species that offer the region its main attraction. The lake is or was a quiet and lonely oasis fixed firmly in steeps and land that has prescience of the northern desert. Till the end of the 19th century, both Baringo and Bogoria were only visited by the slaves who travelled together; the remains of Fort Baringo, far back as these years, are seen and found there. The lake was first set forth in words by Joseph Thomson in 1883. After a period of 9 years, in 1892, J.W. Gregory the English geologist explained the creation of the rift valley from his observation at Baringo.

6 Days: Lake Bogoria - Lake Baringo - Lake Nakuru Safaris - Masai Mara Camping Safari

Day 1 Nairobi - Lake Bogoria

After breakfast, depart to Lake Bogoria Game Reserve. Lunch en-route. Lake Bogoria is famous because of thousands of Flamingo and the hot springs. Proceed to Lake Baringo for overnight in the camp.

Day 2  Lake Baringo

After breakfast spend the morning at leisure in Lake Baringo. After lunch enjoy a boat ride to the Njemp Island.  Dinner and overnight ate the camp

Day 3: After breakfast depart to Lake Nakuru National Park. This lake is famous for its Flamingos but there are other types of birds living and feeding there. and offers a wide variety of small game such as Rhino, Waterbuck, Impala, Gazelle and Buffalo. All meals will be provided at the mobile campsite. Overnight at Nakuru.

Day 4:
Depart to Masai Mara Game Reserve. You will cross the valley floor to Narok entering Hemingway's country “Serengeti Plains”. By late afternoon you will have arrived at the campsite and have time for a game drive before being served dinner and overnight rest.

Day 5:
Full day in the reserve on game viewing. Game to be seen includes Zebra, Giraffe, Antelopes, Hyena and virtually every type of wildlife available in Kenya. It is home to all the big five (Elephant, Buffalo, Lion, Leopard, and the Rhino). Besides mammals, over 350 bird species have been recorded here. Dinner and overnight at the Campsite.

Day 6:
Early morning pre-breakfast game drive in the park. After breakfast depart to Nairobi .

Lake Baringo Safaris, Lake Baringo Camping Safari, Lake Baringo Lodge Safari

Lake Baringo is at the threshold of Northern Kenya, and its freshwaters are an oasis in the arid plains.

Lake Baringo is the most northerly of the Rift Valley Lakes. It can be reached from Nairobi in a day or you can break the journey by stopping at Lake Nakuru or Lake Naivasha - both worth a visit in their own right. From the other side it can be reached from Samburu. Some guides recommend that if you're coming from Samburu you should stop at Maralal to break the journey, it can be done in a single day (we've done it several times) but be prepared for a hot, dusty, bumpy and long trip (7-8 hours). Once you get there there's a couple of hotels, one on an island in the lake, and a camp site to stay at.

This is the traditional home of the Njemps tribe, a unique people who are the only pastoral, cattle herding, tribe who also fish. Among other pastoral tribes such as the Maasai, eating fish is a taboo.

The 129 sq km lake is well stocked with fish, and attracts many Pelicans, Cormorants and Fish Eagles. The Lake is also well populated with Crocodile.

The lake itself is truly beautiful, surrounded by volcanic ranges that stretch as far as the eye can see.

At the lakes heart is Ol Kokwe Island, a stark rocky island that is home to Njemps villages and a well appointed camp. This is an excellent base for exploring the lake, with boat trips ideal for bird and hippo spotting.

Baringo is an ideal stopover on a safari to Northern Kenya.


The lake is fed by two rivers, El Molo and Ol Arabel and has no obvious outlet, despite this it's is one of only two freshwater lakes (it is in fact slightly saline, but not enough to bother the crocs, hippos or people who swim in it) in the Great Rift Valley in Kenya. The climate in the region is generally hot and dry and away from the lake shore the surrounding countryside appears quite barren. However the imposing cliffs house a variety of bird life and are also home to the Rock Hyrax (a small rodent-like mammal). The Hyrax are really rather endearing and quite interesting to watch, but from a birders perspective they are of interest as the favourite food of Vereaux's Eagle, which as a result are sometimes seen soaring over the basalt cliffs near the West shore of the lake. The scrub around the edges of the lake also has some interesting birds -if you can find them. Heuglin's or Three-banded courser is not uncommon and you may also be able to see Lichtenstein's Sand-grouse and the Spotted thick-knee. Your best chance of finding them in the scrub is with a local guide, but beware, a number of the "guides" will promise to show you a phoenix if that's what you're interested in - at a price of course.

While it lacks the spectacle of some of its saline neighbours such as Lake Bogoria and Lake Nakuru with their huge flocks of flamingos, it more than makes up for this with the sheer variety of birdlife to be found in and around its shores. (It's also very well placed for a daytrip to Lake Bogoria.) More than 470 species have been recorded there in total, and more than 300 have been recorded in a single day. A recent bird census, carried out in two three hour spells on consecutive days recorded just over 280 species in the 6 hours, and that was outside the main periods for northern or southern migrants. While you're unlikely to see all 470+ species in a short visit, there are plenty of birds to be seen even by novice birders. Pale and dark phase Gabar Goshawk, Paradise Flycatcher, African Fish Eagles, Marabou Storks, Shikra and White-faced Scops Owl are amongst the regular sightings, while some the less common birds that can be seen there include Hemprich's Hornbill (along the cliffs), the African Darter and occasionally the African Skimmer.

The Gabar Goshawks are an interesting local fixture. Lake Baringo Club has a pair which have been nesting in the grounds for a few years now. The pair is made up of a pale phase female and a dark phase male, in each of the years they have nested there they have raised 2 chicks, one pale and one dark! The presence of nesting Hamerkops also gives you the opportunity to see some of the other birds which take advantage of the extraordinary constructions that these birds build. Since 1999 this includes a pair of Grey Kestrel that have taken up residence in a Hamerkop nest, an unusual sighting since these birds are only occasionally seen this far east in Kenya.

The lake used to boast a large Goliath Heronry but, although Goliaths are still breeding around the lake, the Heronry has disappeared. Zimmerman does describe the Goliath breeding as being "sporadic" around this area so maybe this vanishing act is only temporary!

The Baringo district is also at about the most southerly (and easterly) end of the range for Jackson's Hornbill, although they are still very common in the area. Further south and east these birds are replaced by Von der Decken's Hornbill which they closely resemble (except that they have white spotted wings). Some authorities consider the 2 to be conspecific.

Thank you and enjoy!.



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