Narok

Narok (sometimes referred to as Narok Town) is a town west of Nairobi that supports Kenya's economy in south-west of the country, along the Great Rift Valley. Narok is the district capital of the Narok County and stands as the major centre of commerce in the district. Narok has a population of around 40,000 people, mostly Maasai. The elevation of Narok is 1827 metres (5,997 feet) in altitude.

Narok
Town
Narok
Coordinates: 01°05′S 35°52′E
Country Kenya
CountyNarok County

Narok Town is the last major town when travelling by road from Nairobi to Maasai Mara National Park and Keekorok Lodge. The Narok town stands as a center for services, business, and finance. For decades, Narok's economy has benefited from tourism, agriculture, livestock keeping and mining. The 30,000-capacity William Ole Ntimama Stadium, a football stadium, is located in Narok.

Education

Narok Town has several public and private primary and secondary schools.

Public Primary Schools:

  • Masikonde Primary School
  • Ole Sankale Boarding School
  • St. Mary's Primary School
  • St. Peter's Primary
  • Lenana Primary School
  • Ilmashariani Primary School

Private Primary Schools:

  • St. Peters Academy
  • Narok County Academy
  • Ongata School
  • Nasaruni Academy for Maasai Girls

Public Secondary Schools:

  • Narok Boys' High School.
  • Maasai Girls' High School.
  • Ole Tipis Secondary School
  • St Mary's Secondary School.

Private Secondary Schools:

  • St. Stephen Nkoitoi Secondary School
  • Limanet Secondary School

Colleges:

  • Narok Teachers Training College
  • Narok West Technical Training Institute
  • Ludepe Teachers College [1]
  • Lusaka Institute of Science and Technology
  • Narok West Institute of Professional Studies [2]
  • Narok Teachers Training College
  • WE College [3]

Universities:

  • Maasai Mara University [4]

Religious studies

  • Bible College, Bisset Bible College

Economy

Cattle in Narok

Currently the town has embarked on structural and economic growth as the roads and new beautiful building and modern branded shops are mushrooming each day.[5]

The Narok Stadium (now named William Ole Ntimama Stadium has been upgraded by the County Government and National Government. [6] Narok is home to famous Kenyan football club, Sofapaka FC.

The main economic income is the tourism sector, which brings an estimated 10 billion Kenya Shillings annually, as well as wheat farming, which is done both in large and small scale.[7]

Notable people

gollark: Well, lots of people do like having those.
gollark: The US has *much* mass surveillance, in some places apparently near-UK-level bizarre knife laws, insane and incoherent governance, and apparently bad policing.
gollark: It uses highly directed transcranial magnetic stimulation delivered by airborne nanobots to erase the concept of rules from people's minds temporarily.
gollark: Only the GTech™ experimental anarchy cube™ is free.
gollark: It was once exchanged for a trivial amount of euros.

References

  • Alain Zecchini, "Kenya's battle for biodiversity" (on Narok), Le Monde diplomatique, November 2000, MondeDiplo.com, webpage: MondeDiplo-Masai.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.