Mount Kenya
Where to Stay While Visiting Mount Kenya:Mt Kenya Safari Club |
Serena Mountain Lodge |

Mount Kenya plays a crucial role in the life of the
country being Kenya's single most important permanent watershed and her largest
forest reserve. The fertile soils of its lower slopes also sustain the growth of
the nation's richest farmlands whilst much of its vegetation is globally unique.
In recent years, however, the Mountain has suffered greatly from the adverse
effects of deforestation, resulting in large tracts of its lower slopes being
entirely denuded of trees and occupied by squatters. And, although much of the
vast forest cover remains intact, the growing demand for timber (Kenya's staple
construction and fuel source) threatens to lead to even more serious
deforestation and subsequent soil erosion.
Over half of Africa's forests
have been destroyed, in this century alone, by means as varied as illegal
logging, charcoal burning, agricultural encroachment, 'land grabbing' and the
unscheduled de-gazetting of supposedly protected forest areas. Indeed recent
estimates state that only 2.9% of Kenya's original forest cover still exists.
There is also evidence that not only is the water-catchment area suffering, but
also that the montane glaciers have shrunk so rapidly over the last 20 years
that some of them have completely disappeared. Finally the popularity of
trekking and hiking holidays on the mountain is placing enormous pressure on the
natural environment thanks to the attendant ills of tourist refuse, forest
fires, feeding wildlife, off-road driving and erosion of climbing routes.
The People of Mount Kenya Mount Kenya represents the
ancestral home and heartland of the Bantu-speaking Kikuyu people, Kenya's
largest ethnic group. Heavily influential throughout Kenya's history, the Kikuyu
were instrumental in leading the fight for independence, provided the country
with its first President, Mzee Jomo Kenyatta, and have forced the pace of all
subsequent political developments. The original Kikuyu are thought to have
migrated from the east and north-east of the continent in the 16th century.
Because land was the dominant factor in their social, political, religious and
economic life, however, this brought them into conflict first with the Maasai
and then with the European settlers, who seized large tracts of their territory.
That said, the Kikuyu have adapted to the challenges of Western culture more
successfully than any other tribe and are enlightened businessmen and successful
and progressive farmers who grow coffee, tea, pyrethrum horticultural crops,
vegetables and flowers for the export market.
Traditionally the Kikuyu
have always believed that Ngai's (God's) most frequent resting place is on
'Kirinyaga' or Mount Kenya and although Christianity has altered these beliefs
there are still many churchgoers who maintain that their ancestors control their
destiny thanks to their closeness to 'Ngai'. Today the Kikuyu remain at the
forefront of Kenyan development as both successful business people and
formidable politicians.
Climate July to August marks the Kenyan winter.
Broadly speaking, January-February is dry. March-May is wet. June-September is
dry. October-December is wet, the rains passing in time for Christmas.
Climbing Mount Kenya An extinct volcano,
some three and a half million years old with permanently snow-covered,
ice-shattered peaks, Mount Kenya is the second-highest mountain in Africa after
Tanzania's Mount Kilimanjaro. There are four main routes of ascent, the Naro
Moru trail, the Burguret and Sirimon trails and the Chogoria trail and, whilst
the icy peaks of Batian (5199m) and Nelion (5,189m) are accessible only to
experienced mountaineers, Point Lenana (4,985m) can be conquered by anyone who
is reasonably fit. I
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 |