The coast and
major
game parks
are the most obvious
targets, and if you come
to Kenya on an inclusive
tour you're likely to
have your time divided
between these two
attractions. Despite the
impact of human
population pressures,
Kenya's
wildlife
spectacle remains a
fascinating and
addictive experience and
most visitors are
enchanted by their
safaris. Kenya's million-odd
annual visitors are
easily absorbed in such
a large country, and
there's nothing to
prevent you escaping the
predictable tourist
bottlenecks: even on an
organized tour, you
should not feel
constrained to follow
the prescribed plan.
The vast majority of
the population live in
the rugged highland
areas in the
southwest quarter of
the country, where the
ridges are a mix of
shamba smallholdings
and plantations. Running
through the heart of
these highlands sprawls
the Great Rift Valley
, an archetypal East
African scene of dry,
thorn tree savannah,
splashed with lakes and
studded by volcanoes.
It's great walking
country, as are the high
forests and moors of the
Central Highlands
and Mount Kenya
itself - a major target
and a feasible climb for
most people. Nairobi
, the capital, on the
highlands' southern edge,
is generally used only
as a gateway to Kenya,
but has plenty of
diversions to occupy
your time while
arranging an onward trip.
The national parks
and reserves ,
watered by seasonal
streams, are mostly
located in savannah
country on the highland
fringes.
Further west, towards
Lake Victoria ,
lies gentler
countryside, where you
can travel for days
without seeing another
foreign visitor and get
perhaps the best
immersion in Kenyan life
and culture. Beyond the
rolling tea plantations
of Kericho and the hot
plains around the port
of Kisumu lies the steep
volcanic massif of
Mount Elgon ,
astride the Ugandan
border. The little-known
Kakamega Forest
rainforest reserve, with
its unique wildlife, is
here too, and more than
enough reason to strike
out west.
In the north, the
land is desert or
semi-desert, broken only
by the highlight of
Lake Turkana in the
north west, almost
unnaturally blue and
gigantic in the
wilderness. Although
northeast Kenya, towards
the Somalian border, is
currently unsafe for
travellers, the routes
up to Turkana are still
open, and you can even
get there by public
transport. For serious
adventure, it is one of
the most spectacular and
memorable of all African
regions.
Separating Kenya's
interior - or
"up-country" - from the
Indian Ocean, the arid
Maungu Plains form a
barrier which accounts
in large part for the
separate history and
culture of the coast
. Here, a distinct
Islamic Swahili
civilization exists with
a long historical record
in its mosques and tombs
and the ruins of several
ancient towns cut from
the jungle, while along
the length of the coast,
beyond the white sandy
beaches - invariably
shaded by coconut palms
or casuarina trees -
runs an almost
continuous coral reef,
protecting a shallow,
safe lagoon from the
Indian Ocean.