We learned some new things on the way home. Dancing in the security screening booth will necessitate a second scan and customs guys DO NOT like it when you touch your own guns in front of them. Dogs also can sniff out porcupine quills, but that's a story for another day.
Africa did not cease to amaze and inspire us once again this year. Here are a few additional highlights of our journey....
One way to tell the bull and cow giraffes apart is whether there is tuffs of hair on the tips of their horns (ossicones). The cows (and young bulls) continue to have this hair while the mature bulls lose this hair on their tips when they fight.
They have the highest blood pressure of any mammal (necessary to get blood against gravity to their head), but they still manage to appear so peaceful.
Okay, here's your quiz. Is this a bull or a cow? Don't go looking for your enlargement button on your keyboard. Note the sun glare on his tip...so the answer is.....
Bull!
Our ranger told us a neat legend regarding the kudu's markings (shown here). The kudu has three white spots on each side of his face and a chevron on his forehead. The legend is when God created the kudu He took the kudu's face in His hands and kissed him, creating the specific markings.
Africa...full of beauty despite all the thorns. To love Africa is to embrace one while accepting the other. We choose to have hope that one day these thorns among the people will no longer be a part of the way of life there- love and forgiveness will prevail.
typical (photographic) safari vehicle |
There is always animals to see in Africa!
Even foreign horses like apples. (:
Happy trails
to ya all
until next time!