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Most likely everyone had such a desire when sitting in a cozy apartment and without raising from an armchair it would be desirable to come to be on any fantastic wood glade or under a beautiful birch at a stream, where the sun, caressing the rays it is poured by different colors of a rainbow through rustling leaves of a beautiful tree. Have you imagined? Fine, isn't it so? But frequently not always it happens to spend time on the nature and so its caress, a landscape, color would be desirable. What to do? Purchase of a picture of a picturesque landscape in the interior always won a great popul...
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It is possible simply to put money in a bank and to wait until they bring an income. But it is possible to earn much more money by means of the art market. And during the last years private persons started to be involved in fine arts even more than the large companies. Many of known today collectors began with zero: visited art interiors, consulted to experts, choosing their interesting style. Among the people who are putting up money in art, there are the most different: from mathematicians to financial analysts. They have managed to consider advantages of the given business allowing not on...
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[caption id="attachment_78" align="aligncenter" width="448" caption="masai mara game reserve"][/caption] It’s undoubtedly the great savanna of Africa. Within a few minutes of flying into the Mara, I spot an elephant and giraffes on the plains below, and on the banks of the Talek river, a pair of hippos out of the water. It’s the season before the great migration and the plains are filled with tall grasses of different patterns in shades of gold and green. There’s little to tell if there’s anything in the vast grassland that spreads to the horizon, touching the magical Mara Tho...
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[caption id="attachment_72" align="aligncenter" width="595" caption="Fairmont mara Safari Club"][/caption] We’re on the northern extreme of the Mara Game reserve where the Aitong rises in the horizon, over the edges of the world-famous natural wilderness where lions and elephants share space with the tiny zorillas and barrel-shaped, rarely seen aardvarks and hippos deep into the night.  Map of the Masai Mara game reserve The one-hour flight from Nairobi brings us to this amazing world of the predators and prey, the hunters and the hunted. Nothing compares to the Mara. Landing near ...
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[caption id="attachment_33" align="aligncenter" width="595" caption="Rhinos in Mara river"][/caption] It’s a beautiful day with bright blue skies and a colour-filled palette of plains. Perfect for walking in the wild. A family of Sykes monkeys awake from their slumber and bask n the sun on the verandah before the human residents wake up. At the sound of me unzipping the tent, a trio of monkeys dash off into the high canopy of the forest and watch with innocent eyes, probably wondering what our  mission is. Rich foliaged trees fill the forest on the edges of the Mara River – the f...
Jul

26

Oasis Camp

A fantastic landscape opens like a flip of a page – a liquid blue lake profiled amidst the lush green and mountains of Elementeita – a dramatically different scenario from the growing slum that is Keekopey from where we turn in to reach Oasis Eco Camp in the great Rift Valley.

Millions of butterflies’ escort you to the camp flitting like animated flower petals. With the ongoing rains, everything is in bloom – the forest, the flowers and the lake filled to the brim tempting you to walk its shores while the sky teases you with its moods which are changing from a clear sun-blazed blue to clouds of heavy purple-grey.

Armed with umbrellas, we walk through the yellow fever tree forest and into the clearing to reach the shores of Elementeita with the walls of the Great Rift Valley surrounding it in the distance.

Mist rises from the earth giving it an ethereal air. It’s the Keekopey hot springs. A young man relaxes in the water heated from within the earth’s core as we stride into it.

The hot spring is delicious against the cold of the late afternoon. The bubbles ripple the shallow pools reputed to have medicinal properties and it’s quite an effort to leave the natural spa.

Lush tall reeds line the shore where the water is fresh and it’s a busy scene with many a species of water birds in the marshes.

Tiny fish make for the reeds, where the Tilapia grahami breed, a species reported to have been accidentally introduced by the pelicans from Lake Nakuru where the fish were originally introduced in the 1960s to combat the mosquito menace.

A lone African fish eagle, resplendent in its crisp mantle of copper red feathers and white chest searches the waters for a catch.

We round the hillock littered with black obsidian and lava rocks where the field is filled with a carpet of white flowers reaching Delamere’s nose and the saddle-shaped hills.

A dense forest of croton trees fills another hillock – we’re more used to driving around croton bushes in the Mara for they are a favorite haunt of the lions who like to take refuge in them during the heat of the day.

Our guide Patrick Parsen Ole Kodonyo, points to a tiny acacia bush protected by its long sharp thorns. Nestled within on the ground is a cache of tiny eggs.

“Every time you walked nearby, the birds would try and scare you away,” says Patrick. On closer investigation, it showed the reason – the parent birds were protecting their eggs.

Back at Oasis, we meet up with David Chege and his wife Magdalene, an enterprising young couple who built their dream lodge for people who love nature like them. “I’m a civil engineer by training and my wife is an electrical engineer,” narrates David.

However, by the time he had completed his degree from the Nairobi University in 1998, the job market was saturated soDavid branched off into IT and Magdalene worked as an accounts manager for another IT firm.

On their breaks, the two spent time exploring the country and came up with the idea of organising affordable camping trips which they did for a while until they found the spot on the lake.

At first, they wanted to keep it as a camping ground but with their engineering backgrounds, the two drew up plans and after waiting for NEMA’s approval, put up the Oasis Eco Lodge which blends in perfectly with the natural surroundings – the three grass-thatched bandas sit in the natural forest grove each fitted with an upper deck that doubles up as a verandah from where one can relax and watch the tidings of the lake, the forest and the night sky.

Opened in December 2009, the Chege’s have fitted the tiny paradise with solar panels for all its energy consumption, septic tanks to take care of its waste water and its solid non biodegradable waste is transported to Nairobi because Nakuru does not have a good disposable system.

All the vegetables are sourced from the nearby villages and Peter Maina, the chef, fills the table with gourmet meals.

“We’re members of the Greater Lake Elementeita Conservation Association (GLECA),” says Magdelene.

“Lake Elementeita is a shallow lake, only about 1.2 metres at its deepest with a span of about 25 square kilometres. We don’t want it becoming degraded.

Story courtesy of  Rupi Mangat – Daily Nation

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