Serengeti is easily
Tanzania’s most famous national park, and it’s also the largest, at
14,763 square kilometres of protected area that borders Kenya’s Masai Mara
Game Park. Its far-reaching plains of endless grass, tinged with the twisted
shadows of acacia trees, have made it the quintessential image of a wild and
untarnished Africa. Its large stone kopjes are home to rich ecosystems, and
the sheer magnitude and scale of life that the plains support is staggering.
Large prides of lions laze easily in the long grasses, plentiful families of
elephants feed on acacia bark and trump to each other across the plains, and
giraffes, gazelles, monkeys, eland, and the whole range of African wildlife
is in awe-inspiring numbers.
The annual wildebeest migration through the Serengeti and the Masai Mara
attract visitors from around the world, who flock to the open plains to
witness the largest mass movement of land mammals on the planet. More than a
million animals make the seasonal journey to fresh pasture to the north,
then the south, after the biannual rains. The sound of their thundering
hooves, raising massive clouds of thick red dust, has become one of the
legends of the Serengeti plains. The entire ecosystem thrives from the
annual migration, from the lions and birds of prey that gorge themselves on
the weak and the faltering to the gamut of hungry crocodiles that lie in
patient wait at each river crossing for their annual feed.