| Amboseli
|
 |
 |
Amboseli is probably most famous
for its photographs of elephants with snow-capped Kilimanjaro
in the background: a picture that above all says, "come
to Africa"... |
| Read
More |
 |
 |
| Masai
Mara |
 |
|
The Masai Mara is one of the
best known and most popular reserves in the whole of Africa.
There is something so special about it that it tempts seasoned
safari travellers and documentary film-makers back time and time again... |
| Read
More |
 |
 |
| Mount
Kenya National Park |
 |
|
At 5 199 metres, Mount Kenya
is the highest mountain in Kenya and the second highest mountain in Africa,
after Kilimanjaro in neighbouring Tanzania... |
| Read
More |
 |
 |
| Lake
Nakuru National Park |
 |
|
Lake Nakuru is one of a string
of shallow soda lakes that litter the floor of the Rift Valley.
Its algae soaked waters attract thousands of pink flamingos
and pelicans... |
| Read
More |
 |
 |
| Lake
Naivasha National Park |
 |
|
Lake Naivasha is one of Kenya’s
most stunning Rift Valley freshwater lakes. It is surrounded by feathery
papyrus, marshy lagoons and grassy shores... |
| Read
More |
 |
 |
| Samburu,
Buffalo Springs & Shaba National Reserves |
 |
|
Just north of Isiolo, around 325km
north of Nairobi, are the Samburu, Buffalo Springs and Shaba
National Reserves: some of the most remote and least visited
of Kenya’s game parks...
|
| Read
More |
 |
 |
| Marine
National Park |
 |
|
There are seven marine national
parks along Kenya’s coast. They were established between
1968 and 1975 and were the first of their kind in Africa... |
| Read
More |
 |
 |
| Nairobi
National Park |
 |
|
Nairobi National Park is so close
to Kenya’s capital city that it’s not unusual to take
a photo of a rhino browsing peacefully amongst the acacia thorn
with a background of high rise office buildings... |
| Read
More |
 |