(Clicking on a photo will bring up a filmstrip at the bottom. You can then scroll through the photos full screen.)
"The gladdest moment in human life is the departure on a distant journey
into unknown lands.” – Sir Richard Francis Burton
I was curious about the name for this camp, the game reserve around it, and its origins, so I did what anyone would do: I Googled it.
Here’s some information I thought interesting, interspersed with photos from our first game drive at Dinaka Game Reserve
At the end of WWII, two British soldiers, Leonard Ker and Syd Downy, decided to establish “the best safari company the world has ever known” to outfit and guide big game hunters in Africa.
Their website tells the story better than I can.
From the Ker and Downy website: They were hired to run a camp in the Maasai Mara for the production of The Macomber Affair, the United Artists blockbuster starring Gregory Peck and Joan Bennett. It was the beginning of a long love affair with Hollywood, which would see “K&D” outfit some of the biggest films ever to come out of Africa.
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| This little steenbok lingered for photos. |
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| About 24 inches at the shoulder and weighing roughly 35 lbs, steenbok, or steinbok, are counted among the several dwarf antelope. And they are cute. |
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| Common male ostrich. |
The company continued to grow – extending its reach across southern Africa, west to the jungles of Congo, and north into the deserts of Ethiopia and Sudan. By 1977, when hunting was officially banned in Kenya, "K&D" had transformed itself into the leading provider of customised mobile photographic safaris in Africa.
Crested francolin |
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| Like moose in Alaska, a wildebeest always wants to be on the opposite side of the road when it sees you. This one was no different. |
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| Wildebeest portrait. |
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| I think this is a red-crested korhaan. The red crest appears during courtship time. |
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| Scarlet-breasted shrike. |
Today, Ker & Downey is celebrated as the longest-existing safari outfitter in the world.
One step on the wooden boardwalks at Dinaka lodge, and I have questions. What kind of wood is this? Where does it come from? How much maintenance does it require? What’s the secret to keeping it looking so nice?
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| A fork-tailed drongo. |
Everything at Dinaka looks very nice. Everything is nice! Someone cares an awful lot about this place. It truly reflects the adage, “You never get a second chance to make a first impression.”
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| A hartebeest stops in the middle of the road to scratch an itch, and then..... |
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...gawks at us. Three to five feet at the shoulders, and around 440 lbs, they are fleet of foot, often reaching 70 km/h (44mph). haar tuh-bees |
Most of the large animals we encounter early in the first game drive want nothing to do with having their photos taken, and they quickly disappear into the brush. This is indicative of how “unhabituated” they are to humans, unlike a lot of other camps that cater to tourists.
With only four vehicles at Dinaka, and no other camps in the privately-owned reserve, that makes a maximum of eight game drives a day in almost 50,000 unfenced acres per day. Of course, some animals might see the safari trucks more than once per drive, like the male rhinoceros that seemed to prefer a main trail and that we encountered often.
The birds, however, are a bit more cooperative.
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| Fawn-colored lark. |
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| Some wonderful action between this pale chanting goshawk and a forked-tailed drongo. |
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| The drongo, a much smaller raptor, was attempting to drive away the goshawk perhaps because of a nearby nest or hatchlings, or because it's a drongo doing what drongos do. |
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| The goshawk gets tired of the whole kerfullfe. |
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| Another of the dwarf antelopes is the dikdik. They are about 15 inches tall and around 10 lbs. They mate for life and are often seen around campus at night, where they come for safety from predators. |
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| Too late for photos, we find a white rhino cow and calf. Lousy photo, but proof we saw these elusive animals. |
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| This is a Burchell's zebra, identified by the small brown lines between its stripes. |
AND THEN!!!
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| More springbok. These medium-sized antelope are famous for their "pronking,: a stiff-legged leap in the air that often reaches 4 meters (13 ft.). They can run as fast as 56 mph. |
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| A yellow-billed hornbill. |


























Wonderful photos, and loved the background info on the camp! Did you get a pic of leaping springbok? Thanks for taking us along with you!
ReplyDeleteLeilani
Thanks you, Leilani. Never saw a leaping springbok. They were all too calm. Guess that's a good thing as I would not have wanted to frighten them. Impala, on the other hand, go leaping about for fun. Good for motion blur photography.
DeleteGullible, it's not really how great your TRULY GREAT photos are, in this and in all of your Posts, but the process to select the ones you actually post. THAT takes some time and thought. Out of every 100 photos you have, have you any idea of how many are left on the "cutting room floor"?
ReplyDeleteYou wrote about the wooden board walk at the Dinaka lodge .. " I have questions. What kind of wood is this? Where does it come from? How much maintenance does it require? What’s the secret to keeping it looking so nice?" We don't recall seeing answers.
Photos 23 and 24 .. A springbok! It's a life animal for me--my first ever sighting! I am stoked. Fun to read Gullible! Photo 26... What the? "Where will this take us?" Does The Shadow Know! Lots of smiles .. Cap and Patti
I never asked about the boardwalks and I had all the same questions. I was going to, but something stunning happened and I didn't ask. That's coming up soon.
DeleteAs for how many photos wind up on the cutting room floor, that's hard to answer. I can tell you one thing for sure--not as many wind up there as should wind up there. That's because I am lazy about deleting them.. With 17,000 pix, you can imagine how long it takes to go through them, edit, choose the ones that illustrate that story, etc. Plus, my camera takes 5 or 6 frames per second! Lots of duplicates.
Thanks so very much for your quality reply Gullible. Cap and Patti
Delete