Celebrating Nature on Seven Continents: Africa, part 1: A Hyena Worth Waiting For

As a child, while some girls were playing with Barbies, I was tramping through a Philippine rice field determined to get to the end of a rainbow. It turned out to be the beginning of my apparently insatiable quest for nature around the world. Several years later Africa, with its promise of larger-than-life boldly patterned wildlife, loomed like a crown jewel for such an odyssey. I twirled in joy at the mere sight of my first safari vehicle in Kenya, but my college semester there was by no means the end of my rainbow. If I’d made it to Africa, why couldn’t I make it to all the continents? A couple of years ago, I toasted setting foot on my last continent – mainland Antarctica – with a thermos of hot chocolate in the company of a colony of Gentoo Penguins that were far more interested in collecting rocks than celebrating my accomplishment with me. 

In this series of blogs and photography, I share some of the places I’ve visited and animals I’ve encountered on each of the continents, even the unimpressed Gentoo Penguins. I invite you to join me for three tales from each of the seven continents, starting with that college semester in Africa.

Oh, and in case you’re wondering, there is gold at the end of the rainbow… but it’s not in a pot.”

*     *     *     *     *     *     *    *    *

“In the grasslands, the vast grasslands the lion sleeps all day…”

Hyena_blog-2

We belted out our revised lyrics to The Lion Sleeps Tonight as our van bounced through a cloud of dust. Two days at the Maasai Mara Wildlife Reserve and we already felt like pros. Languid lions sprawled across parched soils and browned grass had proven the original song lyrics inaccurate. Now that we’d corrected the errors, lions were no longer our goal. In fact we had an elaborate story-line featuring all the things we wanted to see, a tale that was updated as we checked items off our list and replaced them with newly discovered potential sightings. Our current version included a confused cheetah circling a wildebeest with the turning disease, a dik dik trembling in the bushes beyond and a leopard smuggly viewing the scene from atop a nearby tree, its captured Thompson’s gazelle hanging from an adjacent branch.

The van lurched to a stop, sending us scrambling for hand holds and a better view in the direction our guide gazed. I saw nothing. Shifting to my toes, I strained against the edge of the vehicle’s pop-up top and stared at the dirt mound before me. Was there a brilliant bird tucked in the scraggly bush growing from its top? Had a giant snake disappeared down the gaping hole at its base? There was silence as we collectively scrutinized this unimpressive knoll. Seconds ticked to minutes.

It was unlike our guide to wait so long with nothing to see, but he continued staring at the mound. “Patience,” he urged.

People began fidgeting. Someone sat down and pulled out a walkman. My own gaze wandered to distant trees and the sky above. What were we waiting for?

And then an enchanted gasp, “Oh! It’s soooo cute!!!”

A baby face of fur emerged from the shadows. The creature cocked its head and examined us with curious black eyes before tumbling back into its tunnel.

The Walkman now dangled from the seat and all of our eyes were trained at the gaping hole. Would we get another glimpse?

Our guide glanced back at us and chuckled, “Natal nest of a hyena.”

Yes, unscripted baby hyenas were worth waiting for.

Hyena_blog

To read the other posts in this series, please click on this link.

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8 years ago

I’m somewhat nostalgic, and love stories that reflect back over the years.  A great first entry to TravelGumbo, Kirsten — thanks of sharing this with our travel community!

8 years ago

Great blog Kirsten and I can’t wait to read more in your series! Thanks for sharing and welcome to TG!

8 years ago

Thanks for sharing! Hyenas have always fascinated me and I’d love to see one in the wild.

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