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The Nkoveni Female Hunts Again! – Londolozi Blog

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The Nkoveni Female has been doing a stellar job as a mother leopard, raising her three very cute and playful cubs. We have been blessed with some breathtaking sightings of them lately, and today’s story is going to highlight one of those magnificent moments.

The Nkoveni Female rests on a fallen tamboti tree with her tiny cubs.



A gorgeous female who is found to the east of camp. Easily recognised by her 2:2 spot pattern she is often to be found in Marula trees.



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My fellow Ranger Reece Biehler and I were driving a group of guests staying at Pioneer Camp in March earlier this year. Upon their arrival, they asked us if there were currently any leopard cubs on the reserve. This did not come as a surprise because seeing leopard cubs is probably at the top of most people’s list of “must-see animals” in the bush. It’s the pinnacle of leopard viewing! Little did they know that we had been monitoring the Nkoveni Female closely and knew of her whereabouts on the reserve. Our guests were going to be in luck, but just how lucky were they going to be…?

Sz Nkoveni Cub Groom 9529

On the third morning of the guests’ safari, at the crack of dawn, we departed from the parking lot. We told our guests that the plan for the morning was to continue the search for the Nkoveni Female. We had already been unsuccessful the previous afternoon because we had followed her tracks across the Maxebene Riverbed and into a deep thicket. She did not want to be found or seen. But we were adamant that our trackers would prevail and find her in the morning.

Tracking with Nick, Greg, Rich and Joy

After 20 minutes on drive, Joy spotted some fresh tracks of her and two of the cubs exiting the dry river bed and back onto a road that lead us towards a waterhole. We knew the leopards were close by.

The trackers were on fire, hot on the fresh tracks left behind by the family of leopards. They managed to track them down within fifteen minutes in a shady area of a tamboti grove. All of my guests piled into Reece’s vehicle, myself included, so that we could enjoy the sighting together and squeeze one vehicle into the thicket.

Sz Nkoveni +2 Play In Tamboti Grove Sz 9206

As we came across the Nkoveni Female in a beautiful tamboti thicket, two little heads peaked over her stomach. The two cubs then began to play with one another. What a special sighting.

Sz Nkoveni Cub In Hole In Tree 9590

Concern for the third and missing cub was short-lived as we managed to spot him lying in a hole in a tree nearby!

At this age, the cubs are slowly being weaned off their mother’s milk and experimenting with their new carnivorous diet. With this being said, the Nkoveni Female is now having to provide food for three hungry mouths, excluding her own, so she is hunting just about every other day. We noticed she had a full belly from the large impala which she managed to catch two nights before. This, and her milk pouch, made her look very well-fed. But leopards are very opportunistic hunters, and what happened next left us completely speechless.

Sz 4162 Impala Lamb

We heard a faint rustle in the bushes nearby and an Impala lamb scampered through the Tamboti grove towards our vehicle and across the path of the Nkoveni Female. Big mistake.

The Nkoveni Female shot to her feet and, in a split second, was alert to the lost and unsuspecting lamb. She then progressed into a leopard crawl toward us and used a thick bush as a perfect hiding spot. The impala lamb took a few steps to the left and then disappeared behind a row of trees and the Nkoveni Female followed her in absolute silence. An agonising 20 seconds passed and then we heard a series of footsteps and then a distress call coming from the lamb. Another successful hunt for this hard-working mother leopard!

Here are a few more pictures from a memorable encounter with the Nkoveni Female and her three cubs!

Nt Nkoveni Cub

During all the action, one of the cubs was fixated on its mother and watched her tackle and subdue the Impala lamb. This was such interesting animal behaviour unfolding right before our eyes. While Leopard cubs are instinctively born with the skill of hunting. This is a skill that will be developed much later on in their adolescent lives.

Nt Nkoveni impala Hoist

As we manoeuvred the vehicle out of the Tamboti grove and moved in the direction of the distress call, this was our view. We watched her as she powerfully hoisted the impala lamb up into the safety of an Apple Leaf Tree. Leopards are such strong predators and are able to climb and carry 1.5 times their own weight with their jaws. Incredible!

Nt Nkoveni Hoist Close Up

As the Nkoveni Female suffocates the Impala lamb in a tree, you can notice on the flank of the victim where a sharp puncture wound is bleeding. This is a result of the incredibly sharp claws that leopards possess.

Nt Nkoveni Hoist Stare

Once the lamb became motionless, She took a moment to recover and glanced towards the rest of the herd of Impala in the distance.

After five minutes of viewing The Nkoveni Female with her latest victim up in the tree, she managed to secure the lamb around a large branch in the tree far away from any opportunistic hyenas. She then took a much-deserved rest by laying next to the carcass in the tree which provided us with an exceptional photographic opportunity.

It is a huge privilege to see a leopard cub in the wild – let alone three in the safety and company of their mother but to see the Mother actively hunting in her cubs’ presence was a surreal moment for me and my guests.

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Nick Tennick

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