Sunday 10 July 2016

What you Didn't Know about the Wildebeest Migration

What you didn't know about the Wildebeest Migration

#1. The Migration is predictable – except when it’s not

What you didn't know about the Wildebeest Migration

#2. The animals leap blindly and madly into the water – except when they don’t

Popular perception is that the wildebeest are galloping along at top speed and just crash into the water, following a sort of autopilot herd instinct. This isn’t the case at all. Often, a herd will reach the river at a casual, leisurely pace… and then hang out on its banks for days, frustrating the crocs and tourists alike. No-one knows how and why they suddenly decide to cross but some sort of primeval signal is given and the first intrepid pioneers scuttle down the often very steep sides and rocky banks. You will naturally be rooting for these brave forerunners, and witness the heart-breaking moments when an animal breaks a hind leg trying to climb a bank or loses its precarious grip and falls back down onto others, injuring them all. This is what makes the Migration a true spectacle - the ecstasy and the agony of survival, unedited, unfiltered, in raw true life.
What You Didn't Know about the Great Migration 4What You Didn't Know about the Great Migration 3

#3. The Migration is full of adorable baby gnus and zebras – so cute!

What you didn't know about the Wildebeest Migration
What You Didn't Know about the Great Migration 10

#4. A million wildebeest on the move together, in one group

Yes, it’s a million gnu on the move but they don’t travel all together all the time, or half the group would starve. They split into what are known as ‘mega herds’, which consist of thousands and thousands of individuals travelling on slightly different routes in more or less the same direction. After the rut, which is mating season, those that did not mate often break away from the others and form their own herd that travels through the Seronera Valley.
Members of mega-herds can be quite spread out, with the forerunners arriving at a new place sometimes a day or two ahead of the stragglers – a kind of an early warning system for guides.
Say the 'Wildebeest Migration' and most travellers picture hundreds of thousands of grunting gnu and elegant zebra, braving predators and charging into croc-infested rivers in an ancient cycle, often literally covering the vast plains as far as the eye can see...
This is what most of us think we know about the Migration, one of Africa’s truly wondrous natural spectacles. And while you'd be perfectly correct in leaping to these mental images, the event involves a whole lot more wildebeest than you can shake a traditional fly switch at! The heaving herds do fill the plains, often to the horizon, and they do make thrilling crossings of rivers like the Mara and Grumeti, but here are a few little-known facts from travellers who've witnessed the spectacle first-hand.
What you didn't know about the Wildebeest Migration
Lemala Kuria Hills Lodge is close to the Mara River - a superb location when the herds cross.











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