Under Samburu's acacia trees and ancient stars

Legend meets conservation on a safari where rare species and community wisdom share the terrain

By Victor Raballa in Samburu | China Daily | Updated: 2026-01-01 10:06
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Members of the Samburu community go about their daily routines in northern Kenya's Samburu region in 2023. GERALD ANDERSON/GETTY IMAGES

Locally, Kamunyak's story is not framed as sentimentality. It is spoken of as an embodiment of restraint, coexistence, and the sacred balance that governs life in the harsh Samburu terrain. Elders describe it as an expression of a land that rewards patience and punishes excess. Visitors may hear it early in their stay, often before they have seen a lion at all. It sets the tone.

"You cannot understand the reserve without understanding the Samburu community," says Tom Lesarge, director of Samburu National Reserve. "The locals are part of the attraction."

It is a practical observation. For generations, the protection of nature has been woven into Samburu culture and passed down through the stories elders tell at dusk, rituals performed at sacred hills, and daily practices shaped by survival in the wilderness. The reserve sits roughly 350 kilometers north of Nairobi, where Kenya's greener highlands give way to semi-arid country. Here, acacia trees dominate the horizon, water dictates movement, and survival depends on knowing when not to push further.

For first-time visitors, Samburu often feels quieter than Kenya's southern parks. The drama is subtler. There are fewer vehicles, wider spaces, and longer pauses between sightings. That restraint is part of its character.

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