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Kenyan Collection (page 9)

Background imageKenyan Collection: Fourteen Falls on the Athi River after heavy rain

Fourteen Falls on the Athi River after heavy rain

Background imageKenyan Collection: Grey-headed kingfisher

Grey-headed kingfisher

Background imageKenyan Collection: A male warthog in Lake Nakuru National Park

A male warthog in Lake Nakuru National Park

Background imageKenyan Collection: Worshippers enter the Jamia Mosque in the centre of Nairobi

Worshippers enter the Jamia Mosque in the centre of Nairobi

Background imageKenyan Collection: A Turkana woman sitting in the doorway of her hut

A Turkana woman sitting in the doorway of her hut. Her heavy mporro braided necklace identifies her as a married woman. Typical of her tribe

Background imageKenyan Collection: A Turkana woman

A Turkana woman, typically wearing many layers of bead necklaces and a series of hooped earrings with an pair of leaf-shaped earrrings at the front, sits in the entrance to her hut

Background imageKenyan Collection: Kenya, Samburu, Shaba

Kenya, Samburu, Shaba. High craggy cliffs look down over Shaba National Reserve with its characteristic Doum palms and Acacia trees

Background imageKenyan Collection: Kenya, Samburu, Buffalo Springs Reserve

Kenya, Samburu, Buffalo Springs Reserve. A herd of elephants (Loxodonta africana) drink from the Ewaso Nyiro River which separates the Samburu Reserve from the Buffalo Springs Reserve

Background imageKenyan Collection: A Gabbra herdsman drives his camels across the Chalbi

A Gabbra herdsman drives his camels across the Chalbi Desert at sunset. The Gabbra are a Cushitic tribe of nomadic pastoralists living with their herds of camels

Background imageKenyan Collection: Gabbra tribesmen lead their camel train across the Chalbi Desert

Gabbra tribesmen lead their camel train across the Chalbi Desert. The Gabbra are a Cushitic tribe of nomadic pastoralists living with their herds of camels

Background imageKenyan Collection: A camel wearing a halter and wooden bell at a waterhole

A camel wearing a halter and wooden bell at a waterhole near Kalacha on the edge of the Chalbi Desert

Background imageKenyan Collection: Evening light on the south shore of Lake Turkana with

Evening light on the south shore of Lake Turkana with the volcanic cone of Nabuyatom on the lake edge

Background imageKenyan Collection: Local fishermen risk their lives when they go out on

Local fishermen risk their lives when they go out on Lake Turkana in frail wooden boats powered by sails made from flour sacks and simple wooden paddles

Background imageKenyan Collection: Fishing guide

Fishing guide, Colin Burch, holds up a 30 lb Nile Perch caught on a lure. Nile perch are the largest freshwater fish accessible to anglers

Background imageKenyan Collection: The research centre of Koobi Fora looks out over Lake Turkana

The research centre of Koobi Fora looks out over Lake Turkana. Many important paleontological discoveries have been made in the area, including fossilised hominid remains of Homo erectus

Background imageKenyan Collection: Flamingos fly over Lake Turkana at sunset

Flamingos fly over Lake Turkana at sunset

Background imageKenyan Collection: El Molo fishermen in their dugout canoe on the fringe

El Molo fishermen in their dugout canoe on the fringe of the Omo Delta. The El Molo are reputedly Kenyas smallest tribe, a group of nomadic fishermen who fish the Omo delta and Lake turkana

Background imageKenyan Collection: Baby Rhino

Baby Rhino, hand reared, in Ian and Jane Craigs garden in the Lewa Wildlife Conservancy. Its Keeper (one of several to prevent the Rhino getting too attached to one person)

Background imageKenyan Collection: An unstriped ground squirrel

An unstriped ground squirrel. Unlike other members of the squirrel family, ground squirrels rarely climb trees. They frequently stand upright to get a better view of their surroundings

Background imageKenyan Collection: Two dwarf mongooses on top of a termite mound

Two dwarf mongooses on top of a termite mound, which serves as their den. Their colouring is very varied, ranging from tan to dark brown

Background imageKenyan Collection: A vervet monkey stands on its hind legs among Heliotropium

A vervet monkey stands on its hind legs among Heliotropium flowers to get a better view of its surroundings. The vervet monkey is common and widespread in lightly wooded areas straddling the equator

Background imageKenyan Collection: A giant hog

A giant hog, or forest hog, in the Salient of the Aberdare National Park. Only discovered for science a hundred years ago, these heavily built

Background imageKenyan Collection: Having killed a Thomsons gazelle

Having killed a Thomsons gazelle, a python drags it by the nose to a secure place where it will devour it out of sight from other predators and vultures

Background imageKenyan Collection: A python kills a Thomsons gazelle by constriction

A python kills a Thomsons gazelle by constriction. African pythons can reach a length of over twenty feet. They are not venomous

Background imageKenyan Collection: A dikdik in the Samburu National Reserve of Northern Kenya

A dikdik in the Samburu National Reserve of Northern Kenya. Didiks are territorial and live in monogamous pairs. Only males have small horns

Background imageKenyan Collection: Two dikdiks in the Samburu National Reserve of Northern Kenya

Two dikdiks in the Samburu National Reserve of Northern Kenya. They are territorial and live in monogamous pairs. Only males have small horns

Background imageKenyan Collection: A male gerenuk

A male gerenuk (a name derived from the Somali language meaning giraffe necked ) feeding in the Samburu National Reserve of Northern Kenya

Background imageKenyan Collection: A Bongo bull in a forest clearing

A Bongo bull in a forest clearing. The range in Kenya of this thickset, reddish-brown antelope is restricted to high altitude forests; as such, they are rarely seen

Background imageKenyan Collection: Two hippos fight in the Mara RiverThese vast animals

Two hippos fight in the Mara RiverThese vast animals have a very hierarchical society. When fighting, they engage one anothers teeth, after which the contest becomes a trial of weight and strength

Background imageKenyan Collection: A black rhino and calf in the Salient of the Aberdare National Park

A black rhino and calf in the Salient of the Aberdare National Park. Their skin colour is the result of the mud-wallows they frequent in the bright red soil of the area.& #x26; #x26; #x0B; Rhino

Background imageKenyan Collection: A black rhino in the Salient of the Aberdare National Park

A black rhino in the Salient of the Aberdare National Park. Its skin colour is the result of the mud-wallows it frequents in the bright red soil of the area

Background imageKenyan Collection: A lioness and her cubs

A lioness and her cubs. For the first six to eight weeks of their lives, cub will be concealed in a thicket or rocky outcrop when their mother goes hunting

Background imageKenyan Collection: A Msai warrior speaks on his mobile phone from the

A Msai warrior speaks on his mobile phone from the saddle of his camel near Lake Magadi in Kenyas Rift Valley Province. Mobile phones are a popular method of communicating with family

Background imageKenyan Collection: Msai men lead a camel caravan laden with equipment

Msai men lead a camel caravan laden with equipment for a fly camp (a small temporary camp) past Lake Magadi. Clouds hang low over the Nguruman Escarpment (a western wall of the Great Rift Valley)

Background imageKenyan Collection: Fishermen set out at daybreak in their traditional wooden craft

Fishermen set out at daybreak in their traditional wooden craft, called in Ki-Swahili mashua, to fish beyond the coral reef, which lies less than half a mile offshore

Background imageKenyan Collection: Gabbra women sing and dance to celebrate a wedding

Gabbra women sing and dance to celebrate a wedding. The traditional metal ornamentation on their heads is called malmal

Background imageKenyan Collection: Lava boulders cover vast tracts of infertile land on

Lava boulders cover vast tracts of infertile land on the eastern side of Lake Turkana. Often referred to as the Jade Sea due to its distinctive colour, Lake Turkana is a true desert lake

Background imageKenyan Collection: A small dirt road winds its way through fine farming

A small dirt road winds its way through fine farming country at the top of the 11, 000-feet-high Cherangani Hills. There, small-scale Pokot farmers grow maize, potatoes and pyrethrum

Background imageKenyan Collection: A waterfall with brackish water flows from a swamp

A waterfall with brackish water flows from a swamp in Shaba National Reserve, a beautiful area adjacent to the Samburu National Reserve in Northern Kenya

Background imageKenyan Collection: Wildebeest

Wildebeest (Connochaetes taurinus) Crossing Mara River

Background imageKenyan Collection: Kiboko Star Bed

Kiboko Star Bed, Loisaba Lodge

Background imageKenyan Collection: Lookout

Lookout

Background imageKenyan Collection: Giraffe (Giraffa camelopardalis)

Giraffe (Giraffa camelopardalis)

Background imageKenyan Collection: Leopard (Panthera pardus) with Marabou Stork

Leopard (Panthera pardus) with Marabou Stork (Leptoptilos crumeniferus)

Background imageKenyan Collection: Sir Wilfred Thesiger

Sir Wilfred Thesiger, the famous 20th century explorer and author, relaxes on safari in Kenya in 1990. Wilfred Thesiger

Background imageKenyan Collection: A fine stand of Euphorbia trees

A fine stand of Euphorbia trees (Euphorbia candelabrum) with the Mau Escarpment _ a western wall of the Gregory Rift _ in the background

Background imageKenyan Collection: Sunrise with silhouettes of doum palm trees (hyphaene compressa)

Sunrise with silhouettes of doum palm trees (hyphaene compressa)

Background imageKenyan Collection: A herd of Masai Giraffe

A herd of Masai Giraffe (Giraffa camelopadalis tippelskirchi) stride across the dry, grassy plains of Masai Mara Game Reserve



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