Ruma lies on the flat floor
of the seasonally watered Lambwe River Valley bordered by the Kanyamwa
Escarpment to the South-East in Homa Bay and by the volcanic plugs of the Ruri
Hills to the north. Ranging from riverine woodland and rolling savannah to magnificent
escarpments and towering cliffs, Ruma National Park promises undiscovered
wildlife treasures and undisturbed peace. It is also Kenya’s last
remaining sanctuary for the endangered roan antelope.The park is also the only
protected area in Kenya where the globally threatened blue swallow, a scarce
intra-African migrant, is regularly recorded. Blue swallows, which depend upon
moist grassland for both feeding and roosting, arrive in Kenya from their breeding
grounds in Southern Tanzania around April and depart again in September.
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