Monday, April 14, 2008

That magnificent bird


I hope somebody is impressed by this. We tried to be.

When my sister was visiting from Seattle last month, we went to Murchison Falls National Park in northwestern Uganda for the long Easter weekend. The Victoria Nile River flows through the park (this part of the river originates in Lake Victoria), and at one point along the river, it shoots through a narrow gorge in the world’s most powerful waterfall. Hence the name of the park – Murchison Falls.


The calmer parts of the river are teeming with wildlife – elephants, hippos, crocodile and many types of water birds, from the tiny to the big. One bird we saw was the elusive shoebill stork (this is the impressive part). Apparently sightings of this bird are rare. Even our Lonely Planet guidebook says you have to be “very lucky” to see this bird when visiting the park. It was a big, gray bird with a funny-looking beak. On Easter morning at sunrise, we took a cruise on the river downstream to the delta, where the Victoria Nile dumps into Lake Albert. We don’t know how they spotted it, but our guides found this bird several yards back from the bank of the river, and, since it was gray and very neutral-colored, it was even harder to spot among the river reeds. This is why my photos of it did not come out very clear, but trust me – this is an impressive sight. Hopefully there are some bird watchers among you who will be impressed.

Another impressive fact we learned is that it takes a whole three months for water to get from the source of the Nile to its mouth in the Mediterranean. So the course the river takes is: from Lake Victoria into the Victoria Nile River, which dumps into Lake Albert, which flows into the Albert Nile River, which eventually dumps into the Nile, which we all associate with Egypt. And all along the delta that we visited on Easter morning, there was a lot of papyrus, which is what Moses was hidden among when his mother sent him away along the Nile in Egypt. In places like this that we visited, it seems time has stood still since those ancient days, and that it is still as wild and primitive as it was back then, with animals still roaming free and nature ruling the land.

2 comments:

Unknown said...

Stephen,

I will take your reliable word for it. But, I see no bird.

Keep traveling.

Bill Strehlow

Anonymous said...

Stephen, I see the bird and being one who trys my hand at photography, birds in particular, I can appreciate the effort, they are hard to "catch".

I enjoy reading your blog and Lexi is getting so big! Maybe that is all the sunshine!

Colleen Wear
Ely IA