Just when we thought we had seen it all; there's more. The amount of birdlife at Lake Mangara is staggering. Some of the birds we saw were yellow beaked storks, pelicans, Egyptian geese, grey herons, satin ibis, lesser flamingos, etc, etc. Baboon Family Velvet Monkey Looking for a landing spot Yellow Beaked Stork Egyptian Geese Warning Off Other Birds From Their Chicks Yellow Billed Storks Marco and the Girls Sometimes In Life You Get Shit On Happy Campers Flamingos Grey Heron The Evil Eyed Flamingo Animals have right of way so we wait while an elephant pulls a tree apart
After another night in a safari camp under canvas we set out again on the maze of largely unsignposted tracks and trails that cover the Serengetti. We went along beside the Mara River but had missed the wilderbeast migration. The aftermath of the migration were the hundreds of wilderbeast carcasses littering the rocks with many large birds feeding on the remains. Feeding on wilderbeast carcasses Leopard cub Water buffalo - looks likes he's carved in stone Kanga - Helmeted Guinea Fowl Baby elephant saying hello Picnic on the Serengetti Look, more food Eland Mumbi - Male Southern Ground Horn Bill Let me see We went back later to see the leopard cub again Then we saw mum had made a kill and was dragging it back to their home.
The old part of Zanzibar is known as Stone Town. Zanzibar was under control of the Sultan of Oman in the 18th and for much of the 19th centuries and Stone Town was the centre of the East African slave trade. We wound our way through a maze of narrow alleys, past vendors of all types while dodging vespers and bicycles. Chicken with flies Technicolour Pasta Beans and Things Love the cabling The PVC water supply pipes are strung along the alleyways The House of Wonders is falling apart like much of the city. Outside aid is going to restore it. Negotiation The Old Fort - more a market place Timber Scaffolding
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