Saturday, March 30, 2013

Serengeti


The night before the Serengeti, we stayed at heaven’s nature campsite.  We arrived well after dark and finally found a use for our flashlights.  When in Tanzania, there are a few items you should always have on hand.  These items include: flashlight, tampon/pads, antibacterial liquid &wipes, a hat, sunglasses and a neck/potty pillow…but I digress. 
My " dolphin potty pillow" and pillie, our friend on the trip
 

Upon arrival, we were greeted with the usual jambos, after which we were led to our tent(s).  We were told, 2 will stay in this one and that one over there shall host one.  Ofcourse J, nat and I looked at each other wondering who would draw the short straw.  It was going to be a long night for whom ever would be alone.  So we did the only logical thing to do.  We agreed to all snuggle our way into one tent.  Thankfully, the camp assistants came to our aid and moved a mattress from one tent to the next.   That night, my imagination went into high gear as I imagined all the amazing animals I would see at the Serengeti. 

At dawn, 5am, we woke up only to discover that the ‘other tent’ the one that was described as that tent there over there was really one 10 feet away.  The distance just seemed ominous at night. OOPS.  We had our first jungle showers in warm water baths, and took off!
 
The route to the Serengeti was unbelievable.  I imagine if God sneezed, and every single bacterium sprouted into an animal, that is how the path would look. The land was littered with wildebeest, zebra, gazelles, Ostriches, and warthogs, or Pumbas!  I convinced the driver to stop every2 feel which meant that we BARELY made the deadline for getting to the entrance and paying our park fees.  (3-330pm is the final check in time.)  Depressed I had missed ‘so many’ photo opportunities, I looked forward to our journey.  That day we headed straight to the camp and set up home.  Here we built our FIRST tent.  Infact, we built ours, our guide’s and our cook’s tent at the Tumbili campsite.  We had our dinners under the dull glow of a fluorescent lamp and made our bathroom visits, and went to sleep. 

 

I was awoken in the middle of the night.  “you guys, I”ve to pee.”  You would THINK I would be annoyed at having been woken up in the middle of the niht, but quite the contrary, I was thankful because I awoke to a cacophony of hyena calls within meters of our tent, a grunting wild buffalo, and an occasional lion yawn.  Suddenly, the silence of the night was broken by another voice.  Our guide, whom we had forced to position his tent within 1 foot of ours’ asked,  “are you okay?” Of course J responded, “I’ve to pee”… “don’t it’s not safe”… "ok, ok, I’ll try to sleep through it”…

Some 10-15 minutes must have passed as I dozed to the sounds of the Serengeti when suddenly I heard, “you guys it’s only 130am! I’ve to pee”  Finally we opened our tents and peered cautiously out to see if we could sight these hyenas that seemed not too far away.  The stars twinkled, our LED flashlight jetted from left to right to ensure no animals lurked around looking for the next easy meal.  When we deemed the coast clear J skittered to the back  of the tent, relieved herself, and the rest of the night passed uneventfully. 

I awoke at 5, caught the Serengeti sunrise, packed tents, ate the food prepared by our chef, Obedi, and set up into the rising sun, jetting into the Serengeti, or Endless Plains. 

The Serengeti turned out to be less exciting than anticipated.  Animals were  sparse and sightings were rare.  Although we added a whole new set of previously unseen animals (2 baby leopards on a tree, a Goma (a really large deer), a Dik dik (a lil bambi like deer) and a Jackal, a pride of lions, an amazing hippopotamous pond, and a clan of babboons )this was nothing like the area just prior to entering the Serengeti.  Our guide told us that since the migration process was just starting, all the animals were JUST outside of the park rather than within the park.  TO me the Serengeti reminded me of an abandoned home, waiting to replenish itself and await the return of the animals in the fall. 
Baby Leopards playing on a tree while mama was away on a hunt

Baboons.

That evening upon our return, we found our cook to be in immense pain!  “obedi, whats wrong?” …wince, stagger, sit, and point to chest… We had a language barrier, we couldn’t understand what the matter was with obedi.  All we knew was Obedi, our proud maasai warrior and cook, was in such intense pain he couldn’t stand!

Was this Angina pectoris? Was this a muscle spasm?  We waited as our tour guide translated it to us.  Obedi is in pain, explained Joneson.  He says it hurts to swallow and that the pain is on the inside.  I took a quick medical hx which showed no significant findings, I checked his pulse which was a steady rhythmic 62bpm, and I asked his when he attempted to lift a heavy box through his pain if the process of lifting his arms above his shoulders exacerbated his pain.  Once satisfied that he seemed stable, we gave him 800mg Ibuprofen, put him to rest on a chair outside in the shade, gave him a blanket and told him to not move.  Suddenly, we found ourselves one hand short.  But, Hakuna Matata we said, and set on to break down the tent, back up the kitchenware, and set off to Ngorongoro Crater.

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