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Official
ISP for EASR
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Latest News
More entries, more interest and
more details
With nine months to go before the
first car is flagged off on the start of the nine-day East African Safari
Classic Rally, the entries are building up steadily. There are now twenty-eight
confirmed entries and just over another twenty on the stand-by list which
makes it look as if the maximum number of sixty crews might be exceeded
leaving a few late entries disappointed.
Among the latest entries are Josef Pointinger from Austria in his well-known
Ford Escort Mk1 while Albert Michiels arrival on the list brings the number
of entries from Belgium up to a total three and his is the second Porsche
911 among them. Jayant Shah from Tanzania is once again joined by Lofty
Drews, a Safari veteran and now resident in Australia, and this year they
will be in the Datsun 260Z that Lofty prepared for the 2005 event but
which arrived from Australia a day too late to take the start.
Although the details of the actual route are secret until the rally starts,
the Safari organisers have released an outline of the rally with locations
of the night halts. The innovation this year is that three of the night
halts are used for two consecutive nights thus making service and baggage
arrangements a lot less complicated. The Safari starts on Saturday, November
24th after two days of documentation, scrutineering and parties, with
a ceremonial late afternoon start in downtown Mombasa in the shade of
the crossed tusks on Moi Avenue. The following morning the rally proper
starts from Rally HQ out at Diani Beach and runs through the day up to
the first night halt in Nairobi, capital of Kenya.
The second day takes the crews to Naivasha down on the floor of the Great
Rift Valley in a beautiful setting next to its own spectacular lake and
squeezed between the Aberdare Mountains and the Mau Escarpment. The third
leg is a loop out and back to Naivasha with all that the Kerio Valley
and the Elgeyo Escarpment have to offer in the way of testing rally roads.
The fourth day takes the rally south of Nairobi across the Kedong Valley
and the Kapiti Plains with their fast but deceptive tracks deep into the
Masai Amboseli Reserve and two nights in one of Amboseli's spectacular
lodges. The fifth day is a "rest"day where those that have no
work can explore the game park or soak up the sun. Those whose cars need
attention may have to forego some of that but will be relieved to find
that this year the organisers have removed the possibility to work all
night on cars with problems. At the end of each leg, there will be four
hours of servicing allowed before the cars go into a closed park while
at Amboseli on the rest day, cars will only be released for a "normal
working day" from 8:00am to 5:00pm.
When rallying starts again with the fifth leg, the route goes east towards
the Chulu Hills and Tsavo West National Park with the night halt in the
Taita Hills Lodge. The sixth day heads back west and into Tanzania to
the area around Mount Kilimanjaro before taking a night halt in Arusha.
Once again, there is a daytime loop out from Arusha west towards the fabled
Lake Manyara and its lions that sleep in the trees, then up the Mbulu
Escarpment and back to Arusha. The final and eighth day of competition
includes sections from old Safari routes round the Pare Hills and the
infamous Usumbara Mountains before crossing back into Kenya and the finish
at Diani Beach on the afternoon of Monday, December 3rd. The cars and
crews crossing the finish line will have covered 4,500 km (2,800 miles)
of East African motoring plentifully interspersed with competitive sections
but the prize giving party is still likely to go on until dawn with the
Indian Ocean singing the victor's paean in the background.
For press enquiries, contact E-mail: safari.press@btinternet.com
Event web site : www.eastafricansafarirally.com
John Davenport Tel: +44.7973.334297
Francesca Davenport Tel: +44.7976.918968.
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