Tanzania
Read MoreOur first morning in Africa, rising early to the sound of the Muezzin calling the faithful to worship.
We had arrived in Dar es Salaam late the night before, and when we checked into our hotel, there was only one room available.
What a surprise to be escorted to a penthouse suite with 4 large bedrooms, a full kitchen, living room, and dining room for 10. This photo was taken from one of the terraces.Zanzibar is an archipelago off Tanzania's eastern shore. The ferry to Unguja (Zanzibar's largest island) takes about 2 hours.
Zanzibar gained independence from Great Britain in 1963, and almost immediately erupted into a bloody civil war resulting in the genocide of hundreds of thousands of Arabs and Indians.
In 1964, Tanganyika and Zanzibar united to form modern day Tanzania.Stone Town is the oldest section of Zanzibar City. It was the Gateway to Africa for traders in the middle ages, and was the center of the African slave trade well into the nineteenth century.
Zanzibar is devoutly Muslim, but its architecture reveals African, Arab, Indian, Chinese, Indonesian, and Persian influences.Every year, millions of Wildebeest migrate from the Masai Mara in southwest Kenya to the Southern Serengeti seeking water and grazing grounds
Wildebeest follow the rains, and it is not unusual to see large groups of them running hard towards distant rain clouds.
A newborn Wildebeest can stand within minutes, and run with the herd within a day.From our base at Ubuntu Camp, we set out on multiple game drives (or walks) each day.
Game drives are unstructured events with the drivers seeking out the most interesting animal encounters that can be found that day. Drivers communicate via radio about what animals they find.
The first day finds us driving north from Ndutu Airstrip to Naabi Hill (to recover our day pack) before heading south to Ubuntu. Other days, we explore the Serengeti closer to home.The cheetah cub is part of a group of 3 - a mother and 2 cubs.
Females live alone except when raising cubs. The mother teaches her cubs what they need to know to survive - how to hunt for prey and how to avoid predators.
At eighteen months, the mother leaves the cubs. Female cubs also go their own way, but young males remain together for life.Nata is a Masai guide who leads us on hikes from Ubuntu - the first to the nearby Hippo Pool, and the second to a viewpoint overlooking Lake Eyasi.
Safari Camps in Tanzania are not fenced, so they hire local Masai as security against predators, and as guides.
Men always carry a stick and a knife. When they are in the wild, they also carry spears. In the past, a young Masai would be required to kill a lion with his spear as a right of passage to manhood.
I asked Nata how old he is. About 20, he thinks.