Lake Bogoria Safari
Lake Bogoria is a saline water shallow located at the northern region of the Kenyan Rift, 25 km south of Baringo. The reserve covers the lake and adjacent lands, with 107 km². In the Colony days the lake was known by the name of its discoverer, the Kampala bishop James Hannington, who in 1885 was the first European to sight this place while he was heading for his diocese following Thomson's route. This would be the glory day for the priest, but also his last journey, since upon reaching Lake Victoria he was murdered by order of the cruel king of Buganda, Mwanga II.   Lake Bogoria Lodge Safari - Lake Bogoria Camping Safari

   
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Lake Bogoria national park

Lake Bogoria Safaris

 AHSKL003 6 Days Amboseli | Naivasha| Masai Mara

LAKE BOGORIA NATIONAL PARK

North of Nakuru, Lake Bogoria is not often visited by tourists and yet it has stunning scenery. The shallow soda lake, which covers an area of 30 sq km, is shallow, with a maximum depth of 9 metres. Like other Kenyan soda lakes, it has no outlet and the intense evaporation has led to high levels of salt and minerals. As a result it has no fish but is rich in blue-green algae, which the flamingos love. It also has hot springs and geysers which spout and steam. Because of the extreme temperatures you need to be cautious and don't be tempted to put your hands into the water if you are at all fond of your skin. Lake Bogoria is just off the B4 between Nakuru and Lake Baringo.

Lake Bogoria
At the beginning of Kenya’s great Northern Wilderness lies Lake Bogoria.

The lake is the heart of an arid landscape, in the shadow of the dramatic walls of the Siracho Range. The soda waters of the lake attract massive flocks of Flamingo, and the lake is often carpeted with pink.

The 32 sq km lake is still volcanically active, and the Western shore is lined with spouting geysers, spurting steam and bubbling geothermal pools. Fresh water springs at the lake edge attract an abundance of birds and wildlife.

There are many Fish Eagles, which often prey on the local flamingos.

The shores are always lined with Gazelle, Zebra, Baboons and this is one of the best places to see Greater Kudu...


LAKE BOGORIA NATIONAL RESERVE
Lake Bogoria is a saline water shallow located at the northern region of the Kenyan Rift, 25 km south of Baringo. The reserve covers the lake and adjacent lands, with 107 km². In the Colony days the lake was known by the name of its discoverer, the Kampala bishop James Hannington, who in 1885 was the first European to sight this place while he was heading for his diocese following Thomson's route. This would be the glory day for the priest, but also his last journey, since upon reaching Lake Victoria he was murdered by order of the cruel king of Buganda, Mwanga II.
If Baringo is increasingly attracting more visitors because of its plentiful birdlife, Bogoria is, or at least it was until few years ago, a place where the visitor can enjoy the spectacular African scenery in full solitude. Except for ornithology lovers, who don't forgive the pilgrimage to Baringo, this region is quite off the most common itineraries, specially the one-weekers. The reason is that Bogoria is far from outstanding for its mammals' wildlife, the paramount objective for most tourists. Albeit, whether I had to choose a single park for which just the beauty of the landscape is worth a visit, it would probably be this one.

J.W. Gregory, the English geologist who travelled the region in 1892, blessed the site as "the most beautiful view in Africa". He wasn't off track. The lake displays a superb scenery of bluish hills populated with dry bush, grasslands and riverine forests, framing the calm water shallow pinned with flamingoes. Beyond the eastern shore, the soil rises abruptly to 600 m in the Laikipia Escarpment. At the opposite edge, the earth forms strangely coloured swampy crusts, which break up in deep gaps spitting stinky sulphur waters and steam jets. The close-up geysers, the pink brushstrokes of the flamingoes on the lake and farther the dramatic backdrop of the Laikipia Escarpment, convey a hardly beatable aesthetical composition. But watch out, don't get too close, the signposts warning "Stop - danger zone - go back" are serious: the earth collapses under your feet and beneath there is boiling water.
Bogoria is not even the least of a wildlife desert. Good wildlife fans will appreciate the unparalleled value of being the most accessible place in all the country where you have the chance to spot the majestic greater kudu. In addition to other mammals, flamingoes and a variety of birds fill up the wildlife supply of this reserve.

Starting from the North, Kenya's Rift Valley Soda Lakes are Bogoria, Nakuru, Elementeita and Magadi. Apart from alkalinity they all have one thing in common - flamingoes. Bogoria and Nakuru may at times have as many as a milliion flamingoes feeding there.

Lake Bogoria is dominated by the countless hot springs which pour boiling water into the sterile lake. Sterile, except for the massive flocks of Lesser Flamingos that flood into Bogoria each year. Millions of them have been recorded at peak times of the year and hundreds of thousands is common. Greater Famingo are also present, sometimes in thousands and Black-necked Grebe are usually present. Although no other birds could possibly stand the conditions that the Flamingos find rather pleasant (standing up to your knees in boiling, highly caustic, soda is guaranteed to strip the skin of most animals) there is, nevertheless, an abundance of raptors preying on the ready source of meat. Steppe Eagles, Fish Eagles and Tawny Eagles are present in amazing numbers. In fact, at times the eagles are so numerous you can see 8 or more in a single tree. Bogoria is also one of the places in Kenya which offers a reasonable chance of seeing the Greater Kudu.

In early 2000 there were a significant number of deaths among the lesser flamingo population at Lake Bogoria. There are reports about what happened and the possible causes by the BBC.

Lake Nakuru was the first place in Africa to be designated a National Park primarily because of the birds. It has a comparatively low concentration of salts (compared to the 'real' soda lakes) and it also supports a fish population. As a result the wildlife is very different although, in common with the other soda lakes, Nakuru is home to a very large population of Flamingos which go there to feed. In 1997 the lake was almost completely dried out, partly as a result of drought and partly as a result of large amounts of water being extracted upstream. The extremely heavy El Niño rains in 1998 saved the lake but the numbers of flamingoes are still not as high as they used to be. It is a marvellous place to see a wide range of waders including Avocet, while large rafts of Pelican can also be seen sweeping the water in unison (in a rather attractive pelican version of synchronised swimming!). Probably the best view of the lake is from Baboon Cliffs, the view alone is worth the drive but the road up to the cliffs also provides a chance to see a number of chats. Watch out for the baboons at the top, they'll grab anything they think might be edible. Lake Nakuru National Park is also home to the Kenyan Rhino conservation project - and so is an excellent place to see Rhino.

Continuing south down the Rift is Lake Elementeita which has a couple of places to stay fairly close to the shore. In the 1980s it dried out completely leaving a dry salt lake. Like the others it is usually inhabited by large numbers of flamingoes and, not being as alkaline as Bogoria, by large numbers of other water birds. It has Kenya's only breeding colony of Great White Pelicans and Great Crested Grebe have beeen seen there. Grey-crested Helmet-shrike and Jackson's Widowbwbird can be seen in the area around the Lake.

The most southerly, and most alkaline, of the Kenyan lakes is Magadi. The salt concentrations there are so high that they are mined commercially. Despite this there are quite a few birds which take advantage of the hot springs. As with the other salt lakes the most obvious birds are the flamingoes, which very, very occasionally breed there, but there are plenty of other birds including migrant waders from Europe and Asia such as Little Stint; more than 20,000 waterbirds can usually be seen there in January. Magadi is also about the only place in Kenya where the Chestnut-banded Plover can be seen regularly.

Still further South, in fact outside Kenya, is the world's most alkaline lake, Lake Natron. Lake Natron is inaccessible and inhospitable - unless you happen to be a flamingo; despite the fact that the temperature of the mud around the lake can reach 50° it's the only known breeding ground for East Africa's Lesser Flamingoes, although they do occasionally attempt to breed at Nakuru or Bogoria. The hot mud may help them to breed successfully by keeping predators away from the nests

Thank you and enjoy!.



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