Maybe it is the credit crunch, or just that Wednesday morning flights from South Africa to Mauritius aren't that popular. I wasn't complaining, being the only person in business class with two cabin crew to look after me, meant my wine glass was rarely more than half empty - no bottles that holds just less than two glassfuls on this fight - a very nice bottle of South African Chardonnay - would have been rude not to finish it - I was on holiday and it was a four hour flight....
Arrival in Mauritius, was to a nice small airport - no walking for miles, to then spend time waiting for your bag to make it the same distance... Couldn't have been more than 200 metres from plane to arrivals lounge. And a great climate, possibly a little hotter than Hawaii, less humid than Honk Kong had been. No more getting up with the Sun for me - at least not once I re-balanced the jet lag.
Wednesday, February 18, 2009
Tuesday, February 17, 2009
After the Safari
With the safari at an end, I'm certainly going to try to do it again, and possibly for a longer period next time. I will also try to visit a reserve that isn't a National park. While being a National Park helps ensure there are a large number of animals, there is the downside that you have to stick to the marked roads - which means that the circling vultures can be tantalisingly circling an area you can't get anywhere close to.
I've still to see Cheetah and Ostrich, and I'd like to see more crocs! Which means going a little further north - and hopefully I'll avoid visiting just after unusually high amounts of rainfall have given the undergrowth such a good growing season. Okavango Delta looks like a candidate area...
I've still to see Cheetah and Ostrich, and I'd like to see more crocs! Which means going a little further north - and hopefully I'll avoid visiting just after unusually high amounts of rainfall have given the undergrowth such a good growing season. Okavango Delta looks like a candidate area...
Final day - add Kudu and the endangered Wild Dogs
Final drive of my safari, added another species of bird to the list, then.... |
... a small pack of Wild Dogs - the second endangered species of the trip and the rarest |
Final species of my safari was Kudu, the most impressive horns! |
The road out of the park and litter collecting Kurger style - with an armed guard and in large groups! |
Hyenas, Hippos and Lions - all before breakfast!
Even at breakfasts some wildlife - a colony of bats in one of the thatch building providing shade at the camp. |
Monday, February 16, 2009
Photographs of Big 5 completed
It took my longest lens with a x2 converter, and a deal of patience from Rickson, but I got my first picture of a leopard and completed photographic records of the big 5. I was also very impressed by my newly purchase binoculars - using them highlighted how restricted the view through the viewfinder on my camera is. |
Early bird watches the animals
A Southern Ground Hornbill, not living up to it name by roosting in a tree! It had been a great day for feathered wild life |
Sunday, February 15, 2009
Wildlife in the Spot light
Gathering at dusk to board one of two large open trucks equipped with mounted and hand held spot lights we handed over our sign forms recognising that we did so at our own risk... Then a short talk about keeping arms in the truck - because lions like eating arms when they are hungry for a night of hunting!
Shortly after the sun had gone down the cause of an increase in the chatter on the radio and the driver's more purposeful speed was apparent. A group of six or seven young lions moving along the road, starting their night of hunting. The spotlights and high ISO of my camera came into their own - helped by the animals amazing lack of any attention to the two large trucks and multiple Jeeps shinning bright lights at them... The end of a great day - all of the big five in one day, and photographic evidence of four of them, would the next days bring images of the very elusive leopard?
Early Rising
According to Rickson - the early game watcher sees the wildlife - so I was up with the sun - there is a first time for everything. Not too much of a problem as there was nothing to do once the sun was down, and it meant rather than a 2 hour change of body clock I had a 5 hour change - up at 4am, to sleep at 8pm...
A very successful, if long first day - four of the big five and both white and black Rhino. The night drive awaiting me at dusk...
My first sighting of a large mammal was a giraffe, proving their camouflage to be effective. |
Then even more variety - a pair of Warthogs - not the prettiest of beast! |
Yet another highlight on day one's daytime drives - the third of the big five. A pair of Rhino, again hiding from the heat. |
Then the fourth of the big five in one day of game drives, a couple of sightings of Elephants. These hidden under a small coppice of trees. See my PicasaWeb for even more from day one |
A very successful, if long first day - four of the big five and both white and black Rhino. The night drive awaiting me at dusk...
Saturday, February 14, 2009
Drive into Kruger
My great holiday luck (at least since I got stuck at LA airport waiting for a replacement plane) was with me again - it turned out that for the first three days I was the only person booked with BigSix Safari so Rickson was my personal game guide. I could spend as long as I liked trying to get the perfect pictures without having to be considerate of others - and no competition for the seats nearest the wildlife either - not that either proved a problem when I was join for my last evening/morning by a great group of young US academics...
I'm going to confess that none of these posting are "real time" - I have a good excuse for not doing them at the time - a complete lack of Internet access, but it has taken me longer than I'd have liked to get round to annotating a wonderful two weeks for history....
| The first game drive into Kruger from the gate to the camp, was relatively uneventful. The wonderful hot weather had driven most of the animals into the unusually long undergrowth - you can't have every thing... There were plenty of impala taking advantage of the fact that all the predators where hiding in the shade not wanting to expend any energy in the sapping heat. I just sat back and enjoyed the wonderful climate, the spectacular landscape and Rickson's narration of the surroundings. |
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