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Tag: Kruger National Park

  • The Week In Pictures #742 – Londolozi Blog

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    This past week carried a quiet intensity, the kind that rewards patience and presence in equal measure. From long track and finds that ended high in the branches of jackalberry and marula trees, to perfectly timed golden-lit scenes unfolding effortlessly across open clearings. The bush seemed to move from moments of stillness to sudden action. Apex predators dominated much of Nic and my week, yet it was often the smaller, more subtle moments (an elusive coucal inching closer to our vehicle or the rare spot of a lunar moth) that reminded us of the layered richness of this land. Light, movement and anticipation wove themselves through each sighting, shaping a week that felt both perfectly timed and exciting!

    Let us know in the comments which images are your favourite.

    Enjoy the Week in Pictures…

    After a lengthy search of the area and numerous rasping calls heard deep in the drainage line of the Tugwaan riverbed, tracker Advice and I were over the moon to find the Ximungwe Female scanning her surroundings from the upper realms of this Jackalberry tree.


    Having been viewed by vehicles from an early age, this leopard is supremely relaxed around Land Rovers.


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    Ka Giraffe Symmetry

    Perfectly timed symmetry between two male giraffes as we watched them necking as a means of determining who is more dominant.


    The last surviving cub of a litter of three, he is on the cusp of independence.


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    Ng Shingi Male Close Up

    With him elevated off the ground and out of the long grass, we snapped a nice close-up clean shot of him.

    Ng Shingi Male Staring In Fallen Marula

    A different perspective of him on the branch. This was such an awesome sighting that we have included a number of photos of him into this week’s TWIP.

    Ng Vultures Roosting In Tree With Moody Skies

    Late afternoon light captured the scene beautifully. Over one hundred White-backed Vultures lined the dead leadwood trees of southwest Londolozi, patiently waiting for their turn to feed, as the lions finished off the remains of a buffalo kill.

    Ng Styx Male Walking Down Road

    One of my favourite lions on Londolozi. The Styx Male roared up and down the road for the better part of two hours, looking for the Kambula Breakaway Lioness he has partnered with for some time now. The two shared a buffalo cow kill and may have been split up when more lions and scavenging hyenas showed up at the carcass.

    Ng Shingi Male Descending Marula Tree

    The Shingi Male paused briefly on an ex-branch of this marula tree to assess his height and landing spot. Moments later, he dropped to the ground and continued his morning wandering through the long, green and luscious grass.

    Ng Tawny Eagle Perched On Branch

    A Tawny Eagle perches on the outer branches of a dead Knobthorn tree in the most perfect afternoon light. The characteristic ‘V’ of black in the feathers in the adult Tawny Eagle in visible in this picture.

    Ka Giraffe Bull Feeding Black White

    A curious male giraffe lifts his head amidst feeding to stare us down as we drove past. With giraffe’s leathery and prehensile tongues, thick saliva and lips, it protect their mouths from thorns.

    Ng Talamati Male Yawn

    The Talamati Male gave us a spectacular show as he showed why ‘yawning’ in cats is a great sign of their restlessness and intent to start moving. Shortly after, he walked through the clearings and headed down to the Sand River for a late afternoon drink. Cheers!

    Ka Burchells Coucal

    The elusive Burchells Coucal. One of my favourite summer calls in the bush. We were sitting with sleeping lions when we heard this bird’s incessant call coming closer and closer towards our vehicle. It’s always a privilege to be able to be sitting with lions and still appreciating all the smaller creatures of life around them.


    Londolozi’s most viewed leopard and prolific mother. This gorgeous female has raised multiple cubs to independence.


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    Ng Giraffe Silhouette At Sunrise

    Silhouettes of any animal are exquisite, however, the natural golden morning light at sunrise matches the majesty of this young male Giraffe. He also paused for a moment to appreciate the breaking of a new day.

    Ka Lunar Moth

    A beautiful African Moon Moth, also known as a Lunar Moth! These fascinating moths are a rare find at Londolozi due to their large, pale-green wings and short 7–10 day adult lifespan. These moths do not have functional mouths and do not eat as adults, focusing solely on mating. First time photographing one of them for me!

    Ng Shingi Male And Nkoveni Female Walking Down Maxabene Riverbed

    Such an iconic scene, two leopards, the Nkoveni Female and Shingi Male, wandering off into the Maxabene riverbed.

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    Kate Tennick

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  • The Not-Quite-Perfect Leopard Tree – Londolozi Blog

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    Some sightings deliver exactly what you hoped for. Others deliver something even better: a bit of bushveld comedy wrapped around a spectacular moment. My recent encounter with the Tortoise Pan Male was very much the latter.

    The Short Wheel Base Leopard

    We found him in the northern stretches of Londolozi, draped across the branches of a marula in that calm, heavy-bodied way big male leopards do when they know they rule the place. Stocky, powerful and built like the leopard equivalent of a pitbull, he’s been a remarkably successful male across the Sabi Sands. And on this afternoon, he looked every bit the part. A big, confident cat in his prime framed perfectly for two of the guests who happened to be avid photographers (Rudi and Marion shoutout). In that sense, the sighting felt like a gift.


    Born 2016 to Ndzanzeni Female, royal descendant of Mother Leopard. Now a dominant force in the north.


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    The Doldrums

    Most guides will admit that, after years of working here, you start to quietly “manifest” specific sightings. Not out of entitlement but out of pure love for the place and its possibilities. We daydream about seeing certain leopards in certain trees because every now and then, the bush lines things up so perfectly it almost feels orchestrated. Rain over the past few days had made tracking tricky, add to this that male leopards roam vast territories, and you start to realise that the odds weren’t exactly in our favour! Still, off we went, bouncing between roads he might patrol, reading the landscape for movement, sound, anything. An hour and a half later or so we hit what I can only describe as the doldrums. No tracks. No alarm calls. Nothing. Just the creeping feeling that maybe today wasn’t our day.

    Dj Impala At Golden Light T

    Imagination Regurgitation

    Which is precisely when I started talking up my favourite marula in the area. The “perfect leopard tree”. Every guide has a few. Height, angles, background, clean branches… the whole checklist. So there I was, painting this grand picture for my guests, fully leaning into the fantasy of finding the Tortoise Pan Male draped over that exact tree, even though I knew the bush rarely listens to our plans.

    Kc Three River Ym Marula Tree Nov. 2023

    A Not So Eloquent Moment of Discovery

    We continued up a rise, and in mid-sentence, I spotted a shape in the branches ahead. A leopard. I momentarily forgot my own name and yelled something along the lines of “S**t“! So loud I shouted, I nearly sent my guests and Euce into cardiac arrest. As I sped up towards the sighting, the punchline hit. The Tortoise Pan male wasn’t in THE marula. He was in a far less photogenic marula about 40 metres to the east. Quite literally the closest tree to THAT tree.

    Nm Tortoise Pan Male Leopard In Marula Staring

    The Tortoise Pan Male rests peacefully in a marula.

    Bushveld Humour, Never Take Yourself to Seriously

    There he lay close enough to feel like he’d heard every word of my enthusiastic build-up but far enough away to remind me that the bushveld has a dry sense of humour. We burst out laughing. The perfect tree stood empty, glowing in the afternoon light like a missed stage cue, while the Tortoise Pan Male himself lounged smugly nearby, clearly unbothered by my grand plans. And honestly? It was perfect anyway. A big male leopard in a marula is a privilege no matter which tree he chooses. That much will forever remain true – a reason this job never gets old!

    Moments like these are a reminder to just get out there, enjoy the unpredictability and soak up the magic for whatever it is. Londolozi has a way of meeting you halfway… often with a grin.

    The Tortoise Pan male, once again, delivered. Just not quite in the way I’d scripted.

     

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    Nic Martin

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  • South Africa debates changing name of world-famous Kruger park

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    South Africa’s world-famous Kruger National Park could become known by a new name if some local politicians have their way.

    The vast wildlife sanctuary, called the Sabi Game Reserve at the time, was re-christened in 1926 to honour Paul Kruger. He was president in the late 19th Century of what was known as the South African Republic, which forms part of what is now the east of South Africa.

    For Afrikaners, descendants of 17th Century European settlers, Kruger is revered as a hero who led the resistance against British colonialism.

    But for the majority of South Africans, he is viewed as a relic of the country’s racist past, as he was one of those responsible for driving black Africans off their land and excluding them from having a say in running the republic.

    Many South African cities, towns, roads and other major infrastructure have been given new names since the end of the legalised system of racial discrimination, known as apartheid, and the beginning of the democratic era in 1994. Though sometimes controversial, the decisions have been justified as a way to break with what went before – both the apartheid and colonial era.

    But the proposed Kruger name-change does not just touch on history, it also could have a bearing on the country’s fragile economy.

    Tourists go to the park in their hundreds of thousands every year to view the wildlife on offer [AFP via Getty Images]

    The national park, home to elephants, lions, hippos, leopards and many other animals, attracts almost a million visitors a year, and is a jewel in the crown of South Africa’s tourism industry.

    Some argue that changing Kruger’s name could threaten that.

    Part of the park is in Mpumalanga province and in September, as the country celebrated Heritage Month, representatives from the opposition Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) put forward a proposal in the region’s legislature to change Kruger’s name.

    “How do we celebrate our heritage as South Africans when we still have our beautiful national parks named after the architect of apartheid Paul Kruger,” EFF representative Rhulani Qhibi was quoted as saying in a stirring speech. While not historically accurate, as apartheid in its legal form was introduced decades after Kruger’s death, the rhetoric reflects the way he is viewed by some.

    The EFF also proposed the renaming of other key landmarks in the province, including the Kruger Mpumalanga International airport.

    But in their haste to remove Kruger’s association with the park, the EFF, whose national leader is the firebrand MP Julius Malema, put forward another problematic name: Skukuza.

    Skukuza, which means “he who sweeps clean” in the Tsonga language, was the nickname given to the park’s first warden, James Stevenson-Hamilton, who was known for driving out poachers and black communities that lived in the park in its early days, among other things.

    The EFF leader in Mpumalanga, Collen Sedibe, was quoted in South African publication Sunday World as admitting the party’s blunder.

    “We are still engaging with the land claimants at Kruger National Park and the people who were staying there because they said Skukuza is not the right name. He was the man who kicked them out of the park,” Sedibe said.

    A statue of Paul Kruger in a square in Pretoria set against a cloudless blue sky. The word "killer" has been spray-painted onto the plinth below and pigeons are flying around the base of the statue.

    The Paul Kruger statue in Pretoria has sometimes attracted the ire of protesters – it was daubed with red paint in 2020 [Gallo Images via Getty Images]

    Afrikaner lobby group AfriForum condemned the EFF’s proposal as “cheap politics and proof that political power-hunger in the province outweighs informed or responsible decision-making”.

    The group vowed to mount legal challenges to any attempts to rename the park without due process and blasted the EFF for criticising its namesake.

    “The Kruger National Park was created thanks to Kruger’s vision [and] to ignore Kruger’s contribution to the establishment of the country’s most important national park… is opportunistic and blatantly spreading lies,” AfriForum’s Marais de Vaal said in reaction to the news.

    The motion to change the name was adopted by the provincial legislature after receiving support from its largest parties, the African National Congress (ANC), which is in power nationally, and uMkhonto weSizwe.

    Despite it not being legally binding, as there is a national process that any name change needs to go through, detractors have warned that if approved it could damage the tourism sector, which contributes almost 9% to the country’s economy.

    It could have “severe consequences… it might even dilute the international recognition of this park and South Africa as a tourism destination that we’ve built over so many years”, tourism expert Prof Elmarie Slabbert told the BBC.

    There would also be the cost of having to rebrand the park.

    The academic, a research director at the North West University’s school of tourism management, did acknowledge “that we need to honour indigenous heritage”.

    “But the effect on the economy is going to be so significant that we need to decide where do we spend our money. We’ve got such a high unemployment rate at this point in time that I believe that is where the money should go.”

    More than 30% of the working-age population are unemployed – ranked by the World Bank as one of the worst jobless rates of any nation – and youth unemployment is even higher.

    But economics is not the only basis on which name-change decisions have been made.

    The need to address the inequities of the country’s past has been seen as vital.

    An aerial view of Shark Rock Pier in Gqeberha. The pier can be seen jutting out from the beach over a clear ocean.

    The Indian Ocean city of Gqeberha was known as Port Elizabeth until 2021 [Getty Images]

    For instance, the name of former Prime Minister Hendrik Verwoerd, a key figure in implementing apartheid, has been removed from many places.

    Other changes include the city of Port Elizabeth. Named after the wife of a 19th Century British official, it is now called Gqeberha, the Xhosa word for the river that runs through it. King William’s Town, after William IV, is now Qonce, also referring to a river.

    Johannesburg’s international airport, once known as Jan Smuts – honouring a former prime minister – is now called OR Tambo, after the anti-apartheid leader and former president of the ANC.

    Some cities, like the capital, Pretoria, have kept their monikers but the local government areas under which they come have been renamed.

    Plenty of other renaming ideas have been floated, including changing the name of the Eastern Cape seaside town of Port Alfred, which commemorates Queen Victoria’s second son. Some have even suggested changing the country’s name to Azania.

    Many of these proposals have divided public opinion, and to ensure that changes are not just made on a whim there is an extensive legal process that needs to be completed.

    It is managed by the South African Geographical Names Council (SAGNC) and begins with an application either by individuals, communities or institutions to the body’s provincial branch.

    The proposal is discussed and could lead to a public consultation. Once this has been concluded, the name-change plan is sent to the national office.

    If it is thought to satisfy “all the requirements”, a recommendation will then be made to the sports, arts and culture minister for a final decision, SAGNC chairperson Dr Nkadimeng Mahosi told the BBC.

    “What is happening here [in Mpumalanga’s legislature], does not go according to what the national act says… [and] is political point-scoring,” he said.

    As a national landmark, and the fact that different government departments will need to have a say, Kruger is a unique case, Dr Mahosi added.

    There are then several bureaucratic hurdles that need to be negotiated before the name Kruger ever disappears from tourism brochures.

    But the debate has revealed the sensitivities that continue to exist around how to deal with the country’s past and the legacy of those who used to govern it.

    More about South Africa from the BBC:

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