Thursday, 30 April 2015

Our Founder & CEO, Regina Kirimi



Regina is a professional tour operator, with over 10yrs experience in the industry.  Very passionate about travel and letting the world know about the wonders of our globe. It is with this passion that she  established AbanaSafaris to simplify travel round the world just like our vision states. She imparts knowledge to business people, tourists,  students, short trip missionaries and many more on how to make a positive impact to the community and the environment through travel!  

Regina believes that everyone is a tourist in their own rights, the difference is the distance.  Her vision is to demystify the notion that people travel when they have excess money to spare. Hence, Abana Safaris came up with a savings plan that helps anyone willing to save for their holiday in small bits as well as get financing for holidays, and emergency travels.  With this she started group tours to enable people save on travel costs while having the same experience because of group discounts. 1000s of people have benefited through these trips to various countries.
With her wide range of exposure and travel to various countries round all continents, she is able to address various travel needs and give relevant advise on the best places for holiday or business. Regina believes that once you travel, the experience should change you or at least your business must get to another level.
Abana Safaris puts up packages that help people with the small travels hassles like visa applications, travel insurance, ticket bookings, transportation, accommodation, cargo and freight managements and much more.  This helps people relax during planning as well as on the safari.
She is passionate about giving back to the community and we have a list of Foundations and children's home that we work with to support either the people or conservation efforts.
Our team has been impacted by her and we exist to grow a populace of travelers round the globe mindful of sustainable tourism.  Change starts with me, change begins with you 
With Abana you just don't travel, we care about you, we care about the future.  Go green!






Friday, 10 April 2015

buffallos

                 

The African, or Cape, buffalo is a member of the so-called "Big Five" group of animals, with the elephant, rhino, lion and leopard. Once popular trophies for hunters, these large and often dangerous animals have continued to capture the imagination. Buffaloes have earned a bad reputation from hunters and other people who come in close contact with them. They are unpredictable and can be dangerous if cornered or wounded. Though they have been known to ambush men and are often accused of deliberate savagery, they are usually placid if left alone.

There is only one genus and one species of buffalo in Africa, but this single species has two different types: the large savanna buffalo and the much smaller dwarf forest buffalo. There are also several intermediate types. The buffaloes found in the forests of Kenya and Tanzania are the savanna type, however, and not the true forest buffalo, which occurs only in West Africa.


Physical Characteristics
Savanna buffaloes are large, heavy cowlike animals. They vary greatly not only in size, but in the shapes of their horns and color. Adults are usually dark gray or black (or even look red or white if they have been wallowing in mud of that color) and the young are often reddish-brown. The smaller forest buffalo maintains the red color even as an adult, although in western Uganda, many savanna buffaloes are also red or pale orange instead of black. Adults lose hair as they age.
Both male and female buffaloes have heavy, ridged horns that grow straight out from the head or curve downward and then up. The horns are formidable weapons against predators and for jostling for space within the herd; males use the horns in fights for dominance.

Habitat
Both savanna buffaloes and forest buffaloes live close to water. In general buffaloes are found throughout the northern and southern savanna as well as the lowland rain forest.














Behavior
Buffaloes can live in herds of a few hundred, but have been known to congregate in thousands in the Serengeti during the rainy season. The females and their offspring make up the bulk of the herd. Males may spend much of their time in bachelor groups. These groups are of two types, those that contain males from 4 to 7 years of age and those that have males 12 years and older. The older bulls often prefer to be on their own. Males do not reach their full weight until about age 10. After this, however, their body weight and condition decline, probably because the teeth become worn.
Sight and hearing are both rather poor, but scent is well developed in buffaloes. Although quiet for the most part, the animals do communicate. In mating seasons they grunt and emit hoarse bellows. A calf in danger will bellow mournfully, bringing herd members running at a gallop to defend it.

Diet
Food sources play more of an important role than predation in regulating buffalo numbers. Without fresh green feed, buffaloes lose condition faster than other savanna ungulates, and so death is often due to malnutrition.
Grass forms the greatest part of the savanna buffalo's diet, although at certain times of the year browse plants other than grass is also consumed. Buffaloes spend more time feeding at night than during the day. They seem to have a relatively poor ability to regulate body temperature and remain in the shade for long periods of time in the heat of the day, or wallow in mud.

Caring for the Young
Females have their first calves at age 4 or 5. They usually calve only once every two years. Although young may be born throughout the year, most births occur in the rainy season when abundant grass improves the nutritional level for the females when they are pregnant or nursing. The female and her offspring have an unusually intense and prolonged relationship. Calves are suckled for as long as a year and during this time are completely dependent on their mothers. Female offspring usually stay in the natal herd, but males leave when they are about 4 years old.















Predators
If attacked, the adults in the herd form a circle around the young and face outward. By lowering their heads and presenting a solid barrier of sharp horns, it is difficult for predators to seize a calf. This effective group defense even allows blind and crippled members of the herd to survive. Thus predators do not have a major impact on buffalo herds; it is the old, solitary-living males that are most likely to be taken by lions.
Outside the national parks in East Africa, buffaloes frequently come into conflict with human interests. They break fences and raid cultivated crops and may spread bovine diseases to domestic stock. They are still numerous in many parts of East Africa, even though they have been periodically devastated by the rinderpest virus. In other areas of Africa, buffaloes have been eliminated or their numbers greatly reduced.


















Did you know?
  • The African buffalo differs from the domesticated water buffalo found in other parts of the world, although they both superficially resemble one another.
  • The buffalo is one of the most abundant of Africa's large herbivores. It depends on water and does not live in regions with less than 10 inches of rain a year.

Thursday, 9 April 2015

Abana World Safaris : facts about the wolves

Abana World Safaris : facts about the wolves: Wolf Information, Anatomy, Feeding, Reproduction, Habitat and Wolf Top Facts about Wolves The alpha male and beta female are gene...

facts about the wolves

Wolf Information, Anatomy, Feeding, Reproduction, Habitat and Wolf

Top Facts about Wolves


top wolf facts
  • The alpha male and beta female are generally the only two in a pack of wolves that will mate.
  • The entire pack of wolves is responsible for the care of the young.
The average lifespan of a wolf in the wild is from 6 to 8 years. However, in captivity they can live up to 16 years. They don’t seem to have a problem adjusting to life in captivity. Most of the locations where they are kept try to keep the habitat as natural as they possibly can for them. It is illegal in many areas to sell the pelts of the wolf. However, they were once worth a great deal of money and some still circulate on the 
black market Conservation

Introduction to Wolves

Wolves are a class of the canine family, and they seem to do very well in the right environment. In fact, they are the largest of all canines with exception of some dog species. They are meat eaters and can range in size considerably depending on where they live. Some of them are only about 55 pounds full grown while others can be up to 200 pounds. They can range in size from 40 to 65 inches in length. Such a measurement is from the tip of the nose to the end of the tail.
They have long gotten a bad reputation out there in the wild. They are very intelligent animals that live in groups that are known as packs. They have thick fur to help them survive in a variety of climates. They are found to live in many places throughout the Northern Hemisphere. However, the amount of roaming space that they have continues to get smaller all the time.
Wolves live in small groups that are called packs. They can have from 6 to 20 members in them at a time. They have a very large range that they cover from 33 to 6,200 km2. They hunt as a group which makes it possible for them to take down large prey such as moose and elk. This type of kill helps to ensure there is plenty of food to go around for the entire pack.
Other than hunting to eat, wolves are usually not aggressive. However, they will fight other animals and even other wolves in order to protect their pack. This is where the stories often come in of wolves being violent killers. Right now the biggest threat is to them and not to other animals or humans. The reduction of their habitat has created a great deal of hardship for the wolves.

travel with abana safaris today and  get to know more about the wolves.








Thursday, 2 April 2015

WILD DOGS

  The African wild dog also called cape hunting dog or painted dog.It inhibits the sparse  woodlands of  the sub- Saharan Africa.The long -legged canine have only four toes per foot unlike the other dogs which have five on their forefeet.The dogs Latin word means,"painted wolf" referring to the animals mottled coat,which features white ,black, brown,red and yellow fur.Each animal has its own unique  pattern for its coat and all have big rounded ears.


            African dogs live in packs  which are dominated by a monogamous breeding pair.The female has a litter of 2 to 20 pups which are taken care of by the pack.This dogs are very social they are ford of sharing food and assisting ill members.They communicate by touch ,actions and vocalization.
 They hunt in groups  of 6 to 20 thus being the  best hunters in the world of all the animals.They hunt antelopes and will tackle much larger prey like wildebeest.They supplement there diet with rodents and birds.
As human settlement as expanded the dogs have developed a taste for livestock ,though significant damage is rare.Unfortunately they are hunted and killed by farmers  who fear for their domestic animals.Travel with Abana safaris  and you will get to explore your world and what it consist of in terms of wildlife