It bubbles and writhes, it hisses with toxic breath like something that refuses to sleep. Every so often, it groans and squelches, with a guttural sound — the death rattle of a dragon, or the final gasp of a broken machine refusing to die. Two meters from our tent, yellow, foul-smelling sulfuric fumes rise rhythmically from a fissure in the earth.
Now, sharp cracking sounds rip through the air —the unmistakable sound of stones being flung. For a breathless instant, we wonder: Perhaps… it’s not just the mountain exhaling. Perhaps the lava is moving toward us.
The Mountain of God
For the Maasai, Ol Doinyo Lengai is the seat of God. It is a formidable mountain, 2,962 meters high. It is one of Africa's most active volcanoes, and lies at a point where the African continent is drifting apart, for the last 1.2 million years and currently at a rate of about 3 millimeters per year. This doesn't sound like much, but the effects are dramatic, causing Ol Doinyo Lengai to erupt every few years, at irregular intervals. Its crater changes its appearance each time.
Lengai, recently photographed by our daughter Josi
(Click here to listen to the soundtrack while you continue reading)
On my earlier trip to the Mountains of the Moon (click here for the report) I had skipped Ol Donyo Lengai because of a complete lack of transport. In 1992, taking a break from Operation Lifeline Sudan (click here for the OLS story) and having deposited our children with friends in Nairobi, Gabi and I were determined to make it happen.
Due to perspective compression in photography, it doesn't look like it, but there are 1750 meters of vertical elevation to climb. We are carrying a tent, sleeping bags, and water for two days. It's going to be a long and tough day.
We took our time, and reached the summit before nightfall. Unfortunately, the crater rim is too narrow and windy to securely pitch a tent. So we descend a bit into the crater.
Our tent overlooking the crater of Ol Doniyo Lengai.
Lengai is known for its unique, very "cool", carbonatitic lava. Only a few hundred degrees Celsius warm, the molten lava does not have the red glow common to most lavas though you can, of course, get burned. After solidifying, it turns brown or white and breaks into something like chalk. When wet, this becomes slippery, and that's just one of the things that makes climbing Lengai quite arduous.
We are lying in our tent, almost three thousand meters high, listening to the rumbling and hissing. Since there is no level ground, it isn't particularly comfortable; my legs seem to dangle over the abyss. The setting sun creeps under the cloud cover and baths it in yellow light from below. Shortly after, the summit cloud will make the weather near the top resemble that of the Scottish Highlands.
My knee is in terrible pain. One of the biggest occupational hazards during Operation Lifeline Sudan turned out to be descending the 24 floors of the Kenyatta Conference Centre in Nairobi after a donor conference - right in the middle of a power outage. I had injured my meniscus, but didn’t think much of it at the time. The long climb up Lengai has now made it much worse; I can barely bend my leg. As a result, I have to descend Lengai backwards, facing the mountain.
Half through our descend. In the distance, Lake Natron. The pink color comes from the thousands of flamingos searching for food in the murky water.
Back where we started, we find a Maasai boy who claims to have watched over our car during the night. It’s hard to argue with him - the car is, after all, still there. Coincidence or causality? We thank him and reward his entrepreneurial initiative before taking the road via Mto wa Mbu to Arusha, where, late at night, we manage to find lodging and board.
Bonus picture - three of our kids at Lake Magadi, just north of Lake Natron and part of the Rift Valley ecosystem to which also Lengai belongs. The red coloration is caused primarily by halophilic (salt-loving), pigment-producing microorganisms flourishing in highly saline, alkaline conditions. During dry periods, the water becomes even more saline, allowing these pigmented organisms to multiply rapidly and intensify the red hue.
Recent history
Six months after our visit, in June 1993 Ol Doniyo Lengai violently erupted again, and did so in 1994 and every now and then.
A Wikipedia picture from 2006. The crater is filled to the brim with lava and overflowed. In 2007, eruptions forced the evacuation of three villages.Beginning in 2016, the volcano is being monitored by a seismometer and GNSS stations.
Today, anyone - including UN bureaucrats tired of pushing paper at Gigiri - can hire guides and book tours. There now is faint "trail" to the crater; most visitors set off from their camp before midnight to avoid the equatorial sun during the day.
Other photo-stories by Detlef:
- Lunae Montes - a journey to the source of the Nile, in 1980
- Pirates, Penguins, Patagonia (Voyage around Cap Horn)
- Operation Lifeline Sudan, the first years in pictures
- Duruusta Soomaaliya - The Somali Experience
- Mud Volcanoes and Candy Cane Mountains (Azerbaijan)
- New York - A Walk on the Wild Side
- Into the Midnight Sun (Journey to the North Cape)
- The Door to Hell and the Path to Health (Turkmenistan)
- Magic South (Southern Africa)
- Azhdahak (from Germany to Armenia, by road)
- Top of Mexico
- East Coast - West Coast, across the USA
- At the edge of the bog - where we live
- Rudaki, a Wedding and Proto-Urban Sarazm (Tajikistan)
- Off-Road - The Trail Is the Treasure (Eastern and Southern Africa)
*****
More Insights from Outside the Bubble, by Detlef Palm
Detlef can be contacted via detlefpalm55@gmail.com















Stand aside, David Livingstone ! I think that you, Gabi and your children have covered more of Africa than Livingstone did. What a magical childhood your children have had.
ReplyDeleteAs for your descent from the top of Lengai, do I assume that Gabi had to guide you all the way, acting as eyes in the back of your head ?
Wow! A great thrilling narrative from an adventurous couple- that surpassed Livingstone , Ken! The pictures are awesome and you camping overlooking the crater, was incredible. Thanks for sharing ! Honestly, pardon my ignorance I did not know about this volcano growing up and it was only later when I travelled in Africa for Unicef.
ReplyDeleteall around fabulous photos, and story. Thank you Detlef.
ReplyDeleteExcellent - especially with the sound track. Thank you Detlef and Gabi !!
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