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  • MASAI MARA NATIONAL PARK. KENYA.<br />
The Masai Mara is a large game reserve in south-western Kenya, which is effectively the northern continuation of the Serengeti National Park game reserve in Tanzania. Named after the Maasai people (the traditional inhabitants of the area) and their description of the area when looked at from a viewpoint - "Mara", which is Maa (Maasai language) for spotted: an apt description for the circles of trees, scrub, savannah and cloud shadows that mark the area. It is famous for its exceptional population of Big Cats, game, and the annual migration of zebra, Thomson's gazelle and wildebeest  from the Serengeti every year from July to October, a migration so immense it is called the Great Migration.
    Sabana-05.jpg
  • BAOBAB AROUND LAKE MANYARA NATIONAL PARK. ARUSHA, TANZANIA.<br />
The lake is a shallow freshwater lake in Tanzania, home of a diverse set of landscapes and wildlife.
    Sabana-32.jpg
  • NGORONGORO CRATER. TANZANIA.<br />
No Europeans are known to have set foot in the Crater until 1892, when it was visited by Dr. Oscar Baumann. Two German brothers farmed in the Crater until the outbreak of World War I, after leasing the land from the German colonial administration then in control of East Africa. <br />
A population of approximately 25,000 large animals, largely ungulates along with reputedly the highest density of mammalian predators in Africa, lives in the crater.
    Sabana-27.jpg
  • BAOBAB AT SUNSET. MAPUNGUBWE, SOUTH AFRICA.<br />
Mapungubwe National Park is located near the confluence of the Limpopo  and Shashe rivers. It abuts on the border with Botswana  and Zimbabwe, and forms part of the proposed Limpopo-Shashe Transfrontier Conservation Area. It was established in 1995 and covers an area of over 28,000 hectares. The park protects the historical site of Mapungubwe Hill, which was the capital of the Kingdom of Mapungubwe, as well as the wildlife and riverine forests along the Limpopo River.
    Sabana-19.jpg
  • MOKORO RIDE. OKAVANGO, BOTSWANA.<br />
A makoro (also spelt mekoro, mokoro) is a type of canoe commonly used in the Okavango Delta, Botswana. Makoros are traditionally made by digging out the trunk of a large straight tree, such as an ebony tree or Kigelia tree. Modern makoros, however, are increasingly made of fibre-glass. The boats are still a practical means of transport for residents to move around the swamp. The boats are very vulnerable to attack by hippopotamus, which can overturn them with ease.
    Sabana-11.jpg
  • SOSSUSVLEI AT SUNSET. NAMIBIA.<br />
Sossusvlei is a clay pan in the central Namib Desert, lying within the Namib-Naukluft National Park, Namibia. Fed by the Tsauchab River, it is known for the high, red sand dunes which surround it forming a major sand sea. Vegetation, such as the camelthorn tree, is watered by infrequent floods of the Tsauchab River, which slowly soak into the underlying clay.
    Sabana-15.jpg
  • Broken Dragon's Blood Tree (Dracaena cinnabari), endemic to island, Diksam Plateau, central Socotra Island, listed as World Heritage by UNESCO, Aden Governorate, Yemen, Arabia, West Asia
    SocotraFS004.jpg
  • Dragon's Blood Tree (Dracaena cinnabari), endemic to island, Diksam Plateau, central Socotra Island, listed as World Heritage by UNESCO, Aden Governorate, Yemen, Arabia, West Asia
    SocotraFS002.jpg
  • Dragon's Blood Tree (Dracaena cinnabari), endemic to island, Diksam Plateau, central Socotra Island, listed as World Heritage by UNESCO, Aden Governorate, Yemen, Arabia, West Asia
    SocotraFS030.jpg
  • Acacia trees at Sunset, Southern Serengeti National Park, Tanzania, East Africa
    NgorongoroFS008.jpg
  • Acacia trees at Sunset, Southern Serengeti National Park, Tanzania, East Africa
    NgorongoroFS008.jpg
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