wrm
Not Impressed
We found this critter… somewhere* On all our previous trips, we had only seen white rhino. This was our first black. To miss-appropriate Ruark, “looks at you like you owe him money”.
This was our second.
(How do you know it’s a black rhino? It ran away… seriously, black rhino are very shy).
And a bit down the road we found these two. They were not going anywhere. White, obviously… §
Next day we found a white rhino cow and calf, far away. And that was it for rhino this time around.
* There’s this theory that the poachers use the internet to find out where the rhino are. But the rhino move around. So they are not there even ten minutes later, never mind the… four weeks and counting since this happened. OK, maybe they’re back there… or maybe not. Who knows. What we do know is that there are rhino in the Kruger, and that a poacher can get on a hill with a pair of binoculars and find them that way. But OK Karen, location of rhino not disclosed.
§ In case you don’t know, it’s all about the mouth. The white rhino is actually the wide-mouth rhino, misheard or mispronounced or whatever. It feeds on grass, head-down. The black rhino has a sharper mouth and feeds on bushes. They’re both black in colour.
Lions and Elephants: Two
We found some lions at N’waswitshaka on the S65.
He was favouring his hind leg — good news is it looked a whole lot better when we saw him again later in the day. Prolly got himself kicked by a zebra or something.
In the shade of the dam wall.
And on the other side, in the shade of a tree.
Nothing much was happening so we went off, came back later.
There were elephant at the water hole, being watched very intently by the lions, who had moved off into the bushes.
But the elephants smelled them and chased them away. This all happened in the bush so no pics, sorry. The lions basically went to ground, with the male actually moving further than the two females. We then watched the females slowly moving back towards the dam, eventually the male joined them (the three on the other side had moved off somewhere that way, they also came back later).
Nothing as exciting as last time.
Big birds
Nesting Secretary birds. They’re named for the feathers looking like pens stuck behind a secretary’s ear… or are they?
Nesting Lappet-faced vultures. These were both the same morning on the S37, and the next day neither of them were in the nests.
One of many Kori Bustards we saw. You normally see one on its own, maybe another one a few hundred meters away.
Martial Eagle.
Southern Ground Hornbill are supposed to be kind of scarce, there are signs up at the Parks Offices that they would welcome reports of the whereabouts of these birds (we leave that to people who know what they are doing, we’re not fluent in Bird yet).
But we pretty much always see them, and mostly in groups (we saw a solitary one only once, and we saw… I think 17 in total this time). This was a group of four close to Kumana dam.
Also close to Kumana dam, we found this Bateleur feeding on… something. Maybe a jackal.
Fish Eagles remain stunning.
Verreaux’s Eagle Owl close to Transport Dam.
Nesting Idunno, maybe Wahlberg’s Eagle, maybe Tawny, quite far away.
Ground Hornbill, up a tree.
Fish Eagles seen from the deck at Lower Sabie. 600mm lens zoomed all the way in. We need better glass…
Lions and Elephants: One
Found us some lions at the Kumana dam.
They were just parked off, doing the lion’ around thing.
But wait! What’s that? (Apart from the very nervous giraffe, that is).
We have incoming heffalumps.
Some of the elephant crossed the road, but a few smelled the lions and decided to have none of it (click to embiggen).
Lions everywhere. Some ran across the road and into the main herd of elephant who had crossed the road earlier. Trumpeting in stereo. Lion’s arses disappearing into the bush. It was fun. I think even the elephants enjoyed it. The lions maybe not so much.
This one went to ground just after crossing the road, allowing the elephant to run past. Sound strategy that we would see again later.
We drove down to Tshokwane for breakfast, and when we came back the lions had regrouped under a tree, again just lion’ there.
But the road block was on the other side of the road. A leopard, apparently. Just down the bank by the side of the road, but there was a german Unimog parked right on top of it and no matter how I jockeyed, we had no chance. Our friends from Hoedspruit saw the leopard later.
I think they were just too late to see the actual kill, but the lions had found them a buffalo at the waterhole. Timing is everything.
That was Saturday. This was what was left, Monday morning.
Hyenas
We saw a lot of hyenas on this trip. This one was eyeballing the tourists on the low water bridge at Balule.
He didn’t feel like moving either.
Ngotso North waterhole is on the H1-4, and the elephant carcass was on the S147 just over a kilometer away as the crow flies. We found ten hyenas at the waterhole the next morning.
One of them, a pregnant (alpha?) female, had a hunk of elephant chewing gum.
This fellow was enjoying his morning bath.
A couple pumbas pitched, dunno who was more wary of whom.
Couple days later, further south, we found these two young gentlemen.
And this handsome fellow.