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Another view of the baboon sitting
in the tree.
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These holes are built by aardvarks,
then later occupied by warthogs and finally by hyenas.
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Two skulls from aardvarks which
have been eaten by hyenas.
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A skull from a warthog which has
been eaten by a hyena.
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This is an anthill - look how huge
it is!
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The most amazing part of the walk
was getting this close to grazing zebras.
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The group watches the zebras while
Andrew (our tour guide) talks about them.
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Andrew
tells us about this termite mound. An African termite queen will
lay around 36,000 eggs every day! A termite mound like this takes
decades to build up and is very stable (it feels like rock although it
is made from dirt).
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One last group picture before
hopping on the bus to Kampala.
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Dave standing on the equator...
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...and
me doing the same thing.
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The
equator is shown as an unassuming yellow line drawn on the roadway.
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The Nyia Drum Makers' shop is a
beautiful display of traditional African drums.
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Here some of the drum makers pause
for a picture - the level of detail on these instruments is
unbelievable.
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The plane which would take us away
from Uganda.
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