As we got ready to leave, a couple of Blue-Naped Mousebirds showed up at our Yaeda Valley camp. The male sure had a long tail, and the blue on the back of his neck looked really out of place. Almost like a target for a hawk!
Blue Naped Mousebird
Photos by Dona |
We wound our way off our rocky outcrop, then down into the bottom of the Yaeda Valley. We crossed it to the west, then bumped along the foot of the Kidero Mountains. As we worked our way north, we stopped to talk to the locals walking from all points of the compass to a big party. We gave some a ride, and in between kept our cameras busy. We asked one of the women we picked up where she was going and she said she was "Just walking around."
Yellow Necked Sand Grouse | Xxx
Photo by Dona |
Dark Chanting Goshawk
Photo by Dona |
Great Spotted Cuckoo |
Black Backed Jackal
Photo by Dona |
Pygmy Falcon
Photo by Dona |
Southern Red Bishop
Photos by Dona |
Tree
Photo by Dona |
Flower Xxx Pink White
Photo by Dona |
Flower Xxx Yellow
Photo by Dona |
Lesser Kestrel
Photo by Dona |
Black Headed Heron
Photo by Dona |
Fishers Lovebirds |
European Bee Eaters
Photo by Dona |
Rufous Crowned Roller | Rufous Crowned Roller | Great Spotted Cuckoo |
We stopped in a dry river bottom with some large baobab trees for lunch. Dona and I climbed up on one which was split and half fallen down. On the way down I dropped a piece of trash from our lunch down into the huge cavity in the crotch of the tree where it had split. I crawled down inside and retrieved it, and life was good. Douglas was talking with a local man who had walked up as we were eating. When it was time to leave he informed us the man said this area was full of black mamba snakes.
We didn't see any.
I think that was good, in this case.
It's one of the most poisonous snake in the world.
If not the most poisonous one.
It's the second largest snake in the world, after the King Cobra.
It strikes multiple times.
Its bites are usually fatal in 20 minutes.
Antivenin is in short supply,
and we weren't carrying any that I know of.
It's shy.
That's good.
It tends to run away.
That's good.
But it doesn't like being cornered.
That's a problem.
There weren't any down in the tree cavity.
That's really good.
I did look around before I went down in there.
But I probably would have looked a bit harder if I had known about all that.
Dona Baobab Lunch |
Man with Donkeys but no Cows!
Yes, we are on the road... |
Road |
Eventually we connected to a proper unimproved road and followed that up to the main tourist route to the Ngorongoro Crater. We began to see small farms, and then large communities and rural areas where the entire landscape was farms.
Crater Area Farmland |
We came to an area where we saw a lot of birds hawking insects in the air. At first we thought it was just swallows, but then we realized there were raptors doing it also. We stopped in a hurry and grabbed our cameras. Sometimes what was going on didn't look quite right for the raptors, and we finally realized the Lanner Falcons were grabbing insects with their feet instead of their beaks, and eating them in the air.
Lanner Falcon | Dark Chanting Goshawk |
We were steadily climbing, and eventually the farms petered out and then we were staring down into the crater itself. The Ngorongoro crater is the largest crater in the world. Unfortunately it was very hazy, and we couldn't see well. But we did get the general idea about it being big.
Crater |
We were going to visit the crater the next day, so we continued on, driving through highlands occupied by many Maasai villages.
Maasai Highlands |
Jacksons Widowbird | Malachite Sunbird |
White Stork |
Maasai Land |
Gathering Firewood |
We arrived towards evening at Mysigio Seasonal Camp, our home for the next two nights.
Gary at our Mysigio Camp
Photo by Dona |
Mysigio
Photo by Dona |
Mysigio Sunset |
Flower Xxx Magenta |
We got up early the next morning and more or less helped the ranger open the gate to descend into the crater. Wow! This is an amazing place. I wonder what it was like years ago, before encroachment all around reduced the total number of animals in the greater ecosystem.
Lionesses
Photo by Dona |
Lioness |
Grants Gazelle
Photo by Dona |
Grants Gazelle |
Golden Jackals | Golden Jackals |
Wildebeest and Calf
Photo by Dona |
Wildebeast |
Common Eland | Warthog
Photo by Dona |
We spotted three big male lions deliberately marching across the crater, clearly lords of this realm. They may not be as effective as their female counterparts, but they surely stop you in your tracks.
Lion |
Lions |
Lions
Photo by Dona |
Lions
Photo by Dona |
In some places there were mixed herds of Wildebeests with new calves and Zebras spread out on the crater bottom. But in others it was relatively empty of wildlife, at least to our eyes.
Herd
Photo by Dona |
Zebras
Photo by Dona |
Egyptian Goose |
Spotted Hyena |
Hippos | Hartebeest |
Lappet Faced Vulture | Red Billed Firefinch | Xxx Hawk |
Xxx
Douglas, where are you when we need you? Photo by Dona |
Wow! There it was, just walking down the road. One of the more elusive cats -- a Serval Cat. This guy was not fat, but didn't seem to be too intense. It came almost up to the Land Rover and then lay down in the grass. But it did perk up whenever something moved nearby, and slouched off to check out a butterfly.
Photo by Dona | Photo by Dona |
Serval Cat
Photo by Dona |
There was a hyena carcass lying in the grass near a herd of cape buffalo, but there were no scavengers around. Apparently hyena does not come highly recommended, even to hyenas and other scavengers. As things dry out and times get tough, that changes. This was the season of plenty, the season after the short rains, the season when there are wildebeests calves by the thousands.
Cape Buffalo and Hyena Carcass |
Cape Buffalo | Cape Buffalo |
Holy crow! We came upon a whole flock of Crowned Cranes.
Crowned Cranes
Photo by Dona |
Crowned Crane
Photo by Dona |
Crowned Crane |
Crowned Crane
Photo by Dona |
Yellow Billed Stork with Sacred Ibis | Sacred Ibis |
Hyenas and Vultures devouring a Zebra Carcass |
Hyenas and Vultures
Photo by Dona |
Rhino
Photo by Dona |
Xxx Barn Swallow
Photo by Dona |
Common Greenshank
Photo by Dona |
We came across a Kori Bustart displaying. It stood out like the Sage Grouse do in our part of the world. We didn't see any females around, but maybe they were watching from some hidden nook. We were impressed, anyway.
Kori Bustard Displaying |
Photo by Dona | |
Kori Bustard |
Fan Tailed Widowbird
Photo by Dona |
Black Shouldered Kite
Photo by Dona |
Flower Xxx Pink Yellow
Photo by Dona |
Golden Jackal |
I would have liked to stay in the bottom of the crater until sunset, but the rules required we be out at an earlier hour. When we got back to camp there was a giraffe waiting for us.
Giraffe |
We had dinner and then hit the sack, resting up for our trip in the morning to Oldupai Gorge and then on to the Ndutu area in Serengeti National Park.