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Tarangire National Park
Day after day of cloudless
skies.
The fierce sun sucks the
moisture from the landscape,
baking the earth a dusty red,
the withered grass as brittle as
straw. The Tarangire River has
shrivelled to a shadow of its
wet season self. But it is
choked with wildlife. Thirsty
nomads have wandered hundreds of
parched kilometres knowing that
here, always, there is water.
Herds of up to 300 elephants
scratch the dry river bed for
underground streams, while
migratory wildebeest, zebra,
buffalo, impala, gazelle,
hartebeest and eland crowd the
shrinking lagoons. It's the
greatest concentration of
wildlife outside the Serengeti
ecosystem - a smorgasbord for
predators – and the one place in
Tanzania where dry-country
antelope such as the stately
fringe-eared oryx and peculiar
long-necked gerenuk are
regularly observed.
During the rainy season, the
seasonal visitors scatter over a
20,000 sq km (12,500 sq miles)
range until they exhaust the
green plains and the river calls
once more. But Tarangire's mobs
of elephant are easily
encountered, wet or dry.
The swamps, tinged green year
round, are the focus for 550
bird varieties, the most
breeding species in one habitat
anywhere in the world.
On drier ground you find the
Kori bustard, the heaviest
flying bird; the stocking-thighed
ostrich, the world's largest
bird; and small parties of
ground hornbills blustering like
turkeys.
More ardent bird-lovers might
keep an eye open for screeching
flocks of the dazzlingly
colourful yellow-collared
lovebird, and the somewhat
drabber rufous-tailed weaver and
ashy starling – all endemic to
the dry savannah of
north-central Tanzania.
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