Amboseli
Reforestation Programme
When Shadrack Karabilo, General Manager (Lodges)
first visited Amboseli National Park as the
lodge manager, he was deeply saddened by the
degenerated state it was in. The park was dry
and barren, with not a green tree in sight.
It was dotted with the distressing sight of
fallen tree trunks. Shadrack quickly envisaged
turning it into a beautiful oasis. With a team
of eight, he set to work planting trees hoping
to restore the Park to its former splendour
in the immediate environs of Amboseli Serena
Safari Lodge.
Today, thanks to Shadrack's efforts,
the Park is slowly beginning to come to life.
Over 60,000 indigenous trees have been planted.
Thanks to Kenya Wildlife Service initiatives,
the roads have been upgraded and off-road driving
banned, giving the grass a chance to grow. Amboseli
is beginning to look green again. Guests at
the Lodge are encouraged to plant trees and
have been very supportive. The Kenya Wildlife
Service has already allocated a 2-acre plot
to Serena to plant another 2,700 trees and a
major tour operator has pledged a further 25
acres. But a lot more needs to be done. Amboseli
National Park covers an area of 150 square miles
and Shadrack hopes that before long his dream
of an oasis within the Park can become a reality.
Serena Hotels are luxury resorts,
safari lodges and hotels in some of the world's
most exquisite and remote settings. Each property
is enhanced by its unique surroundings, and
expands horizons for travellers while respecting
local ways of life. Indigenous design and materials
are integrated with the most modern amenities
and complemented by exceptional service. An
eco-tourism pioneer, Serena Hotels has inititiated
important environmental programmes to protect
native wildlife and fragile habitats.
The Amboseli
Eco Programme
Amboseli has suffered greatly over the years
thanks to the combined destructive abilities
of the Maasai cattle, the marauding elephant
and the onslaught of mass-tourism. In addition
the rising water table has brought poisonous
alkalis to the ground surface, decimating vast
tracts of acacia woodland. In recognition of
this fact, Serena Hotels have mounted an ambitious
reforestation programme in cooperation with
the Kenya Wildlife Service. To date over 60,000
indigenous trees have been planted whilst the
majority of roads have been upgraded, thus bringing
to an end the destructive practise of off-road
driving which has already seriously eroded the
grasslands.
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