Jyoti from Tampa: Camels by the side of the road
Jyoti from Tampa: Apparently they were being taken to the market for sale
Jyoti from Tampa: The X-Factor
Jyoti from Tampa: Up Close and personal
Jyoti from Tampa: He loves to pose
Jyoti from Tampa: A crow with grey feathers
Jyoti from Tampa: The Superb Sterling
Jyoti from Tampa: The Superb Sterling. A very colourful pretty bird found in abundance in East Africa.
Jyoti from Tampa: Red-billed Hornbill
Jyoti from Tampa: Red-billed Hornbill on a thorny acacia branch
Jyoti from Tampa: Don't get scared by it's shrewd eyes, they are actually harmless
Jyoti from Tampa: Don't remember the name of this sparrow lookalike
Jyoti from Tampa: No, it didn't get poked in the eye by the thorn. It was just the angle.....
Jyoti from Tampa: Entrance of Amboseli NP - home of the elephants
Jyoti from Tampa: Female Ostrich - the females are less vivid in colour
Jyoti from Tampa: The perfect V
Jyoti from Tampa: The prominent dark feathers loudly protrays it's a male Ostrich for sure!
Jyoti from Tampa: Can you spot the spotted ones in this picture? How many could you find?
Jyoti from Tampa: A picturesque backdrop with the signature East African flat top Acacia and the distant hills
Jyoti from Tampa: Wildly beautiful
Jyoti from Tampa: Follow Me
Jyoti from Tampa: Our first sighting of the "king of the jungle" started off with this kingdom of lions. A dominant male lion usually have three to four lionesses and a few cubs in his pride
Jyoti from Tampa: Mom lion watches over as others try to take a nap
Jyoti from Tampa: ROFL or just itchy?
Jyoti from Tampa: Lions sleep 8-10 hours a day!
Jyoti from Tampa: Ths one is definitely not tired and not in a mood to doze off like the rest
Jyoti from Tampa: The mightier of 'em all
Jyoti from Tampa: The biggest land mammal has a persona of it's own which makes it the most fascinating wild animal to me. Even the lions don't mess with these mighty elegant species
Jyoti from Tampa: The circle of life
Jyoti from Tampa: Perfect family picture. The shades on the elephants' skin shows they were in the water for a while.