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©
2003 Display
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contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition. |
Local
woman has adventure of a lifetime
Some
people live for adventure. Sarah Lawrence, 21, of Lower Bridge is one of
them.
She spent the last year adventuring
on the rivers of the West and in the wilds of Kenya -- on horseback.
Lawrence is an Environmental
Studies and Sociology senior at Whitman University in Walla Walla, Washington.
She spent four months last
year studying river systems in the West, before heading to Kenya to attend
the School of Field Studies affiliated with Boston University.
The school has bush camps
at Kilimanjaro and at Nairobi National Park, and conducts courses in wildlife
management and conservation biology. Students have an opportunity to observe
African wildlife and also learn about local communities and human/livestock
interaction with wildlife.
The highlight of the year
was the summer months spent on El Karama Ranch, located on the equator
in the Laikipia Plateau between Mt. Kenya and the Great Rift Valley.
Lawrence learned about the
ranch from "a friend of a friend," and when she called to say she knew
how to ride and train horses, an invitation was extended to come and help
for the summer.
El Karama, which means "a
precious possession" or "answered prayer" in Arabic-based Swahili, is
a large, family-owned ranch, headed by Guy Grant, whose grandfather emigrated
to Kenya from Scotland. The ranch produces purebred Sahiwal cattle and
also breeds its own horses. Sold primarily to Maasai tribesmen as breeding
stock, the 900 Sahiwals are tended by a diverse group of Kenyan stockmen.
"The whole Maasai culture
is based on their cattle. They will live in mud huts and spend thousands
of shillings to buy good cattle. That is their wealth," said Lawrence.
The cattle graze on pastures
around the vast ranch, but are put into corrals called "bomas" at night
to protect them from the wildlife that freely roams the ranch.
"Kenya is not like a big zoo,"
said Lawrence. "All the big animals are really aggressive and you never
go anywhere alone, and never at dusk or dawn when the animals are hunting."
A new tourist venture offering
a horseback safari is being established on the ranch and is run by the
Grant's daughter, Laria. Catering to experienced riders and definitely
upscale (by wilderness camping standards), the safaris travel for six
to eight days, never leaving the boundaries of the ranch. The camps are
moved every second day, using camels for transport.
"The guests don't see a vehicle
during the safari. You can go places on horseback that you'd never go
on foot because of the speed of the horse," said Lawrence.
The homebred horses were a
combination of Thoroughbred, Arabian, and Somalian/Ethiopian bush horses.
"They are raised here and
they are fit, fast, and responsive. They tend to be a bit spooky because
they are always on alert for predators," said Lawrence.
The safaris take guests through
herds of giraffe, zebra and impala, and Lawrence came upon a lion kill
one day. At night, the horses and camels are put into a boma if one is
near. Otherwise, the horses are picketed in the middle of camp and the
camels stay near their handlers' tents.
When Lawrence arrived on the
ranch, she was put in charge of the horse program. Training nine young
horses, feeding and trimming feet on 30 others, as well as guiding a safari
and teaching natural horsemanship principles to the four men who looked
after the horses made for full days.
"The experience of the ranch
was different than the school in that we were among the wildlife on a
daily basis," said Lawrence. "At school, our contact was very controlled;
out there it was part of the day."
Visit www.horsebackin-kenya.com
for information. |
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