Kenya has experienced bouts of lawlessness and land invasions before. But for many, even people used to seeing their own ethnic group violently take over grazing, or raid cattle, there's been a shift for the worse in Kenya.
Lemarti Lemar, a Samburu community leader, and well-known musician says he has lost "at least 30" cattle to the drought.
"People are just losing everything they own. If a guy loses 50 cattle that's a loss of $25,000 or more. But more dangerous is that the young moran (warriors) have no cattle left to look after. They get hold of illegal guns, they have nothing to do. They've stopped listening to the elders and some have become gangsters," he told CNN.
"We're losing control," he added.
Kenya faces general elections in the middle of next month. The process often provokes fears of instability in the country and, if the results are contested, the potential for political violence could escalate.
In the marginalized communities across the northern counties, urban-based politicians have paid lip service to the unfolding horrors. The government ended, and swiftly reinstated, subsidies on fuel in July. But as Kenya's population is largely centered in the center and south of the country, northern insecurity hasn't been a major election issue.
But that may be forced on the central government after the elections, as pastoralists seeking grazing now bring camels to browse on hedges in Isiolo.
Seeking pasture, they've invaded wildlife parks and sanctuaries, bringing them ever closer to the tourist attractions that are one of Kenya's biggest export earners.
No effort has been made to drive them out but the heavy toll their livestock takes on the landscape means it will struggle to recover in the next rains, if they ever come.
Past experience across Africa has shown that drought combined with overgrazing means when rains do fall, they wash away topsoil in vast quantities. Once that happens, there's little left but desert, after just a few years.
"Any time you get people who are hungry and without other options you've got a security situation. (In) Northern Kenya we're bordered by South Sudan, Ethiopia, and Somalia, all of which are still in the grip of conflict that spews small arms into this ecosystem, so you've got a lot of weapons up here and increasing hunger so, yeah, I'd say that's an increasing security concern," said Frank Pope, CEO of charity Save the Elephants, based in Kenya's Samburu National Reserve.
Pope's organization also works with elephants in Mali, West Africa, much of which, he now warns, was savannah not long ago but now sustains only "elephant, goats, and insurgents."
The combination of drought, soaring food and fuel prices due to a distant war, a burgeoning population, and civil wars on Kenya's doorstep is an incendiary mix.
And that may be bad news for humanitarian operations in neighboring Somalia, Ethiopia, and South Sudan which depend on Kenya's ports, and relative calm, as a base of operations and essential location for logistics.
And as the effects of climate change take hold in Kenya, as children face malnutrition and their mothers waste away, compounded by the desperate battle for nomads and pastoralists to survive, this once stable region is showing few signs that it can cope alone.