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5 Reasons Why Kenya Should Be On Every Wildlife Lover's Bucket List
5 Reasons Why Kenya Should Be On Every Wildlife Lover's Bucket List

NDTV

time3 days ago

  • NDTV

5 Reasons Why Kenya Should Be On Every Wildlife Lover's Bucket List

We all grew up watching wildlife shows and documentaries on television. The thrill of seeing a lion chase its prey or a herd of elephants migrating offered a glimpse into a world far from our city lives. If you are someone who has a deep love for wildlife and everything that comes with it, then Kenya is where you should be heading. Located in East Africa, this fascinating country is not just a travel destination, but a raw and unforgettable experience. From iconic African safaris to sightings of rare animals, Kenya has everything to excite a wildlife lover. Here is why a trip to Kenya should be on every wildlife travel bucket list. Here Are 5 Reasons Why Kenya Is A Must-Visit For Every Wildlife Enthusiast: 1. The Legendary Maasai Mara And The Great Migration Very few wildlife events across the globe match the intensity of the Great Migration. Each year, over two million wildebeest, zebras, and other herbivores cross the sweeping plains of the Maasai Mara in search of greener pastures. Watching them navigate crocodile-filled rivers while lions wait in the tall grass feels like witnessing a live wildlife documentary. While the migration typically takes place between July and October, the Maasai Mara remains a year-round safari hotspot, offering sightings of leopards, elephants, giraffes, and more. 2. Home To The Big Five Kenya is one of the rare places in the world where you can encounter all of the Big Five — the African lion, African bush elephant, Cape buffalo, African leopard, and black rhino — on a single trip. National parks such as Amboseli, Tsavo, and Laikipia provide varied landscapes that attract an incredible range of animals. And it does not end there. Cheetahs roam the open savannahs, hippos bask along riverbanks, and if you are fortunate, you might even catch a glimpse of the elusive African wild dog. 3. Unforgettable Wildlife Encounters In Nairobi Would you like to feed a giraffe from your breakfast table or watch baby elephants being bottle-fed? Nairobi, Kenya's capital, offers unique urban wildlife experiences that are both intimate and impactful. At the Giraffe Centre, visitors can get up close with endangered Rothschild's giraffes. The David Sheldrick Wildlife Trust provides the chance to meet orphaned elephants being rehabilitated for release into the wild. These rare moments add a deeply personal touch to your wildlife journey. 4. Kenya's Diverse Ecosystems Kenya is much more than just open plains. From the snow-covered peaks of Mount Kenya to the pink-hued shores of Lake Nakuru, the country is home to a wide variety of ecosystems. In the Samburu National Reserve, you will find the rare 'Samburu Special Five,' including a unique type of zebra that is not seen in other parks. Whether you are in the arid north or along the coastal mangroves, each region of Kenya offers a fresh perspective on African wildlife. 5. A Blend Of Wildlife And Tribal Culture The magic of Kenya lies not only in its wildlife but also in the people who coexist with nature. Spending time with local communities such as the Maasai, Samburu, or Turkana provides meaningful insights into indigenous life and their relationship with the land. Many safari tours in Kenya partner with these communities, directly supporting conservation efforts and sustainable tourism practices. It is this human connection that makes your trip even more impactful. Can you think of another destination that offers such a rich wildlife experience? Share your thoughts in the comments below.

Greenville businesses feel impact of college students leaving
Greenville businesses feel impact of college students leaving

Yahoo

time14-05-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Greenville businesses feel impact of college students leaving

GREENVILLE, N.C. (WNCT) — Last week, thousands of Pirate graduates walked across the stage to receive their degrees and looking toward bright futures. But, the time after graduation brings a darker and more immediate future for some of Greenville's more permanent residents. The city of Greenville is in their own yearly edition of The Great Migration, as a majority of students make their way out of The Emerald City. It's not just their books and bags their taking with them, for many downtown shops and restaurants, they take the business with them. 'You know, it's a college town,' Nash Hot Chicken Owner Ryan Griffin said. 'Our backdoor is ECU, so we kind of ebb and flow with the campus.' 'It really hurts us downtown. Everyone, we had a huge scene downtown with all of graduation and everything, but once the students leave, we just get nothing,' 5th Street Hardware Restaurant and Taproom Assistant Manager Adam Kenney said. Because this is an annual thing, business owners like Griffin prepare ahead of time for the loss of traffic. 'We got some data now that we try to look at and see where the sales drop off, and what labor we can use to keep the doors open, but still keep customers having a good time,' Griffin said. It isn't just customers that make their way out of town in the summer months. Many staffing positions open up and that's something Griffin said is inevitable in his line of work. 'Anything in the restaurant business is high turnover, especially in a college town,' Griffin said. 'A lot of our front house staffers, servers are college students, but we're used to that now so we have our college group that goes and then we have a couple good local people that stay through the summer and help us through all the hard times.' The loss of personnel can hit some businesses harder than others. 'It's terrible. Just this year entirely, we just lost nine people on our staff because they're all graduating,' Kenney said. Kenney said they are always posting job openings on social media. Griffin, Kenney and Owner of Sup Dogs and Crush Bret Oliviero said all said they're looking forward to the business boom when students come back. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

BBC Learning English - 6 Minute English / How climate change affects animal migration
BBC Learning English - 6 Minute English / How climate change affects animal migration

BBC News

time24-04-2025

  • Science
  • BBC News

BBC Learning English - 6 Minute English / How climate change affects animal migration

_____________________________________________________________________________________________________ Download a free 6 Minute English worksheet and transcript! Try our free interactive quiz! ______________________________________________________________________________________________________ Try more episodes of 6 Minute English: ______________________________________________________________________________________________________ Introduction Climate change can affect the way animals migrate, but did you know that some animal migration could be used to fight climate change? Neil and Beth discuss this and teach you some new vocabulary. This week's question How many animals are thought to take part in The Great Migration, the annual migration of animals around the Serengeti in Tanzania and the Maasai Mara in Kenya? a) 1 million b) 1.5 million c) 2.5 million Listen to the programme to hear the answer. Vocabulary migrate move to another place because of the weather or temperature what kind of (something, e.g. price, distance) are we talking? used to rephrase a question that starts with how much or how far swathes large areas of something secret weapon something nobody knows about that gives you an advantage over a problem or enemy sequester separate and store for perspective used to explain the size or importance of something, particularly when that thing is difficult to imagine TRANSCRIPT Note: This is not a word-for-word transcript. Beth Hello and welcome to 6 Minute English from BBC Learning English. I'm Beth. Neil And I'm Neil. You can find a transcript and worksheet for this podcast on our website Beth So Neil, today we're talking about animal migration: that's the movement of animals from one place to another, usually because of the weather or temperature. Neil Yes. For example, wildebeest are famous for their migration. They travel around the Serengeti in Tanzania and the Maasai Mara in Kenya every year depending on the rain. It's often called The Great Migration. Beth Yes, and I have a question for you about this, Neil. How many animals are thought to take part in The Great Migration every year? Is it: a) 1 million b) 1.5 million c) 2.5 million Neil Well, I don't know… but I'm going to guess 2.5 million. Beth OK. I'll reveal the answer at the end of the programme. Now, wildebeest are not the only animals who travel large distances. Neil That's right. Many sharks also migrate – they move to a different place because of the weather or temperature. Beth Trisha Atwood researches sharks and their migration for Utah State University and explained more to BBC World Service programme, The Climate Question. Trisha Animals migrate for all types of reasons. So, some of them migrate for food resources, things like mating or for giving birth. Neil So, animals can migrate for food, mating and giving birth. Host of BBC World Service's The Climate Question, Sophie Eastaugh, wanted to know more. Sophie And what kind of distances are we talking with these migrations? Are they covering huge swathes of ocean? Trisha Some of these shark species can travel massive distances. We've seen great white sharks that have travelled from the coast off of Perth, Australia, all the way to South Africa. Beth Sophie asks, "What kinds of distances are we talking with these migrations?" This is an informal way to ask, "How far are the migrations?" We can rephrase lots of questions in this way. For example, you could ask "What kind of price are we talking?" to ask how much something costs. Neil Sophie goes on to ask whether sharks travel across huge swathes of ocean. Swathes of ocean means large areas of ocean. Beth Yes, and in fact, sharks do travel across large areas. For example, great white sharks can travel from Australia to South Africa. That is a long way to swim! Neil But, as climate change causes changes to the temperature of the ocean, it's changing the way that sharks migrate. Beth This is a problem; sharks scare away other creatures, such as sea turtles, and these creatures eat seagrass, which absorbs a lot of carbon from the atmosphere. Neil So, basically, when the sharks are around, there's more seagrass on the ocean floor and so more carbon is absorbed. So, sharks can actually help fight climate change. Beth Yes. In fact, lots of species that migrate are really important for fighting climate change. Let's hear more from BBC World Service programme, The Climate Question. Sophie Sharks aren't the only migratory animal that acts as a secret weapon against climate change. Trisha Research that we worked on shows that by just managing about 10 groups of animals we could be taking out or sequestering more CO2 from the atmosphere by about six gigatonnes of carbon per year. Sophie So, for perspective, some experts say that we need to suck 10 gigatonnes of CO2 a year out of the atmosphere to meet our climate goals. Neil Sophie says that many animals that migrate, like sharks, are a secret weapon against climate change. A secret weapon is something nobody knows about that will give you an advantage over a problem or enemy. Beth By protecting sharks and other animals that migrate, Trisha's research shows that we could be sequestering six gigatonnes of carbon dioxide, or CO2, a year from the atmosphere. Sequester means remove and store the carbon, for example in plants like seagrass. Neil Six gigatonnes is a lot of carbon! Sophie says that, for perspective, it's about 60% of the amount of carbon dioxide that some scientists believe we need to remove from the atmosphere each year. We can use the phrase 'for perspective' to explain the size or importance of something, particularly when it's difficult to imagine that thing. Beth Alongside sharks, another species that Trisha believes is important to helping remove carbon dioxide from the atmosphere is the wildebeest. Neil Yes, and that reminds me of your question, Beth. You asked me how many animals take part in The Great Migration, and I think I went for option c) 2.5 million. Was I right? Beth You weren't, I'm afraid. The answer was b) 1.5 million, so still a lot of animals. OK. Let's recap the vocabulary we've learned, starting with migrate: move to a different place. For animals, this is usually because of the weather or temperature. Neil We can use the structure 'What kind of (something) are we talking?' to rephrase a question more informally, particularly one about distance, cost or numbers. For example, "What kind of distance are we talking?" Beth Swathes means large areas of something. Neil A secret weapon is something nobody knows about that gives you an advantage over a problem or enemy. Beth If you sequester something, such as carbon dioxide, you remove it and store it. Neil And we can use the phrase 'for perspective' to explain the size or importance of something, particularly if that thing is difficult to imagine. Beth Once again, our six minutes are up. Why not test what you've learned using the interactive quiz on our website? Bye for now! Neil Goodbye.

Mexico Is Becoming a Beacon
Mexico Is Becoming a Beacon

New York Times

time23-04-2025

  • Business
  • New York Times

Mexico Is Becoming a Beacon

This essay is part of The Great Migration, a series by Lydia Polgreen exploring how people are moving around the world today. We know one type of migration well. It's millions of people from poorer countries traveling mostly to wealthy countries — where they receive, increasingly, a hostile reception — in search of safety and opportunity. But there's another type of migration taking place the world over. Smaller, quieter yet persistent, it involves people from wealthy countries seeking new lives elsewhere, sometimes in other wealthy places but also in poorer countries that have traditionally sent rather than received migrants. Perhaps nowhere on the globe are these two waves of migration converging more starkly than in Mexico City, a vast urban agglomeration that has been transformed over the past two decades. It was once known for violent crime, choking haze and broken infrastructure. For decades, many of its ambitious citizens sought to leave, part of a vast tide of migration across the country's northern border with the United States, a nation many Mexicans saw as a beacon of opportunity. These days, Mexico City is itself a beacon, drawing millions of visitors from across the world. It is a pulsing center of global culture that rivals any of the great European capitals. Its historic parks and plazas have been reborn. It is a culinary juggernaut, where securing a seat at top restaurants requires ingenuity and once-obscure taco stands garner viral, TikTok-fueled fame. The city's economy has thrived, too, driven by the growth of a wide range of businesses. There are bustling factories, high-tech start-ups, banking and insurance companies and even a rapidly expanding global film and television business, making not just Spanish-language content for Latin American audiences and art films but also big-budget streaming shows and Super Bowl commercials. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

The Problem With Sweden Is Sweden
The Problem With Sweden Is Sweden

New York Times

time28-03-2025

  • Politics
  • New York Times

The Problem With Sweden Is Sweden

This essay is part of The Great Migration, a series by Lydia Polgreen exploring how people are moving around the world today. On Aug. 12, 2004, celebratory headlines festooned the pages of Swedish newspapers, hailing a huge milestone: On that day a baby would be born as the nine millionth Swede. After years of fretting over declining birthrates, a modest increase in babies born and, crucially, robust migration had pushed that sprawling but lightly populated nation over a longed-for threshold. Twenty years later, almost exactly to the day, the Swedish government trumpeted a very different achievement: More people were leaving Sweden than were migrating to it. By the end of the year, a country that had long celebrated its status as a refuge for people fleeing war and repression was touting the fact that fewer people had been granted asylum in Sweden than in any year since comparable records have been kept. To the government, led by the center-right Moderate Party and backed by the hard-line anti-migrant Sweden Democrats, this retrenchment was nothing but a good thing. The celebration completed a stunning reversal. Sweden was for decades one of the most open and welcoming nations in the world, to the point where its foreign-born population stands at about 20 percent. Now it is among the most restrictive. By hardening asylum requirements and creating an unfriendly atmosphere for new arrivals, it has dramatically stemmed the flow of migrants. Arrivals have fallen year over year. Not satisfied, the government has cooked up new schemes to induce migrants already in the country to leave, offering a $34,000 payment per adult. In much less than a generation, Sweden has gone from safe haven to heavily fortified citadel. In this, Sweden offers some an example to emulate. As wealthy countries across the globe turn against migration and ascendant right-wing parties push harsh restrictions, Sweden stands out as a country that has gone hard and fast to keep migrants out — first under a center-left government and then a more right-leaning one. It is a case study of backlash, where the fantasy of draconian border restrictions has been enacted. The story, on its face, may seem a simple one: After being overwhelmed by an influx of asylum seekers from Syria and other war-tossed Middle Eastern countries in 2015, the country sought to assert control over its borders and its population. Yet when I traveled to the country earlier this year, I found something much more complicated. There is certainly antipathy toward migrants: In a survey last month, 73 percent of Swedish respondents said migration levels over the past decade were too high. But that's of a piece with a society ill at ease with itself. Beset by metastasizing gang violence, stubborn unemployment and strain on its vaunted social welfare system, the country is rife with discontent — a distemper shared by foreign- and native-born alike. The problem with Sweden, it seems, is not migrants. It's Sweden itself. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

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