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Nom du blog :
lailasamburu
Description du blog :
apercu d'une nouvelle vie...de l'Europe au Kenya...un voyage de decouvertes...
Description audio !

Catégorie :
Blog Société
Date de création :
19.07.2006
Dernière mise à jour :
22.07.2008
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>> Toutes les catégories <<
· ...Matiere a reflexion... (160)
· A propos de moi (85)
· Habitat (27)
· Images d'actualites (215)
· Invitation au voyage (28)
· Le pays (63)
· Les animaux (59)
· Les habitants du Samburu District (90)
· mes compagnons (17)
· poesie (312)
· Pour un sourire (16)
· Textes d'ici et d'ailleurs (58)
· Textes de chansons (49)

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· Sous le bruit des armes...a Maralal, en ce dernier

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Ajoutez aux favoris 20 derniers commentaires

dommage
22.07.2008
What to do ?
20.07.2008
coucou
13.07.2008
Introduction
11.07.2008
cela me fait rigoler
07.07.2008
trop bo
06.07.2008
laila
16.06.2008
felisutation
18.05.2008
slt
17.05.2008
For You
17.05.2008
bonjour
13.05.2008
le pastoralisme au niger
04.05.2008
perfect!
17.04.2008
bilan des essais vaccinaux avec les vaccins antipa
16.04.2008
nouvelles
13.04.2008
je t´aimerai tout le temps que je serai moi
13.04.2008
Excellent article
05.04.2008
bonjour
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saludos! desde la ciudad de lille....en francia...
30.03.2008
BONJOUR LAÎLA
29.03.2008
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Gazelles

Posté le 21.10.2006 par lailasamburu
Partir en safari au Kenya, c'est se lancer sur les pistes de la savane africaine à la découverte des réserves et de la faune. Les gazelles de Thomson, par exemple, sont nombreuses à vagabonder dans cette région à la recherche de pâturages. Photo © Guillaume Ratel



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Leopard

Posté le 21.10.2006 par lailasamburu
La réserve de Samburu est une des plus belles d'Afrique. Située au nord de Nairobi, cette réserve a été créée en 1962 et s'étend sur 225km². Le léopard s'y balade mais il est difficile de le trouver et de l'observer. En journée, cherchez-le dans les arbres car c'est là qu'il effectue sa sieste quotidienne. Photo © Guillaume Ratel

A voir ?

Posté le 21.10.2006 par lailasamburu
Actualités / Evénements
La Baule Kenya : Safari Mode d'emploi

Samedi 21 octobre à 15h00 - Cinéma Les Evens - La Baule
Film de Guillaume RATEL

Non ! Ce film n'est pas un documentaire animalier parmi tant d'autres. Guillaume Ratel vous emmène en brousse et au Mont Kenya. Il vous convie aux préparatifs, aux imprévus et aux joies d'un safari. Comment camper en pleine savane sans devenir une pâtisserie pour lion, respecter le code de la brousse pour ne pas vous faire écraser par un éléphant. Tous les trucs et astuces pour faire votre safari ou mieux en rêver! Il pénètre aussi là où le visiteur pressé ne s'aventure guère: alcool clandestin, ferrailleurs, etc…

Tarif : 6 €

Cinéma Les Evens - 3 Allée des Acacias - LA BAULE - Tél 02 51 75 08 61
Le site web de Connaissance du monde.

Pluie et nuages

Posté le 19.10.2006 par lailasamburu
Un jour sans soleil sur la cote kenyane

Au travers des nuages

Posté le 19.10.2006 par lailasamburu
Coucher de soleil sur l'Ocean Indien

Soleil sur la plage

Posté le 19.10.2006 par lailasamburu
Sable blanc et 28 degres

Ciel de pluie

Posté le 16.10.2006 par lailasamburu
Un ciel nuageux sur la cote de l'Ocean Indien...

Si...

Posté le 12.10.2006 par lailasamburu

Maralal, vue par satellite

Posté le 08.10.2006 par lailasamburu
Dans les escarpements de la Rift Valley...
Vue Satellite de la NASA

Problemes du Samburu District

Posté le 08.10.2006 par lailasamburu
Laikipia: Shrinking grazing land fuels violence

Story by JOHN MBARIA
Publication Date: 10/8/2006
While in other parts of the country where insecurity is fuelled by tribal hatred, in Laikipia it is a fight over resources, pitting pastoralists against private landowners.
With available pasture and water in the drought-prone Samburu and Pokot districts too scarce to support the large and growing livestock numbers, pastoralists in these districts have had to travel to Laikipia seeking to secure a lifeline, especially in private ranches.

"But each time they meet, they collide with each other and with sedentary farmers who have largely occupied areas near permanent water and pasture," says the director of Forest Action Network, Dr Dominique Walubengo.

"This is not a political issue, it is just survival. Some of the people do not even know the names of their MPs," says Dr Walubengo.

Studies in the area indicate that both water and grazing land have been on a steady decline in the districts. Grazing land has decreased by more than 25 per cent since 1990s as the land under crops increased, according to a report published in the Eastern & Southern Africa Geographical Journal. The report shows that only large-scale ranches have a reliable supply of pasture while subdivided areas or lands under communal ownership are "rather bare."

Population increases – both of humans and animals – has also put pressure on the resources, particularly water. For instance, it is estimated that the number of people in Laikipia alone has risen from 50,000 to 500,000 in the last four decades.

That of cattle, sheep, goats, camels and donkeys has gone up to 521,000 while wildlife rose to 121,000. To get water for their animals, the pastoralists have been moving upstream, "consequently destroying crops and irrigation infrastructure."

Over-use of water is another source of conflict. Researchers say that between 60 and 80 per cent of the water flowing in most rivers and streams is used for irrigation by people and firms upstream. For instance, 80 percent of the waters of Naro Moru river is used upstream, "leaving very little or no water flowing during the dry season." Much of this irrigation is illegal.

The biggest "victims" of the skewed use of "common" resources are the pastoralists who are said to have been "restricted" to the edge of the Laikipia plateau and to the dry low lands. These areas experience intense heat, unreliable rainfall, frequent droughts and –in recent years – the drying up of some of the rivers. According to the study, there has been a steady decline in the volumes of water flowing along the once permanent Ewaso Ng'iro river. .

Going hand-in-hand with this has been the growth of a network of towns and rural centres that have confined tens of thousands of residents on a small land area. More recently, the area has also experienced an increase in tourism activities, especially on the white-owned ranches. Still, some ranches have been converted into horticultural enterprises that draw big quantities of water from the few permanent sources there. People have settled along the rivers and converted the limited wetlands and swamps into agricultural land.

Unfortunately, effective solutions have been in short supply. Dr Walubengo says: "We have become impotent both within the Government and as members of the civil society."

There are those who believe that planners need to zone off different areas suitable for different land uses and that the Government ought to ensure that Kenyans stick to such uses. They point out that to secure vital resources like water points and animal corridors, the Government will have to ensure that suggestions made in the recently-released national land policy are effected. But even here, there is skepticism because of the country's poor record of implementing policies.

There are also suggestions that the Government needs to buy off and secure areas that have been used over the generations as communal water points and for dry-season grazing. Pastoralists are also being encouraged to offload their "excess" animals now that the Kenya Meat Commission is up and running.

Photo jointe :

A Samburu family take a rest under a tree on their way to a place near Rumuruti township where several pastoralists are camping on their way to back home from Laikipia district Photo by Stephen Mudiari












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