Day 30 (August 7)
Back in Amboseli for a full day. The day was spent alternating between the wetlands and the plains, where we were on the search for wolves.
609) Spur-Winged Goose Plectropterus gambensis
610) Red-Knobbed Coot Fulica cristata
611) Cape Teal Anas capensis
612) Striated Heron Butorides striata
613) Pied Avocet Recurvirostra avosetta
614) Common Redshank Tringa totanus
615) Winding Cisticola Cisticola marginatus
616) Saddle-Billed Stork Ephippiorhynchus senegalensis
617) Banded Parisoma Curruca boehmi
618) Rufous Chatterer Argya rubiginosa
619) Southern Pochard Netta erythrophthalma
620) Greater Painted-Snipe Rostratula benghalensis
125) Egyptian Mongoose Herpestes ichneumon
126) Hairy Slit-Faced Bat Nycteris hispida
As far as the wolves go, we went the whole day empty handed but having gotten as close as arriving at a site only moments after a pair had disappeared into the grass. In the late afternoon, we decided to stake out a den that was off the road. We'd had no idea whether it was active or what species it currently belonged to, but it was better than wandering the park hoping to see a wolf trotting along. After only about 45 minutes of waiting, I witnessed possibly the coolest thing I've ever seen.
By chance, I decided to take a glance behind us where, a few hundred yards down the road, I saw a big cloud of dust kicked into the air and four animals inside. One was clearly a Thomson's Gazelle, one was large raptor, and then there were two others on the ground right in the center of the cloud. One was small, I assumed a gazelle fawn. I thought I was watching an eagle try and take a gazelle fawn while the adults defended it. Looking closer, as the animals ran out of the cloud and onto the road, I saw that the fourth animal was a canine, jackal-sized. We spun the car around and chased after the action. The fawn ran onto the road, followed by the canid, eagle overhead, and the female gazelle last. The canid nabbed the fawn and took off, other animals in pursuit. As we got closer, I realized the fawn wasn't a fawn at all, it was a hare. And the jackal wasn't a jackal, it was the wolf!
What had happened was the wolf was hunting a hare, but a Tawny Eagle wanted it, too. The gazelle must have had a fawn in the grass nearby and simply wanted the predators gone. The result was an incredible amalgamation of species interactions. Wolf vs hare, eagle vs hare, wolf vs eagle, gazelle vs wolf. It didn't end there either, even once the wolf had the hare and the gazelle had trailed off, the eagle still wanted the kill. The wolf ran and the eagle pursued, when from up ahead the wolf's mate came charging in and jumped the eagle. For the remainder of the time we watched, the presumed female (the one who made the kill) ate the hare while the eagle watched from a distance and all the while the presumed male wolf sat defensively in-between them. Simply incredible!
127) African Golden Wolf Canis lupaster
~Thylo
Day 31 (August 8)
Another early start had us leaving Amboseli and heading back north towards Nairobi. After dropping off my travel companion at his home in Nairobi and him being nice enough to show me the resident Jackson's Chameleon and Leopard Tortoise living on his property, I continued north to Aberdare National Park. We spent the afternoon driving the route from the Treetops gate to The Ark, a famous inn within the park known for it's large watering hole in the backyard and a friendly resident genet. This is where I had planned to spend my nights in the Aberdares, however when it came time for booking I found the inn completely booked out. Instead, we visited to see the watering hole and enjoy the available wildlife: elephants, buffalo, warthog, bushbuck, and, of course, the hogs.
621) Black Saw-Wing Psalidoprocne pristoptera
622) Hunter's Cisticola Cisticola hunteri
623) Rufous-Necked Wryneck Jynx ruficollis
624) Western Crested Guineafowl Guttera verreauxi
625) Cinnamon Bracken Warbler Bradypterus cinnamomeus
626) Tropical Boubou Laniarius major
627) Scaly Francolin Pternistis squamatus
628) Eastern Mountain Greenbul Arizelocichla nigriceps
629) African Olive Pigeon Columba arquatrix
630) Golden-Winged Sunbird Drepanorhynchus reichenowi
128) Giant Forest Hog Hylochoerus meinertzhageni
That evening, we checked into Sandai Farm and went for a short night drive. Sandai has a resident Striped Hyena which is typically seen almost daily in the early evening. Unfortunately, we were unable to find her, but did locate some other cool species.
129) Common Duiker Sylvicapra grimmia
130) Southern Tree-Hyrax Dendrohyrax arboreus
131) North African Crested Porcupine Hystrix cristata
~Thylo