Sure Travel Journey Vol 4.1 Summer 2018 | Page 62

A BILLION-STAR HOTEL F O L L O W I N G T H E W I L D E B E E S T A C R O S S TA N Z A N I A ’ S W I L D S E R E N G E T I , B Y C A R E L V E R H O E F I awake in the northern Serengeti to the sound of lions pacing outside my tiny two-man tent, its paper-thin walls doing little to shield the sound of my racing heart. I’ve been coming to the Serengeti National Park for 12 years to track the Great Migration: the two-million-strong herd of wildebeest that moves like an ever-rumbling thundercloud across the African plains. Pride after pride of lions (there are more than 2 000 lions in the Serengeti National Park alone) follow this mega-herd, waiting for a lone wildebeest to split fatally off from the rest. I should be used to these feline visitors by now; their nocturnal visits have become a regular occurrence over the years. Yet every time I’m within an arm’s length of these big cats with nothing but a piece of 62 // MAKE MEMORIES FOR LIFE canvas between us, my heartbeat echoes across the grasslands. Tonight it’s just the lions, me, my little tent and a spotty internet connection — the perfect combination of simplicity and intentional connection that I’ve come to love in Africa’s wild spaces. I’m in the midst of a yearlong research trip in the Serengeti and, just before the big cats arrived, I’d been thinking I’d found the right balance between being in the wild and dipping into the outside world when and if I choose to. I grew up in South Africa’s Kruger National Park and have always felt more at home in the bush. The unfenced plains and unhindered wildlife bring none of the negative energy and inconsistency I’ve come to associate with my two-legged counterparts. And the heightened senses I’ve developed in nature clash with the incessant noise of urban life. I can’t imagine the world without the African bush. It has been the driving force behind my passion to connect overseas tourists and mountaineers with Africa’s national parks, conservation projects and mountains. It’s why I will be climbing seven of Africa’s mountains in seven weeks in the world-first 7 Summits Africa Challenge this November/December, to raise awareness of seven causes affecting people and animals in East Africa. There is no replacement for the real thing, no nature television channel that can deliver the raw emotions I’ve experienced in the bush. It’s both pure joy and pain to see wildlife – much of which is endangered – pass by, knowing that many of these species might