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Nairobi City Tour - Half Day or Full Day
 

AANB 01 Nairobi City Tour – Half Day or Full Day
This guided tour of the city will recall some of the early days of this now modern city, including stops at the City Market – Nairobi’s fruit and vegetable market, the Railway Museum – housing the glistening relics of old “Lunatic Express” trains, including ancient steam engines and the coach from which Charles Ryall was dragged to his death, Jamia Mosque, the Parliament Buildings – built in the 1950s and focal point of the city’s master plan which was drawn up in 1948, Parliament Gardens – where the remains of Jomo Kenyatta are buried in the Mausoleum which is lined by flags and watched day and night by ceremonial guards, the Law Courts, and the National Museum with its outstanding displays of early man, ethnic regalia, Kenya fauna and a vivid display of the struggle for independence.
Note:
Adding on the Karen Blixen/Giraffe Centre Tour makes this a full day excursion.

Railway Museum
Railway Museum
Railway Museum
National Museum
Giraffe Centre
Kenyan Parliament
City Square, from the Conference Centre
Kenyatta Conference Centre with flags flying for a meeting
Nairobi Law Courts
Holy Family Cathedral Basilica, Nairobi
Jomo Kenyatta, the first President of Kenya from independence to 1978
Kenyatta Conference Centre, City Square
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GIRAFFE: (Giraffa camelopardalis)
This unmistakable animal native to Africa is the tallest living animal in the world today. The average height of giraffes is approximately 4.9 metres but there are recordings in Kenya specifically where a particular specimen reached 5.88 metres. The males weigh on average approximately 1 200 kilograms but can reach weights of up to 1930 kilograms while females on average weigh 830 kilograms but can weigh up to 1180 kilograms. They are found in savannas, grasslands and open woodlands and mostly in areas rich with acacia growth which makes up the majority of their food and they have specially adapted molars to crush these thorns. They are ruminants and have 4 chambered stomachs.

The name “giraffa” has its origins in the Arabic word “xirapha” which literally means “one who walks swiftly” which refers to the quick gait with which these animals walk. The specific name “camelopardalis” is interestingly a reference to its size and hide - “as big as a camel” (‘camelo’) and "as spotted as a leopard" (‘pardalis'). Both males and females have spotted coats and the deepness of the colour varies in order to coincide with their specific environment to aid camouflage.

The front legs are longer than the back legs and the long neck contains 7 elongated vertebra. Giraffe horns are called ossicones and are actually bone protuberances covered with skin and fur. Females have thin and tufted horns while male horns are thicker and smoother because of their sparring with other males. Giraffes have large eyes and a very long purple-black tongue which is used to grasp prickly food from the tops of trees.

Giraffes are not very water dependant and only occasionally drink water as they obtain most of the moisture from food plants and can therefore survive away from water sources. They are mostly diurnal but will on occasion also feed and move during hours of darkness. During the hottest time of the day they either rest standing up or lying down in the open or in the shade with their necks erect. The taller, heavier males make use of different orientations towards the sun to minimise radiation while females and calves usually select shadow. Giraffes are also endothermic as they use their metabolically generated heat to regulate their body temperature independently from the ambient temperature. Giraffes can sleep deeply for a few minutes at a time with their head bent back in an arch against their bodies.

They are mainly predated by lions although leopards, hyenas and crocodiles sometimes take the young, sick or elderly. Giraffe have been known to kill lions with their powerful kick and they also have a height advantage as they can see predators coming from a great distance.

A very interesting fact is that giraffes do not form any strong social bonds but only loose herds. These open unstable herds can reach numbers of up to 70 with individuals joining and leaving the herd at will. It was also found that female giraffes are much more social than males.

Giraffes have polygymous courtships which start when a bull approaches a female to perform a urine test, smelling the urine with a pronounced lip curl, a behaviour referred to as flehmen. Conception mostly takes place in the rainy season with births then occurring during the cold, dry winter months from May to August. The gestation period is very long - 457 days long. Giraffes give birth standing up or walking. At birth giraffe calves can weigh between 50 and 55 kilograms and are approximately 2 metres tall. Female giraffes only reach sexual maturity at 3 to 4 years old but they do not breed for at least another year. Most males only start breeding at the age of 7. Giraffes are viviparous where fertilization and development take place within the female body where the developing embryo derives nourishment from the female.

The life expectancy in the wild for giraffes is approximately 10 to 15 years but the longest known lifespan in the wild has been 25 years of age. In captivity the normal life expectancy is 20 - 27 years of age.

Giraffes are not very vocal and are rarely heard as they mostly communicate with infrasonic sounds. At times they do produce grunts and flute-like sounds.

 
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