The day after I graduated from law school, I was on a plane to Nairobi. My aunt and uncle worked in the Peace Corps back in the day, and one of my cousins was actually born there. Now, some three decades later, they wanted to take the family back to see the village where they had taught and the vibrant country it is in. Of course my immediate family jumped on that opportunity. After a few days in transit, we finally arrived at our lodgings just outside the Maasai Mara National Reserve. Even the accommodations in the Kenyan bush can’t help but be interesting:
The baboons emerged and were passing so quickly I barely had time to turn on my Nikon, blindly guess an appropriate shutter speed, and start shooting. For the next 30 seconds, as groups of baboons emerged from the trees, I would pan the camera from right to left as they ran by, hoping but doubting a single shot would come out. After they’d passed, I scanned the photos on my camera to see what I’d gotten. They were almost all out of focus or blurred by the motion of trying to track these animals at high speed. But then I came to one photo that was in focus, and where the speed I had panned my camera had perfectly matched the speed of the baboons in that instant. Their legs were in motion, but one of them had been looking at me for the entire duration of the exposure, providing a strangely evocative focal point for the picture:
This was my first keeper from what ended up being an incredible photo safari. To see the other highlights, check out my East Africa (Safari) gallery.