Hello my name is DAnielle and I am the meteorologists and if you scroll down my page you will find what the weather is like here
why you should go to the savannah
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In the savanna you could go...
Go On A Wild Live Safari
Go on a Wildlife Safari , visiting classic examples of tropical savanna such as the Serengeti in Tanzania or Masai Mara in Kenya, two adjoining wildlife parks. Just after dawn and just before sunset, you can take a game drive in a pop-top vehicle designed for amateur photographers, which comes alive at these times. You see groups of warthogs, elephants walking single file, lions gazing across the horizon and herds of grazing antelopes, tails flicking in the dim light. you can watch baboons bounding in a clearing or hippos bellowing in a river. The time not on game drives can be spent enjoying international cuisine at a luxury lodge or fine grub prepared by the safari chef around a campfire.
View Tribal Life
View Tribal LifeBomas, the villages in the savanna where Masai people live, may admit your safari group for a fee to meet tribe members for part of the day. Children tend to take particular interest in your cameras and want to see photos of themselves. Full-scale cultural safaris arrange visits for you with natural healers and cooperatives that make clay pots or sign you up for a community volunteering project. The three leading tourist magnets for American tourists -- Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda -- provide opportunities for your party to get a glimpse of authentic nomadic life in the savanna or to visit culture centers outside the capital cities to enjoy a show, including dancers, singers and musicians.
Go Birding looking
Go Birding You can combine cultural encounters with birding by hiring a trained guide from a rural village in the savanna to lead you on a nature walk there's no substitute for local knowledge when it comes to figuring out whether that pretty feathered creature is a hornbill or spoonbill. Uganda offers villagers as guides, while in Kenya, you can take a bird-watching safari that stays in top-class lodges.
Try Rafting
Try Rafting You may associate whitewater rafting and bungee jumping with American thrill-seeking more than the African savanna, but Uganda is making a move into the adventure travel market with activities that focus on adventures on the Nile. Tour operators offer easy raft floats with a look at bird life near the Victorian source of the Nile as well as more extreme rafting that sends you plunging through rapids. If you want instead to get a look down at the savanna, you can join a trek to the top of Mount Kenya in Kenya or Mount Kilimanjaro, just across the border in Tanzania.
Go On A Wild Live Safari
Go on a Wildlife Safari , visiting classic examples of tropical savanna such as the Serengeti in Tanzania or Masai Mara in Kenya, two adjoining wildlife parks. Just after dawn and just before sunset, you can take a game drive in a pop-top vehicle designed for amateur photographers, which comes alive at these times. You see groups of warthogs, elephants walking single file, lions gazing across the horizon and herds of grazing antelopes, tails flicking in the dim light. you can watch baboons bounding in a clearing or hippos bellowing in a river. The time not on game drives can be spent enjoying international cuisine at a luxury lodge or fine grub prepared by the safari chef around a campfire.
View Tribal Life
View Tribal LifeBomas, the villages in the savanna where Masai people live, may admit your safari group for a fee to meet tribe members for part of the day. Children tend to take particular interest in your cameras and want to see photos of themselves. Full-scale cultural safaris arrange visits for you with natural healers and cooperatives that make clay pots or sign you up for a community volunteering project. The three leading tourist magnets for American tourists -- Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda -- provide opportunities for your party to get a glimpse of authentic nomadic life in the savanna or to visit culture centers outside the capital cities to enjoy a show, including dancers, singers and musicians.
Go Birding looking
Go Birding You can combine cultural encounters with birding by hiring a trained guide from a rural village in the savanna to lead you on a nature walk there's no substitute for local knowledge when it comes to figuring out whether that pretty feathered creature is a hornbill or spoonbill. Uganda offers villagers as guides, while in Kenya, you can take a bird-watching safari that stays in top-class lodges.
Try Rafting
Try Rafting You may associate whitewater rafting and bungee jumping with American thrill-seeking more than the African savanna, but Uganda is making a move into the adventure travel market with activities that focus on adventures on the Nile. Tour operators offer easy raft floats with a look at bird life near the Victorian source of the Nile as well as more extreme rafting that sends you plunging through rapids. If you want instead to get a look down at the savanna, you can join a trek to the top of Mount Kenya in Kenya or Mount Kilimanjaro, just across the border in Tanzania.
what to wear if you go yo the Savannah .well you should bring shorts tank tops or short sleeve tennis shoes pants and a sweatshirt
a slideshow of the SAVANNAH
grassland SAVANNAH'S
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World Climate Zones
Have you ever wondered why one area of the world is a desert, another a grassland, and another a rainforest? Why are there different forests and deserts, and why are there different types of life in each area? The answer is climate.Climate is the characteristic condition of the atmosphere near the earth's surface at a certain place on earth. It is the long-term weather of that area (at least 30 years). This includes the region's general pattern of weather conditions, seasons and weather extremes like hurricanes, droughts, or rainy periods. Two of the most important factors determining an area's climate are air temperature and precipitation.World biomes are controlled by climate. The climate of a region will determine what plants will grow there, and what animals will inhabit it. All three components, climate, plants and animals are interwoven to create the fabric of a biome.
Have you ever wondered why one area of the world is a desert, another a grassland, and another a rainforest? Why are there different forests and deserts, and why are there different types of life in each area? The answer is climate.Climate is the characteristic condition of the atmosphere near the earth's surface at a certain place on earth. It is the long-term weather of that area (at least 30 years). This includes the region's general pattern of weather conditions, seasons and weather extremes like hurricanes, droughts, or rainy periods. Two of the most important factors determining an area's climate are air temperature and precipitation.World biomes are controlled by climate. The climate of a region will determine what plants will grow there, and what animals will inhabit it. All three components, climate, plants and animals are interwoven to create the fabric of a biome.
Here are some PICTURES of the weather if you go to the SAVANNAH or some graphs.
something to know about the SAVANNAH weather
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The Savanna biome has a wet/dry climate. Its . The tropical climate, and the dry season in the winter. In the savanna climate there is a distinct dry season, which is in the winter. Savannas get all their rain in the summer months. During the distinct dry season of a savanna, most of the plants shrivel up and die. Some rivers and streams dry up. Most of the animals migrate to find food. In the wet season all of the plants are lush and the rivers flow freely. The animals migrate back to graze. In West Africa the rainy season begins in May. It is usually cooler during the dry season by a few degrees. Because it is in the tropical latitudes that is still hot enough. The savanna climate has a temperature range of 68° to 86° F. In the winter, it is usually about 68° to 78° In the summer the temperature ranges from 78° to 86° F In a Savanna the temperature does not change a lot. When it does, its very gradual and not drastic. There is an annual precipitation of 10 to 30 inches of rain. From December to February hardly any rain falls at all.
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- Annual rainfall in the African Savanna is about the same as that of Wisconsin.
- In the dry season they only get about four inches of rain.
- The dry season occurs more then seven months of the year, from October to March in the southern hemisphere and April to September in the northern hemisphere.
- The dry season comes in the low sun period and the wet season comes in the high sun period.
- They have a wet-dry tropical climate.