 | Malindi Things To Do | Tips 1 - 10 of 14 |  | Popular Things To Do | Other Things To Do Tips | All Tips (14) This is the point where the Portuguese seaman Vasco da Gama laid his anchor in Kenya - after he had been turned away from Mombasa. People here welcomed him with open arms. There is now a simple white-washed pillar as a monument to mark the spot where he landed. It's along the seafront - after Malindi's beach - and you can reach it on foot easily - by following a narrown lane by the sea - or scrambling onto and along the ocean-front rocks. There are nice views from the monument. Leave a Comment Address: malindiDirections: about 15 minutes walk from the beach - direction malindi town
|
Visiting Malindi?
Read reviews about Malindi Hotels
Real Reviews from Real VirtualTourist Members.
Malindi's new market looks everything but new: it's a long row of stalls selling everything and anything - in particular goods of practical nature. You can find cheap clothes and shoes, footballs, and all sorts of food that you's like. I especially liked the fruits' stalls - particularly because I did not recognise most of the fruits they were selling. There are two things that you won't find in this market: souvenirs and coffee. While the first seems reasonable - since it's not a tourist trap or attraction - the latter doesn't make sense. Keny produces excellent coffee - and Î know that Kenyan people drink coffee... still, the only one I could find was western instant coffee. Go figure. Leave a Comment Address: malindiDirections: off the old town - by the garage and bus station
|
I was amazed by the talented disabled craftsmen/women at the Bombolulu workshop. They produce these beautiful handcraft jewellery, handprinted textiles, wood carvings and leather crafts, atleast something to take home with you. Still at the Bombolulu workshop are 8 different cultural traditional homesteads that entertains its guest throught the day everyday. Address: Bombolulu workshopsDirections: Located along the North coast.
|
visit the Gedi ruins and finish by interacting with the locals from the nearby villages for traditional dance entertainment and i assure you when you leave the place,you will have acquired a wealth of knowledge. you can combine a visit to Gedi with a trip to Kipepeo butterfly farm next door. Directions: Gedi is located 65 Miles from Mombasa and 10 from Malindi
|
The Malindi Marine National Park Honestly this is the best place for diving and snorkelling, if you havent been here while in Mombasa then you havent seen nothing yet! Malindi marine Park and Reserve is endowed with magnificent resources such as fringing reefs, coral gardens in the lagoons, sea grass beds, mangroves, mudflats, high fish diversity, marine mammals (e.g. dolphins), Turtles and Shorebirds. The main biotopes of Malindi Marine Park include fringing and patch reefs distributed on the seaward edge of barracuda channels The Park and Reserve has features such as being easily accessible by road and air, hosting rich and relatively unaffected marine biodiversity, beautiful beach and warm water safe for swimming among other factors to achieve the objectives outlined above. Directions: it is located north of Malindi town extending to mida creek.
|
Visiting Malindi?
Read reviews about Malindi Hotels
Real Reviews from Real VirtualTourist Members.
In the courtyard of the Juma'a Mosque you can see the remainings of the old mosque: some scattered old stones and parts of walls, a few simple graves and.. a pillar grave. This one is really beautiful - and ornated with some fine examples of stone carvings. It's really a lot more interesting than the mosque itself. However it's not quite allowed to walk up to the ruins (the grassy patch is a Muslim cemetery), so you'll have to take your photos from the distance Leave a Comment Address: MalindiDirections: in the courtyard of the Juma'a Mosque
|
One of the oldest buildings in town is the Portuguese chapel. It is a simple white-washed cubic building with a traditional makuti roof (whih is nothing else than a strw roof). Within the chapel's fence there's a small graveyard, dating to the 16th century, too - which provides a fascinating portrait of the history of this stretch of "Portuguese" coastline. The chapel's gates are normally closed - but if you want to visit it all you have to do is ask someone in the adjoining bar - and they'll fetch someone with the gate's key for you Leave a Comment Address: malindiDirections: along beach front road - before the baobab restaurant
|
When the tide is out, the coral reef is in! It's possible to walk out and about there and admire the fishes that have been trapped in holes and left behind by the tide. We saw corals of every shape and size, some tame water snakes, poisonous sea-urchins, colourful little fishes - and hundreds of star fishes. They were sooooo amazing: grey, red, brown, green, black and blue; these colourful ones are even more spectacular if you turn them around: their back colour is different. Some star fishes were standing still, others were of a different sort and moved like spiders. Very fascinating. See my travelogue for more pictures. Leave a Comment Address: Malindi beachDirections: at low-tide - on the beach. Ask the local beach boys to take you out there and explain you the marine life that you'll see.
|
Many people in Malindi are Muslim, and the little town is home to twelve mosques. The most "noticeable" is just by the road coming in from Mombasa, but it's not the most important one - not the largest. The largest of which is Juma'a Mosque in the heart of the old town - sort of hidden away among houses and behind high walls: we were not allowed to visit it - I'm not sure if it was because it was Friday or else because we are not muslims. We could only steal a glimpse inside from the front door. This mosque has a bloody past: it was misused as a haven for slave trading until mid 1870's Leave a Comment Address: MalindiDirections: in the old town
|
The ancient ruins of Gede (also called Gedi) is a nice place to kill some hours. Here you'll find lots of monkeys, but most important the old Arab-African town of Gede. The ruins is considered one of the largest archaeological sites for studying an ancient Swahili town and among the few places maintained and conserved within a national park. The ruins are still used for traditional rituals. You'll walk among mosques, tombs and royal toilets, and you'll discover traces of the early slave trade. Around the village you'll find some 50 tree species and globally threatened birds. There's also a museum on site, but boring compared to the large outdoor site (which must also be considered a muesum). Leave a Comment
|
 | |  |
 | 1 | 2 |  |
|
|