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Maralal National Sanctuary
The 'frontier' town of Maralal is the administrative headquarters of the Samburu people, whose district encompasses over 20,000 square kilometers, stretching as far as Lake Turkana in the north. A staging post on the rough road north to the eastern shore of the lake, Maralal National Sanctuary boasts a tiny gem of a game sanctuary actually within the township's legal boundaries.
On the cedar clad hillside above the Maralal town and in the thorn scrub lower down there is much resident game. Impala, eland, buffalo, baboon, warthog and zebra live in harmonious profusion but ever watchful for the leopard and hyena. Seasonally elephant pass through the sanctuary descending from the forested hills, which lie to the north. Much of this wildlife can be seen from the comfortable terrace of the Maralal Safari Lodge for the only permanent water in the sanctuary is a small waterhole just a few meters away. Here, throughout the day, and at night by floodlight, is an almost continuous pageant of wildlife. Leopards are baited in a small forest not far from the lodge and can be seen from a specially constructed 'hides'. The rocky track, which leads north to Lake Turkana, passes across the moorlands (much of which is now under wheat cultivation) and forests of the Leroghi plateau, a seemingly endless area of tranquil beauty.
15 kilometers from the township a dry weather track leads west across the plateau to the edge of the Great Rift Valley. Here at a place called Losiolo, the valley wall is sheer and the vast, almost overwhelming, panorama totally breathtaking. In all directions from Maralal National Sanctuary is majestic scenery whose grandeur is enhanced by its consort with wildlife and by the calm dignity of the herdsmen and their herds. The Samburu who inhabit this vast and beautiful landscape are close relatives of the Maasai of the south. Striding fearlessly across the plains, the warriors in their finery are a noble and fascinating sight.
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