Crater from above |
This morning, we woke at 4:30am. It was still pitch black outside the tent. I peeked out and did my 180 degree scan with the headlamp. About 2 metres behind our tents were a handful of zebras, grazing. The scene was surreal – a dark sky full of thousands of stars, and quiet zebras calmly eating grass behind our tents, their black-and-white stripes accented by the light of my headlamp. It was going to be a magical day.
We got our things packed up, the tent taken down and put back in the truck, lunches packed for later, and breakfast eaten as the sun slowly rose. By the time we left (6:15am) there was a spectacular sunrise blossoming in the sky. We couldn't help but take a moment and let it fully sink in. Here we are, on the rim of an ancient crater, watching the sun rise while zebras share our campsite.
We hop in the trucks – we split up into smaller 4x4's to go into the crater today, as our large truck can't handle the roads down into the crater. The road is very steep, and extremely bump. We hold on tight as we rumble over rocks and ditches, sometimes our entire bodies swinging from side to side. Dust wafts in through the truck. They call it the “African Massage”. We've gotten used to this sort of terrain over the past few days, but the roads into Ngorongoro are another thing entirely.
We descend further into the crater. The swaths of pastel-coloured landscape slowly take form and become grasses, shrubs, and the outlines of the mountains on all sides of the crater. The animals here are trapped here – they can't leave the crater. The crater is a micro example of the Serengeti. There are not very many trees, so there are no giraffes. No cheetahs or leopards, either. But almost everything else is here.
It feels strange to be here. Even though the Maasai have been bringing their cows down into the crater to drink from the salt lake for generations (a treacherous journey for the cows, with only 90% surviving the way back up), it somehow feels as if we are entering a place where humans have never touched – an alien landscape, if you will.
Finally, we reach the crater floor. The first thing we see is a lone ostrich, stark black against the
A sleeping jackal, curled up like a small puppy in the open plains.
A solitary elephant in the distance, slowly walking across the plains. What on earth does it eat here? And where are its herd? We watch it for a while, fascinated by how tiny this giant creature looks against the backdrop of the crater. Are you lonely, elephant? How did you get here? Did you walk from the top of the crater, somehow make it down the steep walls, and find yourself here, now unable to leave? Or have you always been here?
I like this elephant. At the risk of anthropomorphizing it, I dare to say that he seems content to walk his slow walk from one end of the crater to another. Sure of himself and his steps, he gives no mind to any other creature that he passes, just continues his amble across the plains until he is finally out of sight.
We continue onwards.
Later on, we see another one on its knees, sniffing around at the ground and eating. Our driver and guide pulls to a stop and explains that this is normal – the design of the creature means that it has a very short neck that can't reach the ground, so it bends its front knees in order to get at food. Curious!
Posting photos with my words is a necessary crutch. Photography is only a recent development in human story-telling. When we see incredible, indescribable things in the world, we no longer have to rely on the power of our words and gestures alone.
I write for myself, yes – to capture my memories for the future. But I also write for you. To bring you somewhere you might not otherwise ever be able to go. Call it a compulsion, or a duty, or a calling – I don't know. Whether I ever fully accomplish it, I never truly know, either. But here I am.
So let me bring you back into the crater.
We pull up to the first source of water we've seen down here. The bright blue pool reflects the sky like a mirror, but the image is broken up by hippos. Grey and round backs submerged in the pool are everywhere. The hills around the pool are vivid green, another colour that has been almost completely absent from the crater. The grasses and shrubs are lush from the water source, and the hippos and water buffalos are hanging out on the hills together, serenely eating the abundance of greens. We are lucky in that we get to see a hippo fully out of the water as it eats on the hill. It moves from one patch of grass to the other impossibly slowly – a footstep every minute? All movement seems so laborious for hippos.
Can you see the baby? |
Then, we see a small movement alongside one of them – a baby hippo! It swims around its mother, coming to rest at her side for a while, then continues on to her backside and rests its head on her back. Apparently, hippo babies even suckle their mother's milk under the water. Fascinating creatures.
The entire scene felt very pre-historic. The silence that surrounded us as we watched the buffalos and hippos peaceful co-existing in this small pocket of an oasis at the depths of a long-inactive crater was soul-soothing. A buffalo munches grass. A hippo rolls over. Another one take a lumbering step further down the hill. A buffalo and hippo stare at each other, then look away. And us, doing nothing but watching.
Hyena eating a wildebeast skull |
And they're gone, out of sight.
Both terrifying and fascinating to watch, it's how life happens. Knowing it is one thing, but seeing it is something else entirely.
The hippo pool |
But we emerged, weary and exhilarated. We stopped at a viewpoint of the crater from above on the way out. Like explorers returned from another planet, we stared out at the paths of pastel colours, now knowing what rich life they teemed with.
Such a grand experience! <3
ReplyDeleteThis is amazing; well-written, too, as you took me right there.
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