
For our game drives we were hooked up with 4 other people in our landcruiser. Frank and Elaine were from Ireland, and Judy and Andreas were from Germany. We got along great, and we also had a good driver. Our first game drive was the afternoon of our arrival. Not long into our game drive, we saw a pride of lions on a freshly killed wildebeast. Not sure how long before we arrived the animal was killed, but when we got there, one female was working on it and the others were lazing around up above the riverbank. 3 cubs were around. 2 ended up on the kill, the third was running around on top of the riverbank playing with a part of th

e wildebeast's leg. Reminded me of my own cat, but on a slightly larger scale. After staring at the lions for a long time, we roamed around to another section of the park, where we just missed a leopard come out of a tree and head into the bush. We then had to hightail it back to camp. I didn't realize you could drive so fast over the dirt roads of the park, but we did. The park closes at sunset, and sunset on the equator comes fast. We were a bit late, but the sunset from the

park was fantastic!
On our second day, instead of the normal 2 hour morning game drive, we took a much longer drive and brought "breakfast to go" with us. We went far into the park where we saw lots of wildebeast and zebra, but no river crossings. Early in the drive, we were lucky enough to spot a leopard walking in the low brush. We were one of a whole huge group of something like 15 safari vehicles jockeying for a glimpse of the elusing leopard. I think we probably spend about

1/2 hour chasing the leopard before we got a quick look at him as he crossed the road between a few of the vehicles and disappeared in the bru

sh on the other side.
A bit after the leopard encounter, we found a mother and a year old cub sitting on a termite mound surveying the landscape. We watched them for awhile, then headed to one of the high view

points in the park above the Mara river. Saw hippos in the river, but no wildebeast. We had a bit of a funny hippo moment when someone in our safari vehicle blew his nose and c

aused a bit of a hippo stampede down below.
On the way back, we had another encounter with the cheetahs. They ha

d moved away a significant distance from where we had first seen them, and they had just killed a large impala. Both were absolutely exhausted. When we got there, mom was trying to drag the cheetah, and baby was panting under one of the safari vehicles. Mom soon joined them, and there they stayed. I wonder how long that land cruiser had to stay there. The people in the car couldn't even see the

cheetahs under it.
We also saw a group of 3 heyenas devouring a wildebeast. I could hear the bones breaking from their powerful jaws. Two o

f the heyena were tearing the carcas to shreds as another skulked around in the background trying to get a bite. A bit further back, the vultures lurked, just waiting.
Over the

course of the safari, we saw a lot of elephants. Even though we saw so many, they still were incredible to watch. They are so big, and look so slow when they walk, but they are incredibly powerful and dangerous. A few times, they came towards our landcruiser. It would not be to

o difficult for something that big to turn us over. Our driver had a very healthy respect for the elephants. We

could hear them chomping on the vegetation, and we watched them protect their young. We saw tiny elephants that may have just been weeks old, and on our last day, we saw an absolutely enormous bull elephant. He was at least 1 1/2 times as big as all the other elephants we saw, and he was obviously in charge. A whole caravan of elephants walked across the road in

front of us. It took over 5 minutes for all of them to pass. Unbelievable. There must have been close to 50 of them.
We saw giraffes of all sorts. We saw dark giraffes and light giraffes -- different species. We saw baby giraffes -- the one in this picture was very young. We saw sleeping giraffes -- they look like construction cranes with their legs folded beneath their bodies and heads straight up in the air.
We saw buffalo, which are the most dangerous animal on the savanna because of their unpredictablity. We saw lots o

f lions, most of them lazing around in the sun trying to avoid flies. We saw several leopards, but none really clearly. On our last day, we found several leopards hiding in the bush near a dead

cow. At first, we just saw one, but then, we realized that she had cubs with her. Unfortunately, we didn't see much of her, but she was tantalizingly close.We also witnessed some fantastic sunsets. Every night was different. On a few nights, we could see rain in the distanc
e, and the clouds enhanced the scene. We even got a few drops of rain through the open roof of our land cruiser. The only t

hing missing from the safari was the rhino. No rhino in any of the parks. The rhino is the most elusive of the big 5 (the other of which

areo lion, elephant, buffalo, leopard). I guess I'll just have to go back!