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Also now on TWITTER @TsavoTanya...

WHAT & WHERE IS KULAFUMBI?

1724670-982768-thumbnail.jpg 'Kulafumbi' is our family home in Kenya, East Africa. 'Kulafumbi' is a play on the Kiswahili words "kula vumbi", which mean "eat dust", because it was so hot and dusty building our house in this remote, wild, wonderful place. Kulafumbi borders the Tsavo National Park - with no fences between us and the Park, the wildlife comes and goes of its own free will and treats our land as its own, which is exactly how we like it. In turn, we provide a protected area for the wild animals to do as they please. This protected area also creates an important buffer for the river, which forms the boundary between us and the park.
House & Land - more info
My Family & I - more info

ON-GOING SPECIES COUNT

1829439-992202-thumbnail.jpg Look how many species of animals & birds we've spotted to date at Kulafumbi:

MAMMALS: 43+
REPTILES &
AMPHIBIANS: 18+++

BIRDS: 199+
INSECTS: Too many to count

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SAFARI SANCTUARY: the conservation game

The fabulous new Facebook game that supports conservation efforts in Africa!

Build your own wildlife orphanage in Africa's wilderness - adopt sick or lonely orphaned baby elephants, rhino, meerkats, buffalo and many other animals - nurse them back to health and give them a second chance in life!

This is not a zoo game! Once your animals are big and strong enough to look after themselves, release them back into the wild where they belong! Fly on animal rescue missions in your helicopter, chase evil poachers, remove nasty animal traps, enjoy incredible graphics, 3D dynamic, interactive animals and the real sounds of the African savannah. This game looks like Africa, feels like Africa, in fact it virtually IS Africa! There's not another game quite like this one, a trans-continental creation developed between the African wilderness and a digital games studio in UK.

PLAY NOW! or if you prefer, LEARN MORE ABOUT THE GAME, WHAT INSPIRED ITS CREATION AND WHICH CONSERVATION CHARITIES BENEFIT FROM IT.

Kenyans for Wildlife

KENYANS FOR WILDLIFE
is a dynamic, interesting Facebook group which discusses wildlife issues in Kenya and is having an incredible effect on conservation in this country. You don't have to be Kenyan - this group is open to everyone. If you care about conservation in Africa, please do join. 

JOIN NOW - KENYANS FOR WILDLIFE.

PEOPLE LIKE US

"We are the music-makers,
And we are the dreamers of dreams,
Wandering by lone sea-breakers,
And sitting by desolate streams;
World-losers and world-forsakers,
On whom the pale moon gleams:
Yet we are the movers and shakers
Of the world for ever, it seems..."

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« 15th December 2007 | Main | 5th December 2007 »
Sunday
Dec162007

6th December 2007

We were back at the Crocodile Falls again today. There was not much action but we saw the same huge crocodile sliding up the falls again, which allowed me to get some long shots to complement the close-ups from yesterday. Who could ask for more?

The Weavers were carrying on as usual, collecting grass for their nests, uninterested in the crocodile basking in the sun beneath their nest tree. We saw a large yellow-green bird being pursued by a Starling – we think it is a Eurasian Golden Oriole.

New flowers are coming out everywhere, as the rains continue. While I was photographing one flower – a beautiful tiny delicate creeper flower – a tiny movement caught my eye, and I noticed a spider that had caught a caterpillar in its web, and was proceeding to suck out its life blood.

A new bird migrant was here for a short 24 hours: the Black-winged Stilts with their impossibly long red legs and sheer black and white plumage. The resident Spur-winged Plover air were – true to form – trying to intimidate the much taller Stilts and chase them away, but with absolutely no success. The Stilts appeared to be resting – probably after a long flight, and knowing that they had another long journey the next day…

It rained heavily again this afternoon…we sought refuge indoors, but I managed to get a few shots of the rain, beating down on the Tana River Poplars lining the river, on a small crocodile in the river, and on the star grass growing in our balcony gardens. I find it’s not often easy to capture the ferocity of rain in a photograph, but today I had a measure of success.

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