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Keekorok
Lodge comes on-board for MARA 2008
We
are pleased to advise that the historic and world renowned Keekorok Lodge
has provided a room allocation to MARA 2008 to substitute for that previously
at the Mara Sarova.
Keekorok,
whose name is derived from a Maasai word denoting a species of blacked-barked
trees that are endemic to the area, was the first lodge to be opened in
Kenya's Maasai Mara National Reserve. The site of Keekorok long pre-dates
the formation of the Mara itself: known to the Maasai people as Ekorok
and an area rich in wildlife which they had lived alongside in virtual
harmony for generations, the addition of 'ke' gave the place its
now familiar name. Explorers, missionaries and traders gradually infiltrated
the area and they must have been awestruck by the beauty of the African
plains as by the profusion of animals that lived on them. Inevitably hunters
saw an opportunity to amass huge wealth very quickly when commodities
such as ostrich feathers and elephant tusks were much in demand in Europe,
America and the Far East with the result that the name of Kenya soon became
synonymous with that of the Big Game Hunter as personified in the novels
of Ernest Hemingway and a string of Hollywood movies several of which
were filmed using Keekorok as a base.
The location of Ekorok and later Keekorok was well chosen: not only did
it offer shade and permanent water flowing from rocky outcrops, but rich
grasses ensured an abundance of grazing animals even during migrations
and this in turn meant that the 'Big Five' comprising lion, leopard, buffalo,
elephant and rhino were never absent. Construction of the lodge commenced
in 1962 a year after the game reserve had been formally established. A
stream flowing in front of the lodge was dammed in 1972 to form a lake
that quickly attracted resident families of hippos and this led to the
construction of an elevated walkway from which to view them and the abundant
birdlife. Total reconstruction of all public areas was embarked upon in
April 2005 flowing a fire that gutted the main building. The 98 chalets
and cottages were completely refurbished and modernised during reconstruction
of the public areas in 2005.
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