Tags
black kite, black rhino, black-backed jackal, buffalo, elephant, flamingo, great white pelican, hippo, Kori bustard, lesser flamingo, lioness, Ngorogoro, Ngorogoro Crater, rhino, Tanzania, Tarangire, Thomson's gazelle, weaver bird, zebra
We moved on, and I was thrilled now to see flamingos taking off from the lake,
rising higher and higher and higher. I was mindful of a documentary I had seen on TV about some Great White Pelicans taking off daily from a lake with no fish, using thermals to rise over some mountains to get to another lake where the food was plentiful.
As I followed these flamingos with my eyes, I seemed to me that they were doing the same thing, for whatever reason, and I watched them fly off from the crater and over its rim. Others more interested in photographic opportunities than wildlife behaviour did not get as excited as I was.

Kori bustard, display

Black-backed jackal
We found ourselves in an area with many lionesses – and many jeeps. The former just ignored the latter except when they had to go round them. Reactions of other wildlife were mixed. Some seemed to realise that the felines were not hunting, but were just in a quest for water. Others – the Thomson’s gazelles perhaps – maybe could not even see the danger. Truly hunting lions would not have made themselves so obvious.
We were all excited to see in the distance a black rhino, something we could certainly not have counted on.

Black rhino. The name has nothing to do with the colour.

Black-backed jackal
To the ‘Hippo Pool’ where some of us were fortunate enough to find some shade and a place to sit to have our lunch, amused by two kinds of weaver birds. We were advised to keep our food well covered or it might be snatched by black kites.

Hippo pool

Two kinds of weaver birds

Black kite
We started to climb – in our jeeps – out of the crater after lunch, to make our way to our next Park, stopping only to pay tribute to those who over the years had lost their lives in the service of wildlife, killed in the main not by animals but by poachers.

Climbing up the side of the crater

At the top

A tribute to those who have lost their lives in defence of the area’s wildlife
(Coming: Tarangire National Park)
The videos, how clever. I loved the view from your lunch spot and thank you for braving the heat to bring such a multitude of fascinating images.
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It was good to have water by us at lunchtime. Some of my colleagues actually chose to stay out in the sun!
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I wasn’t expecting to have so much good scenery as well as the exciting animal and bird life.
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I was thrilled at the thought of being in a crater, not the only geological excitement on this trip – more to come…
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What an exciting trip, with so many different animals and birds to see and in such interesting surroundings. Great to have the videos and feel one is sharing the experience with you.
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It’s a pleasure to have you to share it with!
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I love the video of the lioness walking. I find it interesting that the Thomson’s gazelles didn’t seem overly worried about her presence. But like you said she was obviously not hunting, and Thomson’s gazelles are extremely fast. It probably wouldn’t have been hard for them to outrun the lioness if she changed her intentions.
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Thomson’s gazelles obviously brighter than zebras!
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Don’t say that in front of any zebras! They’re not the most patient of animals 😛
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I think it would feel surreal to be in a place with so many different kinds of large mammals. Wonderful, but as if I’d waked up in Oz.
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The whole experience is rather dream-like, at the distance of two or three weeks.
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