Playtime - 3708b+ by Jen Hall
Via Flickr:
Cheetah cubs playing, testing out those claws. Look at the size of those back paws! Cheetahs aren't good climbers, but don't tell those cubs! Masai Mara, Kenya Happy Safari Sunday...
The Masai "jumping dance", which the correct name is adumu, is one of several rites that make up the Eunoto, the event in which the morani, or younger warriors, advance to manhood. #levame #travel #traveladdict #wanderlust #savana #savanalife #hakunamatata #ojipedos7 #masai #arusha #tanzania (em Arusha, Tanzania) https://www.instagram.com/p/CovUkM1M2jFW6j-Q-shZGipx5hFWdgWVz-I0E80/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
Excavations in Sudan have uncovered 7,000-year-old bone tools that offer rare evidence suggesting the modern Masai practice of bleeding cows dates back to ancient times. The discovery sheds light on the earliest cattle-breeding communities in Africa.
Maasai culture is centred around the belief that God (called Engai, or Enkai, in the tribe's Maa language) created cattle especially for them, and they are the custodians of all the world's cattle. For Maasai, life revolves around amassing and grazing large herds of cows (and to a lesser extent, goats). #maasai #africa #tanzania #kenya #safari #culture #maasaimara #travel #maasaitribe #masai #zanzibar #african #wildlife #handmade #nature #serengeti #ngorongoro #maasaiculture #madeinafrica #masaimara #love #cultureintofashion #art #hakunamatata #photography #tarangire #kenia #fulani #samburu #kilimanjaro (at Kilimanjaro, Tanzania) https://www.instagram.com/p/ChDQYC4On9w/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
Windows to the Soul - 86751b+ by Jen Hall
Via Flickr:
How about her beautiful eyes? When I see this photo I can still feel how intense and beautiful our momentary eye contact was. Thoughts on the random fur across her eye? I kind of like it. Masai Mara, Kenya
Sure, you can sit there and judge. But when you have no means to pick-up a tissue, much less reach your sky-high sinuses; then you have to find other ways to clear-out the lurgy.
If I may tangent, we don’t say “booger” in the UK (Probably because it sounds too close to “Bugger”). We call them “bogeys”. Almost makes me wish it was “bogey” instead - more room for ideas: Could’ve been to do with snot, golf or a type of British fae.