Rockfig Jnr staring through the grass |
(Andrea, Robin, Shadrack & Petros)
Elephant (Breeding Herd) / Karans – Old
Closed Road
Elephant (Breeding Herd) / Scholtz –
Zebrawood Pan Road
Elephant (Kambaku) / Peru – Peru Airstrip
Elephant (Kambaku) / Mbali – Western Cutline
Leopard (Xiviti) / Peru – Peru Dam
Leopard (Rockfig Jnr) / Kings – Little Ridge
Afternoon Drive
(Andrea, Robin, Shadrack, Petros &
Herold)
Rhino (x 1 male)
Rhino (x 1 male)
Leopard (x 1 male & x 1 female) / Argyle
– Lovers Leap
Elephant (breeding herd) / Peru – Peru
Entrance
Elephant (breeding herd) / Peru – Phiva
Plains
Elephant (breeding herd) / Mbali – Aardvark
Road
Elephant (breeding herd) / Peru – Sohebele
Plains
Buffalo (2 Daghaboys) / Karans – Moeniejag
Crossing
Buffalo (small breeding herd) / Argyle – Lovers
Leap
After a few really quiet days, it is fantastic
to have things pick up again. I am not sure if it is because Herold and Diff
are back and have brought the Mgiba Magic we rely on so much? Or if it is the
change in the weather but we awoke to soft rain falling and to be honest, my
first thought was “Oh dear!” It wasn’t long however, that we found a
wonderfully relaxed elephant herd enjoying the cool morning air. The herd was
being followed by a huge bull elephant in musth who certainly gave us a bit of
a show! We spent a good part of the morning with the elephant, and although
photos were few due to the rain, it was still a spectacular sighting. The
morning continued with some great giraffe and zebra sightings.
As we approached Vielmetter, the Kings guys
found Rockfig Jnr female leopard down on their property. When we arrived, she
was weaving through the grass looking for something to catch. She kept changing
direction and it became a bit difficult to follow. Suddenly though, she
stopped. She paused. She pounced. And moments later emerged from the bushes
with a baby steenbuck in her mouth! The steenbuck was still alive and she spent
the next while letting it go and chasing the poor thing while the little
steenbuck let out little desperate cries. It was a spectacularly horrific
scene. It was partly hidden by long grass so the visual on the photos is a
little unclear. However, sitting and watching something like that in front of
your eyes is a brutal reminder of the harsh reality of nature.
My afternoon plan was to find rhino. As we
headed out though, it was the buffalo to make the first appearance, slowly
feeding near Lovers Leap. It was an awesome scene with the buffalo and the rock
face in the background.
I was pretty determined to find a rhino and
headed to an area we are usually able to pick tracks and follow. It was then
that Robin found a male rhino himself! I was in a quandary – do I turn around
and respond to his rhino or do I carry on and do my own thing and find one
myself. I stuck to my gut and carried on! I was starting to feel a little
despondent however, as no tracks were turning up and it was getting late. We
stopped at a pan to watch some giraffe in the distance and as we were leaving
we heard a sneeze behind some bushed. To our delight, a male rhino was peering
at us from behind a bush. We sat with him as the sun went down and although he
seemed a little nervous in the beginning, he soon relaxed and we had great
views.
The other guys managed to find a number of
different elephant herds up north, a few more buffalo and Petros also got lucky
with two leopards although they quickly moved into a drainage line before
anyone else could take a look! En route home we had some awesome owl sightings!
What an evening, seems Timbavati is back to
its normal form!
Thanks for the update, Andrea. I also find it difficult to watch kills!
ReplyDeleteTammy Lee