Children's Beds in Kenya

Sasha Kovaleva on what to expect from an amazing African country Decide which part of the country you want and what is the weather like there during this period. For example, we saw enough of the green meadows in Ukraine, so we rushed to the south of Kenya, to the savannas. Plan your trip during the Great Migration. Let's be honest, you're not going to the beach to wallow (they aren't here) - you need lions, elephants, that's all. It is especially impressive when there are great thousands of all this: when zebras jump out from under the wheels, lions devour a buffalo, wildebeests swim in herds to the other side of the river. And the gazelles - but who counts these gazelles, they are here like pigeons in Kyiv. In general, the migration period is twice a year, the location is the Masai Mara National Park. Kenya is big. So if you want to do everything in ten days, you have to choose. No, you will not be able to visit all the national parks. No, you won't be able to hang out with all the trib Children's Beds in Kenya es. 1. First, Nairobi: there is nothing to see there, except for the slums (to the slums - only with a guide). There is also an orphanage for elephants and a park where you can feed giraffes from your hands, but these are almost zoos, you understand. 2. Further - to the north, to Lake Naivasha with a mandatory check-in to the Crescent Island located in the middle of it. Walk with animals. 3. Further - to the south, for a few days in the Masai Mara park. There is also Tsavo Park: there is a flat area and not so impressive animal migration. And the completely flat Amboseli, the main attraction of which is the view of Kilimanjaro, but the mountain is often overcast, so how lucky. We were lucky. As it turned out, no one ate us there. Even before departure, we were promised leopard chases, cult sacrifices, a plague on both our homes in the form of fevers and malaria. Nothing came true. To be honest, our first lunch in a cafe in the suburbs of Nairobi began like this: we walked along the wall, pouring plenty of antiseptic on our hands. We tiptoed across the muddy tiles and cautiously examined the dirty plastic table. Politely smiling into space, we wiped the forks with a napkin and carefully chewed the usual potatoes and salad, listening to our feelings. We returned to this cafe a few days later - during this time, life has already managed to beat us up. We've had hyenas chewing through a telephone wire, rural bars with drunken shepherds, snotty children begging for pens, and much more. Needless to say, now we opened the door to the cafe, hooting and cackling, and piled fried Jerusalem artichoke and unfamiliar beans in some kind of sauce into our plates. In general, do not be too afraid. Malaria? If you hang around in the evenings in the rainy season near the reservoirs, then of course. But there are pills and repellents. Yellow fever? At the entrance to the country about the vaccination is not even asked. Do tsetse flies bite? Of course they bite. But in order to absolutely certainly catch sleeping sickness, you need to guess so that these are 15 flies from the same family. Unsanitary - yes. But compared to India, these are all such trifles. Hand gel to help you. The gel, by the way, is better to buy here, and not in Kyiv. Well, what interesting things will you see at home? And in a roadside supermarket in Kenya, in a long grocery aisle, you will meet a Masai with a spear, who will lead you along the aisles and poke you in the right direction with a spear. The beauty. https://jiji.co.ke/62-childrens-beds

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