High tea was served at 3:30, and then it was time for our
afternoon game drive. The
weather was still cold and cloudy.
We were joined by an Australian couple and their British
cousin who lives in Botswana. We
started off along the dry riverbed where we had seen the leopard
in the morning, but he was nowhere in sight.
For a long time the animal viewing was very sparse; we saw
a few impala and very little else.
Eventually we came upon a bachelor herd of male zebras.
It seems that zebras are famous for turning their backsides
toward people; it is easy to get a lot of photos of nothing but
zebra butts. However
this group posed for us beautifully, standing in a symmetrical
pattern, looking back over their shoulders at us.
After that our luck picked up.
We were able to get quite close to both a pair of tiny
steenbok and several large elands, providing quite a contrast in
antelopes. We stopped
to watch a dozen giraffes, browsing the treetops for their dinner.
The guides are in touch with each other by radio, so if
something rare is sighted everyone can have a chance to see it.
Abraham got a call that cheetahs had been seen near the
perimeter of the reserve, so he hurried to the area.
We found a mother cheetah lying with her six-month-old
baby. The young one
was intermittently nursing, while the mother purred loudly with a
contented look on her face. They
reminded me very much of our house cat nursing her kittens.
Although there were two other vehicles close by, the
cheetahs did not seem worried by our presence.
They were absolutely beautiful, and we watched them for a
long while in the fading light.
Abraham
drove us to the top of a small hill for Sundowners.
We really enjoyed this African tradition of finding a
scenic spot and watching the sunset while enjoying a drink.
Jineen and I have followed a similar custom on our trips;
we find the most beautiful view we can at the end of the day, and
have a glass of wine and a snack.
We had always called it ‘Happy Hour,’ but decided that
‘Sundowners,’ is a better name.
We enjoyed a bottle of South African white wine and some
chicken wings, and watched the sun escape from behind the clouds
just in time to sink below the horizon in a brilliant red
sunset.
We
drove back toward the lodge, spotlighting along the way.
We marveled at how Abraham could sweep the darkness on both
sides of the road with the powerful light and still concentrate on
his driving enough to avoid running into a termite hill or
aardvark burrow. We
were driving slowly along a sandy creekbed in the dark, when
suddenly in a blur of motion there were elephants on either side
of us. We got a quick
exciting glimpse of them before they vanished into the bush,
transformed by moonlight into magical creatures.
We got back to the lodge at 7:00 p.m., shivering with cold.
In deference to the weather, dinner was served in the
Winter Lounge; this was the only meal we had in an enclosed room
for the entire trip. Our
waitress shyly announced the menu: Hot
butternut squash soup for starters, and then a choice between pork
chops and oxtail for the main course.
Thinking the idea of eating an ox’s tail a bit
disgusting, I chose the pork chops – but they were very tough.
Warthog perhaps?
July
13
We set off for the morning game
drive at seven, joined by the Australian couple. It
was cold and cloudy again, but we had dressed warmer. I
had encouraged Jineen to buy an extra polar fleece jacket at the
gift shop, so I wouldn’t have to watch her shiver.
As we left camp, Abraham pointed out an area where the lawn
had been rooted up by bush pigs.
They had really made a mess of it – the groundskeeper
would probably like to make bacon out of these nocturnal relatives
of the warthog.
We
stopped by the hyena den. The
mother and her baby were out lying on the rocks again, and the
older baby peeked out at us from a crevice.
We watched them a few minutes and then continued on.
The
Landrover was quite good over the rugged terrain, and Abraham
drove it in places where I wouldn’t have guessed a vehicle could
go. But crossing a
sandy gully we became quite stuck, wheels spinning futilely.
Then with a sudden lurch the ‘rover pulled free, but
after that we noticed the vehicle had a definite list to the left.
It
was an elephant morning. We
encountered several large family groups with babies, and they
allowed us to come quite close, to watch and photograph them.
They appeared serene and dignified, with their wise
wrinkled faces, like they knew all and had seen all, the wisdom of
millennium on their granite heads.
Shafts of sunlight broke through the clouds, making the
landscape glow, and there were patches of blue in the sky.
By now it was obvious that the Landrover was tilting badly
to the left – as we drove over the uneven terrain I had to lean
hard to the right to avoid sliding off the bench seat.
Realizing that he hadn’t noticed, we brought it to
Abraham’s attention; he got out to check and found we had lost a
rear spring. He turned
the vehicle around to look for it, backtracking about a mile
before retrieving the spring from the gully where we had gotten
stuck. Abraham jacked
up the ‘rover and made the necessary repairs.
The clouds cleared away, at least temporarily, and the sun
came out as we drove across the open plain.
We could see giraffes in the distance; their long necks and
heads sticking up above the scrubby trees reminded us of the
Diplodocus dinosaurs in Jurassic Park.
Jineen came up with a name for it: Giraffic
Park.
We found our cheetahs from the
night before, the mother and the half grown cub.
They walked regally across the savannah to a leaning tree
then proceeded to climb it, one at a time.
After coming back down, they lay in the shade of the tree
and licked each other’s faces.
After a few minutes they started to wrestle and play, and
then they licked some more before finally settling down for a nap.
We returned to camp just in time for brunch.
One of the unique and excellent things about Tuli Lodge was
that each meal was served in a different location; this time we
ate on the lawn just outside our cabin.
After brunch Jineen and I went for a bush walk with Simon.
Everyone else visiting the camp seemed content to spend the
middle of the day resting or hanging out by the pool, but we
didn’t want to miss a single moment that could be spent in the
bush. A walking safari
is a great way to experience all of the small things that are easy
to miss from a vehicle.
We saw quite a few new birds;
buffalo weavers with their massive nests, yellow-masked weavers,
and white-browed sparrow weavers.
We also saw a grey hornbill, much less common than his
yellow and red billed cousins.
Simon asked us if we could identify a small green bird with
an orangey-yellow breast and a blue brow, and I replied, ‘well,
it looks to me like some kind of a little bee-eater.’
Turns out I was right; the name of the species was in fact
‘Little Bee-eater.’
We found a leopard tortoise shell,
with brightly marked sections of yellow, orange and black.
This prompted Simon to tell us the story of the leopard
tortoise, and how he came to have his shell divided into segments.
The gods were having a big feast
in heaven, and the birds were all invited to attend.
The leopard tortoise really wanted to go, so all the birds
agreed to give him one feather each, so that he could fly up to
heaven with them for the party.
The chief bird told him, “your presence will be a gift
for all of us.’ So
the tortoise took ‘All of us’ as his new name that the birds
had given him.
The
turtle flew up to heaven and saw the great feast waiting.
“This food is for all of us,” said the gods.
The leopard tortoise, overcome with greed, said that since
the birds had named him ‘All of us’ the food was for him, and
then he proceeded to eat all of the food, leaving none for the
birds. Of course this
angered the birds, so they took back their feathers, leaving the
turtle no way to get back down to earth.
He did manage to get one of the birds to take a message to
his wife, asking her to find many pillows and pile them up
together. He then
leapt from heaven and fell to earth, landing on the pillows to
break his fall. However
it was a very long drop and there were not enough pillows, so he
bounced off of them and hit the ground, where his shell was
shattered into many sections.
He survived, however, and his broken shell was glued back
together. And from
that day forward, the leopard tortoise has had his segmented
shell.
Every safari guide will talk about the
Big Five. These are
the five animals that are considered the most dangerous to hunt;
elephants, leopards, lions, buffalo, and rhinos.
But Simon introduced us to what the guides have dubbed the
Little Five: The
elephant shrew, the leopard tortoise, the ant lion, the buffalo
weaver, and the rhino beetle.
So far we had three out of five.
We headed back to the lodge, walking slowly across the wide
rocky flats. A
magnificent pair of baobabs stood in front of the high rock
formation, stark against a backdrop of dramatic clouds.
Their enchanted appearance stirred the imagination.
A pair of klipspringers gazed at us from the top of the
ridge. We returned to
camp on the steep rocky path by the waterfall.
As we came down to the lawn we saw a flash of iridescent
blue – a woodland kingfisher flew by, soon joined by another.
We thanked Simon for the bush walk, and then set out after
the kingfishers. We
followed them around camp as they flew from tree to tree, trying
to get close enough for a good photo.
We explored a little trail through
the trees and along the river.
There were deep burrows in the woods, made by aardvarks
digging for ants at night. We
could see marks where the warthogs had been rooting up the forest
floor. The sound of
birds singing and the cooing of doves filled the air.
We had a couple of free hours before
tea, so we climbed back up the steep path to the top of the rocky
escarpment. A family
of rock dassies peered out at us, the babies scampering among the
rocks. A dark blue
starling watched us from a nearby crag.
There is a flat area at the very top of the outcrop, with
benches and a railing, called the Star Deck.
We stood there and looked down over the plain.
Although it didn’t seem like we had climbed that far,
from the deck it felt like we were above the world.
We stayed for a while, enjoying the company of the birds
and lizards.
After high tea we went out for the afternoon game drive.
The Landrover was quite full this time, with eight
passengers; three on the bench seat was a bit cramped for
photography. We set
out on a track that went along the Limpopo River, searching for
crocodiles. We saw
beautiful scenery and lots of birds, but no crocs.
We left the river and followed a track through a rocky area
to a small watering hole, and there we found our crocodile.
It was not very large, but we were still surprised to hear
that it was probably just a few months old – Abraham said they
need to grow up fast or something eats them.
We
drove quite a long ways through a bare area, seeing relatively few
animals. As dark storm
clouds gathered on the horizon, a herd of impala darted past the
vehicle, leaping high in the air as they ran.
We passed a couple of zebras and wildebeests, two
ostriches, some elands, and one giraffe.
We saw a lone elephant on the horizon.
Abraham suddenly stopped the ‘rover; we looked to the
right and saw a black-backed jackal beneath a tree.
We were admiring this attractive foxlike canine, his
chestnut coat marked with silver and black, but that was not why
Abraham had stopped. “Look,
look!” he urged us, directing our attention to the left.
There were our two cheetahs, mother and half-grown
youngster, their faces smeared with blood, eating a freshly killed
impala. We watched
them feed in the fading light, and the jackals also watched,
waiting their turn. Abraham
explained that the cheetahs need to eat fast, because once it gets
dark the jackals will call out, and the hyenas will hear and come
to take the kill from the cheetahs.
The hyenas repay the favor by sharing the kill with the
jackals. This is one
of the main reasons why cheetahs hunt in the daytime instead of at
night.
We
left the cheetahs and headed across the plain; the sun was
starting to set and the sky was on fire.
A huge baobab tree stood alone against the backdrop of the
magnificent African sunset, its trunk gleaming in the last
horizontal shafts of light. This
was our Sundowners destination.
The baobab was massive, more than 30 feet around, and
Abraham said it was over 800 years old.
The sunset was spectacular, with incredible hues of orange
and magenta stretching 360 degrees around the horizon.
Near the earth’s poles the sun travels somewhat
horizontally as it sets, so that the waning light lasts a long
time. In Africa, close
to the equator, the opposite is true – the sun seems to drop
straight down like a stone. With
the far horizons and clear air, the sunsets are brilliant but
short-lived, and the darkness comes on suddenly.
We had wine and snacks beneath the mighty baobab, and
enjoyed the spectacular evening.
Dinner was served in the bush.
After spotlighting our way back to the shelter where we had
stopped for Sundowners on the first night, we sat around the
campfire with drinks while the staff cooked dinner on the braai
(an open-flamed grill). Tables
were set up on a wide patio bordered by a low stone wall,
overlooking the water hole. Hyenas
lurked just outside the ring of firelight, attracted by the smell
of roasting meat. We
dined by the light of storm lanterns.
An ant lion, drawn to the flame, fluttered onto our table
– the fourth member of our Little Five.
Our waitress announced the menu in
a shy voice; we started off with bleu cheese soup.
This was followed by chicken kabobs, sausage, pork chops,
jacket potatoes, and a grits-like substance made out of mielie meal, a Botswana staple made from maize – all cooked on the
braai.
After dinner the Tuli Choir sang for us, and performed a
shuffling traditional dance around the fire.
What an amazing evening.
July
14
Up at six again, and after a cup of tea and a quick bite of
breakfast, we were driving out the back gate of Tuli Lodge with
Abraham, heading up a steep rocky slope.
It was still cold, but this morning there was not a cloud
in sight, and the sun shone brightly in a deep blue sky.
It was a welcome contrast to the mostly cloudy weather and
overcast skies of the last three days – and in fact, from that
moment on we did not see another wisp of cloud for the entire
duration of our trip.
We
passed a man on the road near camp; he was waiting for a bus.
He told Abraham he had seen something go up over the hill
that may have been a leopard.
Abraham drove the Landrover straight up over the rock
outcropping in pursuit, traversing through steep gullies and
ravines. We continued
to search the rough rocky area, without benefit of any roads or
tracks. It is
unbelievable how rugged these ‘rovers are, and it was a wonder
we had any tires left, let alone springs.
There was nothing moving up on this high ridge, not even a
klipspringer. Abraham
continued to search for the leopard, driving the slopes at
unlikely angles. It
was like something out of a commercial for Landrover, where they
drive a vehicle up onto some inaccessible peak to prove its
ruggedness.
Presently we gave up the
leopard hunt. We came
down out of the rocks and set off across the plain.
The bright sunshine engendered a sense of exhilaration.
Jineen gestured at the brilliant blue sky above and quoted,
‘The sun rolling high in the sapphire sky,’ a lyric from The
Lion King. From
then on, Elton John’s version of The
Circle of Life ran through my head on every game drive for the
rest of the trip.
We
saw a couple of zebras, a crowned plover, and a brown snake eagle
sitting high in a tree. Then
we located a herd of around thirty elephants, including the
smallest baby we had yet seen – Abraham said it was probably
only about six months old. We
parked on a knoll where we could watch them, and had a cup of tea.
We drove by the hyena daycare center; the mother and the
two youngsters were lying in the usual spot.
The mom got up and crossed the track in front of us with
the larger baby following; the smaller one hid, peeking out at us
from behind the rocks.
Brunch was served on the lawn,
beside the cliff overlooking the river.
We watched the birds and checked for crocs in the river.
A smallish black bird with a long forked tail sat on a
branch above the table – Simon said it was a fork-tailed drongo.
It waited for an opportune moment before swooping down
suddenly to make a raid on the breakfast plate of the British man
sitting across the table. But
at the last moment it lost its nerve and panicked; it was hard to
say who was frightened more, the man or the bird.
The drongo flew back up on the branch above the table for
reconnaissance, but never gathered the courage to make another
strike.
We packed up our bags and said
goodbye to Tuli Lodge. It was
time to head for our next destination, the Mashatu Tented Camp.
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