Lewa
Where to Stay While Visiting Lewa:Il Ngwesi Lodge |
Lewa House |
Lewa Safari Camp |
Wilderness Trails |
In 1995 the Craig family turned their
entire farm on the northern slopes of Mt Kenya into the Lewa Wildlife
Conservancy, with a mandate to protect and conserve the wildlife of Kenya. They
had to convince the local communities to stop seeing animals as competition for
their cattle's grazing and instead see them as a source of income. This was
achieved and many fences were taken down and old migration routes were re-opened
to the animals.
Lewa Downs is now an area of outstanding natural beauty
with the Lewa River giving life to dense woodland and patches of open savannah
providing the perfect habitat for a whole range of Kenya's animals.
Community development projects have also proved successful, and nearby
areas have benefited from the Conservancy 's experience and support. Il Ngwesi
is a 16,500 acre (6,677ha) group ranch, which now includes a lodge, is owned and
run by the Laikipiak Maasai. All profits are returned to the community who are
now avid supporters of conservation.
Lewa has developed a range of
activities for its visitors, allowing people to get actively involved in
conservation and community projects.
On the wildlife side these include day and night game drives and
nature walks, horse and camel rides, visits to Lewa's orphaned animals and
horseback rhino patrol for experienced riders. You can also accompany the lion
tracker to collect data on the resident lion population or head for the Ngare
Ndare Forest Reserve in search of black and white colobus monkeys. On the
education/community side you can visit schools, water schemes and other
community development projects or visit Lewa's prehistoric archaeological site
where stone hand axes are common and date back approximately 800,000-1 million
years.
Kenya leads the way in the transformation of private farms into
wildlife reserves and the safari experience in these places is quite unique. You
are often hosted by the owners and welcomed to a select lodge catering for a
small number of guests. Your guides are usually people who know the area
intimately, which gives a greater depth to the whole experience.
ANIMALS & BIRDS
The Conservancy has grown and now
supports an impressive array of wildlife, much of it indigenous to the area. The
45,000 acre (18,211ha) area has more than 25% of the world's threatened Grevy's
zebra (there are approximately only 3,000 left). At the end of 2002, eight new
precious rhino calves were born (4 white and 4 black rhino), bringing the
steadily increasing numbers to a healthy 32 indigenous black rhino and 33 white
rhino.
There are of course a host of other animals native to this part
of East Africa including elephants and reticulated giraffe who have bred so
successfully, that the Conservancy was faced with an over population and had to
relocate some of them.
There are thought to be only about 50 shy aquatic
sitatunga antelope in Kenya and Lewa Plains has about 20 living in the swampy
riverine areas of the reserve. Other antelope to be seen in some numbers are
eland, oryx, impala and waterbuck. Predators are not here in great numbers but
lion, leopard and hyena are around.
SEASONS 
The days are usually hot and dry and the nights quite cool.
Typical Kenya seasons go something like this:
Rainy Season: The long hot
and humid rainy period starts around April and lasts until June, then the short
rains come during the warm months of November and December. Dry<
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 |