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TRADITIONAL MAASAI LIFE

Those wishing to incorporate an insightful cultural element into their safari may wish to include a day spent with the Maasai people close to Lake Manyara, as well as a day with the Hadzabe.

Team Kilimanjaro has a zero-impact camp site on a hill overlooking Lake Manyara and within easy reach of several Maasai communities that still observe traditional subsistence lifestyles. A full day spent with the Maasai will usually involve a walking safari, beginning from our campsite, into the Losimingur Hills, to the north of Manyara. The walk will usually be led by a local Maasai guide with translation being assisted by your safari guide. Where possible, we aim to ensure that the local Maasai guide is not merely a professional group leader who has migrated away from village life into town to learn English and commerce, but is actually an active member of one of the nearby local communities, someone who still supports his community by means of the techniques that he will be revealing to you.

Walking through the hills with the Maasai is fascinating, particularly if visitors aim to take full advantage of their local guide’s knowledge and to frequently pause and question him. A good dialogue will provide some amazing insights as to how the Maasai derive medicines from the many varied plants; how Maasai social life is ordered by age and what are the respective duties of each group; how the Maasai hold to the belief that all cattle are properly theirs by divine right and how the Morani should be tasked with marauding neighbouring tribes and ‘stealing back’ these cows; how such missions often sadly cause the death of several participants; and a great deal more that - if one is prepared to delve deeply - will reveal a worldview and offer perspectives that contrast very greatly with those of home.
Meeting with some Maasai ladies inside their hut. Fascinating insights can be had into Maasai life by speaking to these ladies with the aid of a translator.
A temporary homestead of some Morani; used during a month's Orpu.
The Maasai are fiercely proud of their traditions and enjoy teaching visitors their ancient skills.
Bush camp setup of Morani during their Orpu. The notches on the tree behind the pot indicate the number of days they have been here in the bush, away from their families. The red liquid to the fore is a traditional medicine brewed over days from boiled woods collected locally. Drinking this bitter fluid is believed to boost immunity to common illnesses.