The name of this park established in 1967, Ol Donyo Sabuk,
means large mountain in Maasai language. It is situated 65 km
(40 mi) north of Nairobi and has an excellent and clear view of Nairobi
and other lowland areas. Wildlife species that can be spotted here include
buffalo, colobus monkeys, baboons, bushbuck, impala, duiker, and abundant birdlife.
Ol Donyo Sabuk National Park is a common one-day trip out of Nairobi only 65 km (40 mi) away. The mountain is the highest peak in the park, covering 20.7 km2 (8.0 sq mi). It is particularly attractive for hikers or families wanting some freedom and exercise, outside their vehicles. One approach to the park is via the Fourteen Falls on the Athi River. The park's attraction is its beauty and views of both Mt. Kenya and Mt. Kilimanjaro. It teems with game including baboon, colobus, bushbuck, impala, duiker and many birds. While the name "Ol Donyo Sabuk" is Maasai for 'large mountain', the word Sabuk was mistakenly thought by many writers to mean "buffalo" whereas in fact Maasai call buffalo Olosowan. Today, some 250 buffalos roam the slopes. Kikuyu traditionalists also call the mountain by Kea-Njahe, known as the 'Mountain of the Big Rain', one of Ngai's lesser homes. The solitary mountain rises to 2,145 m (7,037 ft) from an otherwise flat area. The steep ascent requires a 4WD (4×4) vehicle. Near the summit lie the graves of Sir William Northrup McMillan (1872–1925) and his wife Lady Lucie.
Ol Donyo Sabuk National Park is a common one-day trip out of Nairobi only 65 km (40 mi) away. The mountain is the highest peak in the park, covering 20.7 km2 (8.0 sq mi). It is particularly attractive for hikers or families wanting some freedom and exercise, outside their vehicles. One approach to the park is via the Fourteen Falls on the Athi River. The park's attraction is its beauty and views of both Mt. Kenya and Mt. Kilimanjaro. It teems with game including baboon, colobus, bushbuck, impala, duiker and many birds. While the name "Ol Donyo Sabuk" is Maasai for 'large mountain', the word Sabuk was mistakenly thought by many writers to mean "buffalo" whereas in fact Maasai call buffalo Olosowan. Today, some 250 buffalos roam the slopes. Kikuyu traditionalists also call the mountain by Kea-Njahe, known as the 'Mountain of the Big Rain', one of Ngai's lesser homes. The solitary mountain rises to 2,145 m (7,037 ft) from an otherwise flat area. The steep ascent requires a 4WD (4×4) vehicle. Near the summit lie the graves of Sir William Northrup McMillan (1872–1925) and his wife Lady Lucie.
The town is located about 18.5 km (11.5 mi)
east-southeast of Thika, along the Thika-Garissa road (A3 road). Driving on
Garissa Road from Thika town, there are pineapple plantations on both sides,
accentuated by little pockets of blooming eucalyptus. About 18 kilometres
(11 mi) east of Thika, there is a junction going south, with Kenya
Wildlife Service markings. It will be a 3-kilometre (1.9 mi) drive from
here to the famous Fourteen Falls, described as one of Kenya's most spectacular
landmarks. By the river is Kilimambogo Teachers College, and Immaculate Heart
of Mary mission hospital. Donyo Sabuk town is a kilometre (half-mile) away from
Fourteen Falls, just across the Athi River, with a junction leading to the game
park, and the other to the great house of Donyo Sabuk.
Down past the 7,037 ft (2,145-metre) mountain base sits
Donyo Sabuk town, a town that has retained many things that Lord Macmillan
bequeathed the area. Here, partying goes on well into the night, and there are
a number of "boys’ bands", where the box guitar is still in vogue.
This musical town is the hometown of the late Kamba musician Kakai Kilonzo,
late legendary Sila of Kilunda fame, and the still-active Gä'thika boys band.
The major attractions att the park include; Fourteen Falls,
scenic views of Mt.Kenya from the summit, abundant forest birds, wildlife
watching, An unusual burial site the McMillan grave, Montane landscape,and much
more.
Lord William Northrop
Macmillan
(1872–1925) was a decorated American soldier and knighted by the King of
England, even though he was not British. He was a huge man raised in St. Louis,
Missouri, United States. He arrived in Kenya in 1901 for big game hunting,
playing host to former US President Theodore Roosevelt, during his famous 1911
safari at their ranch, Juja Farm (later a popular location for film crews). He
and his wife were great philanthropists. They established the MacMillan Library
in central Nairobi.
His poor grasp of plain reality was more than compensated for
by his exaggerated ambitions and legendary eccentricities. But not until
travelling from where Juja town stands today, through open distance all the way
around and past Mount Kilimambogo, can someone begin to understand how the
unlikely dreams of one man shaped the future of an entire community.
If the facial image retained inside Macmillan Memorial
Library, in Nairobi, which has immortalised him, is anything to go by, the man
was a serious-looking gentleman. Indeed, he was serious enough to want to own
the whole mountain, which, together with the Aberdares (Nyandarua Ranges), was
regarded by the Kikuyu and Kamba as God's subsidiary home after Mount Kenya.
This is Mount Kilimambogo, which today falls in the middle of Ol Donyo Sabuk
National Park, another enduring legacy of Lord Macmillan's exploits.
Macmillan's farming pursuits stretched from horizon to horizon. The anguish of
his crushing failures to father children is equalled only by the indomitable
spirit in which he took on one farming failure after the other. But the
American stayed on, a craving that he seemed to have passed on to many people
who followed in his footsteps.
Further east of Ol-Donyo, the building that was Macmillan's
home, a fort by any definition, sits in splendour. More than three-quarters of
the house is under key and lock. A part of it houses the Muka Mukuu
Co-operative Society, a local failed outfit, managed by elderly locals.
Covering a ground enough for three basketball pitches, the
villagers have spent more than a century wondering why a couple that had no
children put up such a huge dwelling place. So large is the building that Lord
Macmillan and his wife would spend one year in one wing of the house, then
migrate to the other in the second half of the year. The locals are yet to
figure out how they can benefit from such an obvious tourist attraction site.
It was in this house that Macmillan housed his friend and
former American President Theodore
Roosevelt, as he wrote his biography. In fact, it was not the first time
Roosevelt was spending time there. He had been there before he became president
while on a series of hunting trips. Thanks to the ribald gang he joined on the
way, his conduct during his stay at Donyo Sabuk almost cost him his presidency.
The other prominent person who had stayed in the house was the wartime British Prime Minister Sir Winston
Churchill. The house also served as a jailhouse during the Second World
War. It is also one of Kenya's most famous film crew jaunts. Macmillan's house
is a museum now.
The Fourteen Falls area is protected and equipped with a
picnic site. It has historical and religious importance both to the residents
and Asian immigrants. The Asians use the site for recreation and spiritual
rites, disposing of cremated ash in the river in the belief that it will go all
the way to India through the Indian Ocean, hence acting as a shrine. Others
come for recreation, retaining the Happy Valley theme that was first introduced
by Lord Macmillan. Like Lord Macmillan, the adjacent community, some of whom
are descendants of the people the adventurer brought here, still farm the land.
Fourteen Falls is located just a little bit away from Thika town.
LOVE THS PLACE
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