Lake Nakuru
Where to Stay While Visiting Lake Nakuru:Flamingo Hill Tented Camp |
Lake Nakuru Lodge |
Sarova Lion Hill |
Lake Nakuru
is home to thousands of pink flamigoes and pelicans. This exotic park boasts of
a rich concentration of wildlife including black and white colobus monkeys and
is also a Rhino sanctuary. Look for temperamental black rhinos browsing in the
bushes, and larger white rhinos cropping grass along the lakeside. No where else
will get a photo of a rhino with a back drop of pink flamngos sifting food from
a shimmering lake.
This is a shallow alkaline lake that is about 60
square kilometers in size. It is set in a picturesque landscape surrounded by
woodlands and grassland close to Nakuru town. The landscape includes areas of
marsh and grasslands alternating with rocky cliffs and outcrops, stretches of
acacia woodland and rocky hillsides covered with a Euphorbia forest on the
eastern perimeter.
Lake Nakuru is bordered by Menengai crater to the
north, the Bahati hills to the north east, the lion hill ranges to the east,
eburu crater to the south and the mau escarpment to the west. Three major
rivers, the njoro, makalia and enderit drain into the lake, together with
treated water from the town's sewage works and the outflow from several springs
along the shore.
The park
was first gazetted as a bird sanctuary in 1960 and upgraded to National Park
status in 1968. A northern extension was added to the park in 1974 and the lake
was designated as a Ramsar site in 1990. The foundation of the parks food chains
is the cyanophyte spirulina platensis which can support huge numbers of lesser
flamingo.
Nakuru means "Dust or Dusty Place" in Maasai language. Lake
Nakuru National Park, close to Nakuru town, was established in 1961. It started
off small, only encompassing the famous lake and the surrounding mountainous
vicinity. Now it has been extended to include a large part of the savannahs.
Currently, the fenced Lake Nakuru National Park covers around 90 square miles.
It has unusual but beautiful vegetation. The forest vegetation is covered with
Euphorbia, tall cactus like trees and acacia woodland. The forest region is a
host to over 400 migratory bird species from around the
world.
Location:
Nakuru provides the visitor with one of
Kenya's best known images. Thousands of flamingo, joined into a massive flock,
fringe the shores of this soda lake. A pulsing pink swathe of life that carpets
the water, the flamingo are a breathtaking sight. 
The lake has become world famous for these birds, who visit the
lake to feed on algae that forms on the lake bed. They move back and forth,
feeding and occasionally and spectacularly taking to flight, filling the sky
over the lake with colour. The lake is extremely variable in size- changing from
5 up to 30 sq kms in area.
The wildlife at Lake Nakuru
Nakuru
has more than just flamingos. This is a major National Park and an important
sanctuary for Rhino. Both Black and White Rhino are found here, and are often
seen resting under acacias by the Lake shore.
The park abounds with game. There are huge herds of
waterbuck, zebra, buffalo, the endangered Rothschild Giraffe and more.
Other wildlife in the Lake Nakuru National Park includes: The famous
Black and White rhinos. The Black rhinos have been slowly multiplying over the
years, and are well protected. Thanks partially to the government of South
Africa. Lake Nakuru N
Kenya Parks
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