Videos � Behind The Scenes #3 -Expedition Africa on History Channel
Author: admin | 1 August 2009 | Views: 2361
Videos � Behind The Scenes #3 -Expedition Africa on History Channel
Author: admin | 1 August 2009 | Views: 2361
General � Expedition Africa
Author: admin | 1 August 2009 | Views: 1762
Expedition Africa is an eight-part reality television series produced by Mark Burnett and airing on The History Channel. The series follows four modern day explorers - a navigator, a wildlife expert, a survivalist, and a journalist - as they substantially retrace H.M. Stanley's famed expedition to find Dr. David Livingstone. Their route deviates somewhat from Stanley's in that it includes a treacherous crossing of the Uluguru Mountains, which Stanley circumvented. Additionally, whereas Stanley took roughly 8 months to find Livingstone, the explorers on the show have 30 days to complete the 970-mile journey deep into the interior of Tanzania.
Travel Stories � Moshi Tours & Sightseeing Excursions
Author: admin | 29 July 2009 | Views: 1333
Explore Moshi with a little help. Browse our Moshi tours listings for a range of exciting sightseeing trips and excursions. We list independent tour operators who offer everything from a simple guided city bus tour to escorted adventure treks
1 day - From your hotel to Kilimanjaro/ Marangu gate You will leave your hotel/ lodge about 2:30AM after breakfast, then drive to Marangu entrance gate for payments. After check up with park officers, start your walking toward north-west side to Mandara huts. On your way to Mandara, take as many pictures as you can so that you may have memorable trip. Towered eucalyptus, thick rain forests and water streams will give fantastic air condition while you watch blue monkey, white and black colobus, horn bills and many other animals. You will stop for lunch and then go back to gate, catch your vehicle and drive to green hostels for camping. Mount Kilimanjaro as Seen from Moshi Town Travel Stories � Studying Hemingway in Tanzania
Author: admin | 28 July 2009 | Views: 1489
Ernest Hemingway is one of the most well known writers in the world. However, not many people know about his lifelong fascination with Africa. For years I knew about Hemingway, having read some of his works, but in the summer of 2002, I fell under Hemingway's spell. That summer, I helped lead a large group of American students, their parents, and teachers on safari in some of the game parks of northern Tanzania: Ngorongoro, Serengeti, and Tarangire. The safari was organized by Thomson Safaris, https://www.thomsonsafaris.com, and my role was to incorporate folklore into the experience. As I prepared for this trip, I decided to take Hemingway's African stories with me. I could not have made a better choice, as I wrote in a Tanzanian newspaper afterwards... Books � Cookery Book the Tanzanian Way (1993)
Author: admin | 28 July 2009 | Views: 1150
This book's objective is to make life (and what is life without food!) a little more interesting in the kitchen and on the table. Of course, there are many variations and a lot of the time it is enjoyable to just experiment with what you have in the cupboard.
Films � Cheetah (1989)
Author: admin | 27 July 2009 | Views: 1046
An American boy and girl, spending six months in Kenya with their scientist parents adopt a cheetah, only to realize that they must set it loose so that it can learn to hunt and be free.
However, when the animal is captured by poachers planning to race it against greyhounds, the two city kids, together with a young African goat herder they befriended, head off into the wild to rescue the cheetah. Films � Baraka (1992)
Author: admin | 27 July 2009 | Views: 1174
The word Baraka means "blessing" in several languages; watching this film, the viewer is blessed with a dazzling barrage of images that transcend language.
Filmed in 24 countries and set to an ever-changing global soundtrack, the movie draws some surprising connections between various peoples and the spaces they inhabit, whether that space is a lonely mountaintop or a crowded cigarette factory... Films � Gorillas in the Mist: The Story of Dian Fossey (1988)
Author: admin | 27 July 2009 | Views: 1316
Gorillas in the Mist is a 1988 film which tells the true-life story of naturalist Dian Fossey and her work in Rwanda with Mountain Gorillas. The screenplay was adapted by Anna Hamilton Phelan from articles by Alex Shoumatoff and Harold T. P. Hayes and a story by Phelan and Tab Murphy. The original music score was composed by Maurice Jarre. The movie was directed by Michael Apted and the cinematography was by John Seale.
A Kentucky woman, Dian Fossey, is inspired by an anthropologist Louis Leakey to devote her life to the study of primates. Travelling into deepest Africa, Fossey becomes fascinated with the lives and habits of the rare mountain gorillas of the Rwandan jungle... Films � To Walk with Lions (1999)
Author: admin | 27 July 2009 | Views: 1210
To Walk With Lions is a good movie if you really like watching Richard Harris.
Richard Harris, John Michie, Kerry Fox, Ian Bannen, Hugh Quarshie do a great job supporting, too. If you haven't heard of To Walk With Lions, here's a quick plot: Together with his young assistant Tony Fitzjohn, Adamson battles to keep the animals on his game reserve "Kora" from dangerous poachers and deadly "shifta" warriors who are determinded to destroy rhinos and elephants for their tusks, and lions for their rich pelts. Academy Award Nominee Richard Harris of Gladiator and Harry Potter and The Sorcerer�s Stone takes you to the wilds of Africa in an inspirational story about one man�s magnificent crusade. |