Ol Doinyo Orok / Namanga Hills

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Namanga Hills (official name)

Elevation 2,548 metres (8,360 ft)
Location Kenya

The Ol Doinyo Orok mountain (in kimaasai), also called Namanga Hills, is situated in southern Kenya next to the Tanzanian border in the Namanga Division. The mountain has a stretched triangular shape, almost like an arrow pointing north. The short side faces the Tanzanian border (and one corner is actually crossing it). The highest peak is 2548 m.[1]

The Ol Doinyo Orok Mountain Forest Reserve is a government gazetted area, 117.84 square kilometres large.[2] A large part of it consists of high mist forest (above 1700 m). Being one of the last remaining in Kenya, it contains a large variety of plants, herbs and also several animal species not found in the surrounding semi-arid lowlands. In the mountain valleys there are natural water catchments created by the high altitude rains and the high humid climate. These provide the surrounding maasai communities with water and pasture even during the dry seasons.

The mountain wildlife has been under a lot of stress due to poaching and traditional maasai hunting, which has wiped out many of the large mammals and predators. But there are still a small population of leopards to be found. Other large animals include buffaloes (in rapidly decreasing number due to poaching), bushbucks, olive baboons, vervet monkeys, rock hyraxes, etc. There are also a large variety of migratory and endemic birds in the area. Very little research has been taken place on the mountain ecology and no scientific animal count has been made on the large animals. The bush savanna vegetation in the surrounding lowlands is also home to animals like giraffes, zebras, gazelles, eland antelopes, warthogs, ostriches, wild dogs and hyenas, etc. Many of these migrate to the high hills during nighttime or settle there during droughts. Occasionally elephants from Amboseli National Park or Tanzania migrate to the area.

Since the gazettement in 1979 the mountain forest have been generally well preserved, illegal wood cutting, charcoal burning, honey collecting through fires have decreased through the efforts of the Kenyan local authorities and Kenya Wildlife Service, with the support of local environmental committees.

The mountain receives few tourists annually, even though it lies next to Namanga, the gateway to Tanzania and Amboseli National Park. The local community is therefore trying to market the area more for treking visitors.

Mist forest on Ol Doinyo Orok
Mist forest on Ol Doinyo Orok


[edit] References

  1. ^ Ol Doinyo Orok Forest Reserve Participartory Forest Management Plan 2006-2011, A Partnership Between the Forest Department and Oldoinyo Orok Forest Management Association (OLDOFOMAA), by East Africa Cross Border Biodiversity Project, 2005
  2. ^ ibid


[edit] See also

Maasai | Namanga | Kajiado District | Amboseli