Aberdares Mountains Overview

Aberdares Waterfall

The Aberdare Mountain Ranges soar to peaks of 13,000 feet and dip into deep, V shaped valleys with streams and rivers cascading over spectacular waterfalls, including Kenya's longest fall of approximately 1,000 feet. Located in the heart of the Kikuyu tribe highlands area in central Kenya, traditional folklore states that the Aberdare Mountains are one of the homes of Ngai, God.

There are three main eco-systems within the Aberdare Mountains: the forest, which gives way to dense bamboo forests, which itself gives way to moorland as the altitude rises.

Leopard

The forest is home to a multitude of elephant, buffalo, giant forest hog and the endangered black rhino. The Aberdares are also an excellent area for spotting the elusive leopard and occasional sightings have been made of the Golden cat. Black and white Colobus monkeys and Sykes monkeys are easily seen, as are waterbuck, reedbuck, duikers, serval cats and bushbuck. Melanistic cats appear to be quite common in the high altitudes of the Aberdares as black serval cats are spotted fairly often.

Once above 10,000 feet, the bamboo gives way to rolling moorlands, where crystal clear streams are well stocked with trout, and varieties of lobelia, groundsel and heather cover much of the ground. Here eland, lion, elephant and buffalo may be found in addition to the numerous birds, such as the Jackson's francolin, sparrow hawk, African goshawk, sunbirds and plovers.

Aberdares Landscape

The moorland area offers superb scenery and excellent opportunities for high altitude hiking and fly-fishing, which is encouraged as the trout is not an indigenous species.

A very different landscape from the wide, open plains of the African savanna, the Aberdares have been described as Scotland with lions and are well worth a stop on any tour of Kenya.

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