As you can probably guess from these photos, I managed to get back to East Africa last month, specifically Kenya.  The first part of the trip was for work as I was attending and instructing at the 2009 PASA (Pan African Sanctuary Alliance) Healthcare Workshop.  Afterwards, I spent a week visiting Amboseli and Maasai Mara National Parks and went on numerous game drives.  Over the next several weeks I will be posting the photos from my trip and brief stories about each one.

Although leopards are believed to be the most numerous of the big cats in Africa, they are very elusive and therefore, you have to be incredibly lucky to see one.  Samburu National Park in Kenya is the best place to see leopard, but I wasn’t able to get a safari to Samburu this time.  However, luck was still on my side, as this one was resting in a tree close to the road in the Maasai Mara. The foliage was very dense and initially all that I could see was a foot and a part of the tail, but after several minutes the leopard changed position and I was able to get this picture.  After several minutes it climbed down the trunk and got a drink of water from the small stream below before returning to it’s vantage point in the tree. With it being the rainy season, the undergrowth was very dense and so all that we were able to see during this time were flashes of his spots moving amongst the vegetation.  It was amazing  to be able to see the leopard move without a sound and blend so well into it’s surroundings.