Lapped by the Indian Ocean, straddling the equator, and with Mount
Kenya rising above a magnificent landscape of forested hills, patchwork
farms and wooded savanna, Kenya is a richly rewarding place to travel.
The country’s dramatic geography has resulted in a great range of
natural habitats, harbouring a huge variety of wildlife, while its
history of migration and conquest has brought about a fascinating social
panorama, which includes the Swahili city-states of the coast and the
Maasai of the Rift Valley.
Kenya’s world-famous national parks, tribal peoples and superb
beaches lend the country an exotic image with magnetic appeal. Treating
it as a succession of tourist sights, however, is not the most
stimulating way to experience it. If you get off the beaten track, you
can enter the world inhabited by most Kenyans: a ceaselessly active
scene of muddy farm tracks, corrugated-iron huts, tea shops and lodging
houses, crammed buses and streets wandered by goats and children. Both
on and off the tourist routes, you’ll find warmth and openness, and an
abundance of superb scenery – rolling savanna dotted with Maasai herds
and wild animals, high Kikuyu moorlands grazed by cattle and sheep, and
dense forests full of monkeys and birdsong. Of course Kenya is not all
postcard-perfect: start a conversation with any local and you’ll soon
find out about the country’s deep economic and social tensions.
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