KULAFUMBI ON FACEBOOK

Please join the KULAFUMBI FACEBOOK PAGE for quick updates, extra photos & news snippets...

Also now on TWITTER @TsavoTanya...

WHAT & WHERE IS KULAFUMBI?

1724670-982768-thumbnail.jpg 'Kulafumbi' is our family home in Kenya, East Africa. 'Kulafumbi' is a play on the Kiswahili words "kula vumbi", which mean "eat dust", because it was so hot and dusty building our house in this remote, wild, wonderful place. Kulafumbi borders the Tsavo National Park - with no fences between us and the Park, the wildlife comes and goes of its own free will and treats our land as its own, which is exactly how we like it. In turn, we provide a protected area for the wild animals to do as they please. This protected area also creates an important buffer for the river, which forms the boundary between us and the park.
House & Land - more info
My Family & I - more info

ON-GOING SPECIES COUNT

1829439-992202-thumbnail.jpg Look how many species of animals & birds we've spotted to date at Kulafumbi:

MAMMALS: 43+
REPTILES &
AMPHIBIANS: 18+++

BIRDS: 199+
INSECTS: Too many to count

SEARCH THIS SITE
PEOPLE LIKE US

"We are the music-makers,
And we are the dreamers of dreams,
Wandering by lone sea-breakers,
And sitting by desolate streams;
World-losers and world-forsakers,
On whom the pale moon gleams:
Yet we are the movers and shakers
Of the world for ever, it seems..."

1722042-921087-thumbnail.jpg

BOOKMARK

AddThis Social Bookmark Button AddThis Feed Button

Powered by Squarespace

PLOVER STORY: Spur-winged Plovers Nesting > Day Minus Two: Spur-winged Plover Two-Egg Nest (29 October 2007) (7)

The speckled beige and black-ink-smudged eggs are laid on the ground, in a nest fashioned from twigs and small stones – which the Plover parent continues to re-arrange while sitting on the nest and protecting the eggs from the boiling sun. It’s amazing how camouflaged the nest is, even with the adult bird sitting on it. Because of the work going on all around, and the possibility of the tractor crushing the nest, my father had to put a stake in the ground right next to the nest, to ensure he doesn’t drive over it by mistake, but if it were not for that, you would have a hard time spotting where the nest is. Read More...