| Lying
on the equator, with the glaciated peaks of Mount Kenya –
second highest mountain in Africa – rising from a natural
environment of exceptional beauty, Kenya is a hugely rewarding place
to travel. The country's dramatically diverse geography has resulted
in a great range of natural habitats, while its history of migration
and conquest has brought about a complex social panorama. But if
the world-famous national parks, colourful ethnic mix and superb
beaches lend an exotic image, the glossy hype of the tourism industry
ignores Kenya's post-colonial poverty and deep political tensions.
In any case, treating Kenya as a succession of tourist sights isn't
the most stimulating way of experiencing the country. Travelling
independently, or at least with eyes open (something this guide
is designed to facilitate), you can enter the very different world
inhabited by most Kenyans: a ceaselessly active landscape of farm
and field, of streams and bush paths, of wooden and corrugated-iron
shacks, tea shops and lodging houses, of crammed buses and pick-up
vans, of overloaded bicycles, and of streets wandered by goats,
chickens and toddlers. Off the more heavily trodden tourist routes,
you'll find a rewarding degree of warmth, openness and curiosity
in Kenya's towns and villages. And out in the wilds, there is an
abundance of superb scenery – vistas of rolling savannah dotted
with Maasai and their herds, high Kikuyu moorlands, dense forests
bursting with bird song and insect noise, and stony, shimmering
desert – all of which comes crisply into focus when experienced
in the context of an economically beleaguered African nation four
decades after Independence.
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