Aberdeen National Park
Amboseli National Park
Mt Kenya National Park
Masai-Mara Game Reserve
Marsabit National Park
Meru National  Park
Nairobi National park
Lake Nakuru National park

Tsavo National Park
Gedi National Park
Olorgesaillie National Park

   
Most visitors to Kenya want to experience the country’s world famous wildlife. But there are many different ways to experience the Kenyan wilderness >>>>>>
   
Tanzania hosts three of the world's most spectacular sights… Mount Kilimanjaro, the highest free standing mountain in the world, and the highest in Africa at 5895m asl;>>>>>>
   

Baloon Safaris
Mountain Climbing
Wedding

 
 
 
 
  Mt Kenya  
     
   
     
 

 

Mount Kenya, extinct volcano in central Kenya, located just south of the equator. With an elevation of 5,199 m (17,057 ft), Mount Kenya is the second highest mountain in Africa, after Kilimanjaro.

The mountain was created by massive, successive eruptions of a volcano leaving a series of snow- and glacier-covered peaks, and valleys containing frozen lakes. B As recently as the late 19th century, seven of these glaciers melted completely away. The several that remain are retreating rapidly.

Mount Kenya features an array of ecosystems and climatic zones. Grasslands and low trees grow on the basal plateau of the mountain. Rising above the basal plateau, a ring of dense rain forest covers the mountain slopes up to about 3,200 m (about 10,500 ft). Above this rain forest, alpine zone vegetation covers the mountain to about 4,600 m (about 15,000 ft), where it dwindles to mosses and lichens living on the snow-encrusted rocks. From the crowned eagle and mountain buzzard that inhabit the upper mountainous regions to the elephants, rhinoceroses, forest hogs, and Sykes monkeys that live in the dense forest areas, many animal species gain sustenance from this varied vegetation.

The numerous rivers radiating from the central cone and the volcanic soils create a fertile environment. The lower slopes of Mount Kenya are cultivated by the Kikuyu and the related Embu and Meru peoples. The Swahili name given to Mount Kenya by the Kikuyu, Kirinyaga, translates to “mountain of whiteness.”

Mount Kenya and the surrounding Mount Kenya National Park have developed into a popular travel destination. Visitors can often see rhinoceroses, elephants, and buffalo. One of the earliest recorded climbers to reach the summit of Mount Kenya was British geographer Halford John Mackinder, who scaled the mountain in 1899. Although less skilled mountaineers usually do not attempt to climb the volcano’s two highest peaks, Batian and Nelion, many trekkers reach the top of Point Lenana, the third highest peak on Mount Kenya.

.