


In the heart of Taita Taveta, the ground trembles as herds of elephants, glowing a deep shade of rust-red from dust baths, march slowly across the savannah.
This is Tsavo East, one of Kenya’s oldest and largest national parks, a wild theatre where nature takes center stage.
Spread over 13,700 square kilometers, the park covers almost 40 per cent of all national park land in Kenya.
The Kenya Wildlife Service (KWS) describes it as “a theatre of the wild,” a fitting name for a place where life unfolds in its rawest form.
The park’s rugged beauty is framed by dramatic landmarks.
The Yatta Plateau, the world’s longest lava flow, stretches endlessly, while the Galana River winds through semi-arid bushlands, feeding hippos, crocodiles and palm-lined oases that break the monotony of the dry landscape.