Serengeti NP, Tanzania

The Great Migration of the Endless Savanna


Supply
Wildebeests drink water in several turns in a muddy pond during their long journey.
keeping an eye on the herd
Serengeti National Park visitor observes a herd of wildebeests in motion.
hippo pond
Hippopotamus stands out from a pool full of other conflicting elements of its species.
Predator on the attack
Lioness approaches a herd of running wildebeests, waiting for the best moment to launch her attack.
in the wake of the rain
Thousands of wildebeest race across the golden and dusty savannah of the Serengeti.
marabout tree
Marabou about to land on a tree colonized by other specimens of these scavengers.
wildebeest crossing
Wildebeests cross a road from PN Serengeti, right in front of a safari jeep.
neither horse nor ox
The eccentric face of a wildebeest, also called a horse-ox for its mixture of elements between ox and horses.
Masai style
Serengeti Serena Lodge cabins, with Masai-influenced architecture and spread across one of the rare steep slopes of the Serengeti.
Savannah secretariat
A secretary hunts reptiles among the tall grass of the Serengeti savannah.
Power ranger
Serengeti National Park Ranger Samson Njoghomi holds an old Ak-46 machine gun on top of a hill.
pine cone savanna
Elephants and wildebeest coincide in the same area of ​​the savannah. Some of the elephants will chase away the wildebeests in their path.
little lions
Two lion cubs watch their mother go away in search of prey.
bones of various animals
Serengeti National Park Visitors Center Guide explains the origin of each lined bone.
spiderman lizard
An agama-mwanzae lizard with its lush coloration sunbathes on a rock.
winged parasites
Weavers patrol the skin of a buffalo looking for parasitic insects.
in the golden savanna
Wildebeests graze in the savanna with the sun setting over the Serengeti.
In these prairies that the Masai people say syringet (run forever), millions of wildebeests and other herbivores chase the rains. For predators, their arrival and that of the monsoon are the same salvation.

Finally, we leave the famous Mara River.

We departed from the Kenyan National Reserve of Masai Mara towards its extension in northern Tanzania.

We cross overcrowded and chaotic villages around the Isebania-Sirari border. Already with the respective stamps in the passports, we changed jeep and guide.

Moses Lota introduces himself. Takes over navigation.

We conquered the highlands of the Tarime region, far greener and more agricultural than anything we had seen in recent days.

Six hours after the early departure, we felt at ease with the new guide and were back in the savannah.

Serengeti, Great Savannah Migration, Tanzania, secretary

A secretary hunts reptiles among the tall grass of the Serengeti savannah.

"Sarah Mary and Mark of Jesus?" asks us also the conductor with his purposely silly way of incredulity that would come to amuse us time and time again.

"Well, counting Moses here, this is going to look like a biblical expedition."

Journey to the heart of the Serengeti National Park

We cross the Fort Ikoma portal of the Serengeti National Park, register with the authorities, and proceed to its core. The trip was soon shaken by the appearance of one of God's most demonic creatures on the scene.

"There, it's about to start!" announces the guide after a sharp slap in the face.

With the roof of the jeep open, it only took a few seconds for us all to share an inglorious resistance against the countless attacks of tsetse flies.

Moses reassures us. “This story is no longer what it was. They had to be bitten thousands of times and be unlucky the size of Tanzania to catch sleeping sickness. In fact, on the contrary, with them around, no one sleeps in this jeep.”

Serengeti, Great Savannah Migration, Tanzania, keeping an eye on the herd

Serengeti National Park visitor observes a herd of wildebeests in motion.

It's mid-afternoon. We just have to check in where we were going to stay close to nightfall.

Accordingly, we completed the route in full game drive mode, as the English-speaking colonists from Africa called the habit of driving through the savannah and observing the fauna.

We found the first clans of lions with offspring and dozens of elephants.

Until the sun goes down, there is still a huge flock of indolent but irascible hippos that almost completely fill a small section of the Grumeti River.

Serengeti, Great Savannah Migration, Tanzania, Hippo-waterhole

Hippopotamus stands out from a pool full of other conflicting elements of its species.

We check into Serena Lodge at night and after the allowed time.

Guide more than beaten to the job, Moses is willing to favor our work and enters through the gate prepared for the eventual disgrace. "Do not worry. I tell them we had to help someone with a hole!"

Serena Lodge Serengeti Unfenced Shelter

As soon as we got out of the jeep, one of the employees of the lodge he listens to us talking and approaches us in hesitant and somewhat clumsy Portuguese. “Hello, I'm Marcerino. I also speak portuguese.

My parents are Mozambicans. They live on the edge. I came here at a very young age."

In the days we spent in that elegant Tanzanian hotel, Marcerino – the nameplate on his shirt confirmed the name – would pay us a special dedication.

The Serena Lodge where he worked was made of buildings shaped like large Masai huts, distributed along one of the rare steep slopes of the savannah, among acacia trees and thorny bushes.

Serengeti, Great Savannah Migration, Tanzania, Serena Lodge

Serengeti Serena Lodge cabins, with Masai-influenced architecture and spread across one of the rare steep slopes of the Serengeti.

In the image of some others from wild africa, the lodge is not fenced. We want to leave the room for dinner but we can only do it with an escort.

The bodyguard who knocks on the door with his lantern at the ready wastes no time in enlightening us on the advantage of his presence. "So what animals have you seen here today?" we ask. "It has been calm." responds. “But a little of everything can appear. We've been visited by buffaloes, lions, leopards and even elephants.

We have to be careful. At this time, guests are in the mood to eat, not be eaten.”

During the night, we heard a lion's shuffling roar from an opposite hill. The top of that elevation seduced us because we suspected it must provide incredible 360° views.

With the sun coming up behind it, we pursued the privilege of going there.

We ask at reception if there are any special trails. “There is and part already back here. But you're not thinking about going there like that, is it?”

In fact, we hadn't considered the little expedition in all its aspects.

Ranger and AK-46 Protected Ascension to a Panoramic Hill

Anyway, after some time, the lodge staff went from refusing us the tour to providing it with military security. Marcerino picks us up as we leave the reception: “friends, we can go now. This way."

Along the way, a park ranger joins us, dressed in a green military uniform and holding an old AK-46 against his trunk.

“Just yesterday there was a clan of lions installed on that hillside. Don't be scared, but the machine gun really has to go with us.”

Serengeti, Great Savannah Migration, Tanzania, Power Ranger

Serengeti National Park Ranger Samson Njoghomi holds an old Ak-46 machine gun on top of a hill.

Samson, the shaved-haired squeaker who walks ahead of the group looks like a man of few conversations. Like the hill, its tense face also challenges us. “We ended up starting a conversation.

In the middle of the hill's ascent, we approached the desire we had – like so many curious travelers – to climb Mount Kilimanjaro, the grandiose roof of Africa.

Samson's eyes seem to instantly glow. “I went up there a while ago in a selection test for park rangers in Tanzania. We were over fifty and only eight reached the summit. I was one of them. Now I have this job.”

We reached the top. We admire the surrounding scenery.

To all sides except the opposite slope taken by Serena Lodge, the savannah stretched out into infinity colored by some low, verdant or parched vegetation depending on the water in the subsoil.

Serengeti, Great Savannah Migration, Tanzania, buffalo

Weavers patrol the skin of a buffalo looking for parasitic insects.

The Serengeti Savannah without End

As we catch our breath, the four of us turn to binoculars or our telephoto lenses and scrutinize that imposing Africa in detail.

We detect herds of buffaloes and elephants, wildebeests, zebras and giraffes, any of the animal sets, tiny in the endless prairie scenery. A little later, with the sun still low on the horizon, we return to the lodge.

We left in a jeep in his wake.

Serengeti, Great Savannah Migration, Tanzania, Wildebeest crossing

Wildebeests cross a road from PN Serengeti, right in front of a safari jeep.

Moses Lote takes us dozens of kilometers along unpaved roads, at a low speed, as is supposed to be inside the park.

We started by going mostly through herds of gazelles and impalas. It doesn't take long for us to enter a wet area – sometimes even soaked. At a glance, the Serengeti's fauna and flora proves to be far more diverse.

There are ponds, some more muddy than others, which attract specimens to which the heat begins to cause thirst.

A flock of marabouts hovers gently from the top of the branches of a dry tree to the water's edge, which comes to contend with hippos, rowdy baboons, and various wary herbivores.

Serengeti, Great Savannah Migration, Tanzania, Marabou Tree

Marabou about to land on a tree colonized by other specimens of these scavengers.

As we approach this pool, we notice that a herd of elephants is crossing the savanna towards us.

Some younger pachyderms have fun investing in a caravan of wildebeests that we don't understand and that the presence of several jeeps intimidated them from crossing the road.

Serengeti, Great Savannah Migration, Tanzania, wildebeest and elephants

Elephants and wildebeest coincide in the same area of ​​the savannah. Some of the elephants will chase away the wildebeests in their path.

The Long Wildebeest Caravans That Make Life Easier for Predators

Moses stops ours and turns around: “They're really lucky! Do you know why we all stopped here? There is a clan of lions crouched in the grass waiting for the wildebeests.

Some of the jeep drivers increase the space available for the crossing.

Ox-horses are not begged. They rush, at a gallop, over the cats' trap.

Hundreds of them pass by the only lioness we can detect, a few meters away, without her attacking.

Serengeti, Great Savannah Migration, Tanzania, Lioness

Lioness approaches a herd of running wildebeests, waiting for the best moment to launch her attack.

Instead, minutes after the entire caravan had moved to the other side of the road, we noticed that two more distant ones were already dragging an adult wildebeest and a newly caught baby wildebeest into the shade of a tree.

“See? That's why predators prefer them. They're easy.” shoots Moses. “God created them in a hurry. In addition to forgetting the brain, he made them with spare parts from a number of other animals.

No wonder they always rank so highly on the list of Big Ugly here from Africa.”

Serengeti, Great Savannah Migration, Tanzania, wildebeest

The eccentric face of a wildebeest, also called a horse-ox for its mixture of elements between ox and horses.

With the dry season settling in those parts, hunts like the one we had just followed would become rarer in the months to come.

Wildebeests greedily drank water from the remaining ponds and streams.

We saw them traverse the savanna in more and more endless caravans.

Serengeti, Great Savannah Migration, Tanzania, wildebeest

Thousands of wildebeest race across the golden and dusty savannah of the Serengeti.

Back and forth, waiting for herd leaders to give the signal to leave or already in full migration to the distant but contiguous lands of Masai Mara.

On this route, they are forced to cross the crocodile-infested streams of the Mara and grumetti.

Serengeti, Great Savannah Migration, Tanzania, wildebeest on river

Wildebeests drink water in several turns in a muddy pond during their long journey.

The heavy clouds brought by the cyclic monsoon from east Africa had already moved there.

By that time, they irrigated meadows far greener and more succulent than those of that vast Serengeti.

Serengeti, Great Savannah Migration, Tanzania, Golden Savannah

Wildebeests graze in the savanna with the sun setting over the Serengeti.

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Promise?
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Got2Globe Photo Portfolio
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History
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Literature
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autumn in the caucasus

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Correspondence verification
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Meares glacier
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