American author Ernest Hemingway presents an account of the two-month safari he and his wife Pauline took into the game country of East Africa in the winter of 1933 to 1934.
Describes the experiences of travellers on safaris to remote areas in Botswana, Mongolia, and the Galapagos Islands, and along the Amazon River, and their observations of local customs, wild animals, and exotic scenery.
Riley learns valuable lessons about conservation and responsibility when he accompanies his cousin Alice, Aunt Martha, and Uncle Max, a conservation biologist, on a safari to South Africa to count baby wild animals.
Arusha, Mosi, Tumpe and their friends embark on an exciting counting adventure through the grasslands of Tanzania, discovering all different kinds of African animals as they count from one to ten. Includes facts about Tanzania and information about each animal, the Masai people and the Swahili language.
Riley joins his cousin Alice, Aunt Martha, and Uncle Max on an African safari, where they track and count baby wild animals, leading to close encounters with all kinds of animals.
The Cat in the Hat takes Sally and Nick to Africa where they meet all sorts of animals, including big cats, elephants, baboons, side-striped jackals, pythons, and more.
While visiting President Theodore Roosevelt's safari camp in British East Africa in 1909, Indy helps track down an oryx that has mysteriously disappeared.