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News / Life / Travel

Training safaris teach tourists to read landscape’s signs

By CHARMAINE NORONHA, Associated Press
Published: August 28, 2016, 6:00am
2 Photos
Members of Kenya&#039;s Maasai tribe on a training mission March 5 in Kenya&#039;s Maasai Mara region. They were participating in a program to brush up on their skills as safari guides. The program also allows tourists to learn alongside them so that they&#039;re not just riding along for photo opportunities, but are instead actively learning to tune into the sights and sounds of the natural world.
Members of Kenya's Maasai tribe on a training mission March 5 in Kenya's Maasai Mara region. They were participating in a program to brush up on their skills as safari guides. The program also allows tourists to learn alongside them so that they're not just riding along for photo opportunities, but are instead actively learning to tune into the sights and sounds of the natural world. (Photos by Charmaine Noronha/Associated Press) Photo Gallery

MARA NORTH CONSERVANCY, Kenya — It’s not just a safari. It’s a master class in the untamed world, a behind-the-scenes education with experts who are the talking Google gods of wildlife.

That’s what it’s like on safaris that let tourists learn alongside locals who are training to be guides.

The guides, members of Kenya’s Maasai tribe, spend three weeks on a training mission traversing East Africa’s Maasai Mara region under the tutelage of senior guiding experts. And tourists can come along for the Land Cruiser rides.

The three-week expedition, called Pyramids of Life, moves from Kenya’s Mara North Conservancy, which borders the country’s famous Masa Mara region, to Tanzania’s northern and southern Serengeti. But unlike other safaris I’ve been on, this one is not just about drive-by photo opportunities. It’s about learning to become attuned to the sights and sounds of nature so you’re able to predict and identify what may be moving about in the plains.

On a typical safari, you’re rushed off from place to place to make sure you bag photos of all the Big 5 game — lion, elephant, buffalo, leopard and rhino. But on this trip, instead, you immerse yourself for hours watching incredible scenes unfold.

As we wound our way through the plains each day under the heat of a penetrating sun, we saw lions mating, impalas galloping by, hungry hippos and giraffes on the hunt for water. We witnessed a wildebeest giving birth and saw her newborn calf stumble to gain its footing, falling and rising several times in those first few moments of life. Then, as the mother began sauntering off to join thousands of other wildebeests in a migrating herd, we were stunned to see the newborn running too.

We also saw a warthog torn to pieces by a lion. In the quiet of the night, the sound of the big cat’s teeth crushing the wild pig’s bones sent shivers down my spine.

Topi antelopes stood guard on mounds of dirt to warn others of impending danger. Zebras used their tails to swish insects off their pals. We even learned about creatures I’d never heard of, like the hyrax, a small rodent-like animal that we were told is actually related to elephants.

Pyramids of Life is offered by Alex Walker’s Serian tour company. Walker says when he first started in the business 20 years ago, he used to conduct 45-day safaris. “Back in the day, you really got to know the landscape and understand the animals,” Walker said. “Your newspaper was reading the sounds of animals and birds to indicate what was happening in the bush. It was like a chess game, trying to work out where things were.”

Today, most game drives have been condensed to one or two days out in the plains. “The idea of safari has been compacted into photos and soundbites,” Walker said. The idea behind the Pyramids of Life tour is “to bring that real-life-connect-the-dots back. We want to teach you to read the plains.”

Serian’s Maasai guides know the bush, having grown up here, but they have “differing levels of knowledge.” The training allows them to share what they know with each other and with the guests, and provide an overlay of information about what they’re seeing. “It’s about reconnecting with nature and allowing for the time to take it all in,” Walker said.

We also watched as the guides and their trainers developed relationships, sharing information, giggling at mistakes and patting each other on the shoulder when they learned something. And we partook in a walking safari to learn the ways of the Maasai.

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