You can "come touch the sky" in Mount Kenya
Mount Kenya is Kenya's highest peak and Africa's second highest. It is a volcano that formed roughly 3 million years after the East African Rift opened and was covered by an ice covering for thousands of years. Mount Kenya National Park was established in 1997, and it was classified as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1997.
This mountain's surroundings are breathtaking. It is pure wilderness with lakes, tarns, glaciers, deep forest and a variety of rare and endangered animal species, high altitude adapted plains wildlife, and distinctive patchwork and alpine plants. The majority of visitors to Mount Kenya National Park come to climb the mountain. The mountain, which has three peaks, has seven paths up it. The remaining two peaks are only accessible to climbers with excellent technical climbing skills. The climbing is best attempted between the middle of January and the end of February, and between August and the end of September. Furthermore, you will travel through various diverse ecosystems on your trek, from tropical forest to bamboo forest, and even several strange species like the Giant Lobelia and Rosette plants.