Tsavo West
Where to Stay While Visiting Tsavo West:Finch Hattons |
Kilaguni Serena |
Lake Naivasha Sopa |
Ngulia Safari Lodge |
Salt Lick Lodge |
Severin Safari Camp |
Taita Hills Lodge |
Voyager Safari Camp |

The vast Tsavo ecosystem features a huge
diversity of habitats including mountains, rivers, forests, plains, lakes and
wooded grassland. Once thickly wooded, Tsavo was transformed over the years into
open bush and grassland by the great elephant herds which roamed endlessly
across its red earth. These days, though the elephant numbers have been
drastically reduced by a series of catastrophic droughts, they still leave a
trail of destruction in their wake whilst even more damage is being done to the
terrain by the off-road driving habits of the tour operators. Another hazard
that park wardens must contend with is fire, especially during the long hot dry
summers. Finally, due to the massive size and impenetrability of much of the
park, tracking and monitoring the massive animal herds becomes virtually
impossible and in the past this has resulted in disastrous poaching. In the
1960's, for instance, Tsavo had the biggest population of black rhinos in Africa
(between 6000 and 9000) but by 1981 they had been poached to barely 100
individuals. Today, most of the rhino have been moved to a sanctuary so that
their numbers may gradually re-build and poaching is not tolerated, either by
the Kenya Wildlife Service or the Kenyan government.
The People of Tsavo The
AkambaTsavo is the traditional home of the Bantu-speaking Akamba people
who are numerically Kenya's fourth-largest group. Thought to have migrated to
Tsavo from the Mount Kilimanjaro region several centuries ago, the Akamba became
great traders in ivory, beer, honey, ornaments and iron weapons and, thanks to
their knowledge of the interior of the continent, were able to cover a vast
region that stretched from the coast to Lake Victoria. Highly regarded for their
fighting ability during colonial times, large numbers of Akamba were drafted
into the British army where many thousands of them lost their lives during the
First World War. Culturally similar to the Maasai, Akamba adolescents must go
through colourful initiation rites before being admitted to adulthood whilst
Akamba society is built up around strictly defined age-sets and groupings of
elders. Finally the Akamba are famous for the beauty of their wildlife carvings.
The TaitaThe Bantu-speaking Taita are essentially a coastal
people who have long farmed the southern lands of the region. An intensely
spiritual people who, before Christianity, relied on communication with the dead
for arbitration and future direction, the Taita farm only after permission has
been granted from the tribal elders and sacrifices and supplications have been
made to the collections of ancestral skulls that reside in the Taita's sacred
caves. Traditional Taita crops include millet, beans, cassava, sugar cane and
maize whilst trade revolves around the barter of meat and skins. Traditional
crafts include leatherwork, metal work, basket weaving and woodwork.
The MaasaiThe region is also home to the fabled Maasai
peoples. Often strikingly tall and slender, swathed in brilliant red cloth
'Shukas', hung about with beads and metal jewellery, the young men (Moran)
favour long, plaited, ochre-daubed hairstyles and have a formidable reputation
for glamour, prowess and ferocity. Traditionally the Maasai live off the milk
and blood of their beloved cattle and believe that all the world's cattle are
theirs by God-given right. Their nomadic and pastoral lifestyle, though
historically based on the pursuit of the migratory wildlife, is slowly changing
thanks to<
Kenya Parks
Aberdares | Amboseli | Barack Obama | Bomas of Kenya | Great Rift Valley | Kisumu Museum | Kisumu Town | Lake Baringo | Lake Bogoria | Lake Naivasha | Lake Nakuru | Lake Victoria - Ke | Lewa | Maasai Mara | Mombasa | Mount Kenya | Mount Meru | Nairobi City | Nairobi Nat. Park | Nairobi National Museum | Nakuru Town | Nyangoma Kogelo | Odinga Mausoleum | Railway Museum | Samburu | Shaba | Shimba Hills | Siaya Town | Sweetwaters | Tsavo East | Tsavo West |