Mount Mtelo

Mtelo
Mtelo

Location in Kenya

Highest point
Elevation 3,336 m (10,945 ft)
Coordinates 1°40′N 35°23′E / 1.66°N 35.38°E / 1.66; 35.38Coordinates: 1°40′N 35°23′E / 1.66°N 35.38°E / 1.66; 35.38
Geography
Location Kenya

Mount Mtelo (Sekerr) is the fifth highest 'mountain' in Kenya (3336m/10,944 ft), after Mt Kenya, Mt Elgon, Aberdares and High Cheranganis, and is situated in the North West highlands of West Pokot County, approximately 120 km north of Kitale Town.

Climbing the mountain

Marich Pass Field Studies Centre represents a good base from which to explore the mountain and guides are available to help you with the ascent. It is a three-day hike to the top and back, and it is advised that hikers stay a night or two at the wonderful Mount Mtelo Viewpoint Camp , a campsite with cottage accommodation run by the Ywalasiwa family. However, it is possible to get to the campsite by vehicle, an amazing drive up the Sekerr escarpment. No specialist equipment or training is required for the climb, and there are different trails that can be taken to the campsite and peak passing through cultivated areas of the Pokot, forest, bamboo and open moorland, with extensive views of eastern Uganda and north-west Kenya on a clear day. The mountain is considered sacred, as it is described as the cradle of pastoral Pokot according to oral traditions . Mount Mtelo is home to black-and-white colobus monkeys, small antelope, 3 species of turaco and 10 sunbird species.

The altitude means the temperature and humidity is lower than in Marich, making hiking far more comfortable as well as being unfavourable for mosquitoes.

Community and development projects

The area is home to six clans Chapin, Kamket, Ngusurot, Silokot, Talai and Tungo with an overall population of over 30,000. However, the area is isolated, and most people are involved in subsistence farming (maize and beans). In recent years local people, with outside assistance, have worked to set up a number of community projects aimed at helping the Pokot people of the Mbara sub-location. These projects have included: the creation of a number of water pipeline projects which provide safe drinking water to the local population; the building of a new clinic; and a tree nursery controlled by a local women’s group.

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