Sandals in Kenya

COVID-19 (coronavirus) can affect your travel plans. Wherever you go, check out the most relevant tips. A magazine about beautiful places and independent travel news Cross the equator, feed a giraffe and 10 more reasons to dash to Kenya If everything is so bored that you need to radically change the situation, a regular vacation at sea will not work. You can really reboot where package tourists don't go - for example, in hot Kenya. Where else in the day will you see a herd of elephants running across the road, a lion going out to hunt and natives dancing with spears? Here are 12 reasons to travel to Kenya right now. From school geography lessons, everyone remembers that the highest point in Africa - the Kilimanjaro volcano - is in Tanzania. But there was not a word in the textbooks that his white hat is best seen from the Amboseli park in Kenya. You need to come to the park for a safari at 6 in the morning, when the summit is not covered with haze: you will take a canon picture with a herd of elephants against the background of a snow-covered peak. Closer  Sandals in Kenya to noon, the Kili volcano, as the locals call it in their own way, hides behind the clouds. But take your time to deploy the jeep, because life in the savannah is in full swing in the afternoon. Spy on the hippos basking in the swamp spas, film the crowned cranes dancing and catch the horned buffaloes as they roll the birds on their backs. As you get tired of driving along the dusty roads of Amboseli, go to the observation hill. While stretching your legs, at the same time admire the wonderful panorama of the entire park. It is best to go to Kenya from July to September: usually these months are dry, comfortable, and you can see many animals. There are frequent short rains from September to mid-December. January and February are good, but hot - a great time to sunbathe on the beach. But from March to June, there are prolonged rains that erode dirt roads in Kenyan parks. There is hardly a more contrasting place in Kenya than the capital city of Nairobi. To tickle your nerves, head to Africa's largest ghetto, the Kibera slum on the outskirts of the city, home to over a million people. There are a lot of scary stories about this place, so choose a reliable guide. On the spot you will see crumbling shacks without water and light, mountains of garbage and fetid rivulets - it is better for sissies not to go here. If you are not ready to look below the poverty line and find yourself in non-tourist Kenya, look at the rooftops of Nairobi from the helipad of the International Center or step into the world of the rich in the posh Westlands with glittering skyscrapers. During the day, the respected audience buys up branded items in the Westgate and Yaya shopping centers, and in the evening they dance on the dance floors of the SkyLux Lounge and Black Diamond. Want to see the ocean change color multiple times a day? For this you need to go to the resort of Mombasa. To the south of the Old City, where Arab and Portuguese architecture blends, Diani Beach stretches along the turquoise edge of the sea. On this fantastic coastline, it is great to bask on the warm sand, chase colored fish with scuba diving and learn to kitesurf. Fans of parties will drink more than one mojito in the Forty Thieves reggae bar, but romantics will have dinner by candlelight more than once in the Ali Barbour's Cave cave restaurant. To the north of Mombasa lie the resort villages of Malindi and Watamu, where you should come for picturesque sunsets and ankle-deep walks in clear water. And how many tropical fish are found in the Watamu Marine Park, where they ride on boats with a transparent bottom! While you swim over the coral reefs, hundreds of Nemo's friends will flash under your feet. No passports, no electricity bills or social media - that's how the Maasai tribe in southern Kenya lives. You will recognize them from a thousand: men decorate their faces with scars and pull out their front teeth, and women shave their heads and hang themselves with colorful beads. In tourist places, there is a high risk of stumbling upon mummers who put on sandals from car tires, wrapped themselves in a colorful cape and hope to earn extra money from lovers of exoticism. To get to know the real Masai, ask for the contacts of the guide at your hotel and head to the villages on the border with Tanzania. The Maasai live in Spartan conditions and revered cows so much that even huts are built from clay and dried dung. They wi https://jiji.co.ke/55-sandals

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