The world natural wildlife instinct is obviously not to be reckoned with: salmon fight their way to move upstream to spawn in the creeks they hatched in; birds manage to embark on heroic migrations twice in a year and reach similar destinations, and herds of wildebeest roar in great packs across the Serengeti national park in the famed wildebeest migration. We can't always recognize why the natural wildlife of the world faces these obstacles, but we can be grateful for that the instinct to do it is somewhat pretty powerful, and witnessing one of these classic animal migrations will give you a wisdom of being part of something enormous and conscientiously slow and ancient, yet also of the prospective for renewal.
Several years ago I was fortunate enough to get plugged in to the planet wildlife nature when watching the initial few moments in the lives of a grasp of baby turtles. Hatching from eggs concealed within the sand, without being exposed on what needs to be done, they dug their own way out into the air above and skittered, as quickly as their minute, newly hatched flippers should carry them, in the direction of the ocean. Even if they sense the air or listen to the ocean from within their eggs, they've never experienced those effects before, so it is the world natural wildlife instinct which should dictate to them what needs to be done. In that moonlit instant I thought child turtle instinct must be one of the largely powerful forces in natural world that can be explored through Kenya safari, but that's really only the tip of the world wildlife iceberg. It was like being plugged in a straight line into nature. It’s healthier for your soul than revitalizing at a spa!
So which heroic world wildlife migrations worth scheduling your own cycle around? Masai Mara safari is the finest known - thousands of wildebeest taking miles of dust into the atmosphere predators behind you at every ridge.