Showing posts with label Wart Hog. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wart Hog. Show all posts

Monday, November 16, 2015

Simbavati Safari Camp, Tuesday & Wednesday, October 6 & 7, 2015


I apologize for being behind on my emails.  Normally I have 4 hours between breakfast and lunch.  That is the only time available between 5 AM wakeup and the end of dinner at about 9:30.  Tuesday we moved to Arathusa Safari Lodge.  The move took up my writing time on Tuesday.  On Wednesday it was over 100 degrees.  After our post-lunch nature walk I needed a nap so that day was gone.  
So this update is for Tuesday evening and Wednesday morning at Simbavati.  
Tuesday evening game drive.
Another group found a White Rhino.  We were late to the party, but we were able to follow him through the brush/trees.  Our guide said he only weighed about two tons, but I can't believe he was that small.
We also saw some Wart Hogs and a Pygmy Mongoose.  The Pygmy Mongoose is reportedly the smallest carnivore.
At our sundowner (that is what we call our afternoon tea when we stop at dusk for tea and biscuits and wait for it to get dark) we were in the company of several Giraffes.  They seemed very curious about us - but not curious enough to get close.  After the sundowner the tracker scans the sides of the road as we drive back to the lodge.  He is looking for eyes that reflect the light.  As we passed one of the water holes we saw a Hippo that had just left the water.  There was a Hyena  there, too.
Final game drive at Simbavati - on Wednesday  October 7.
We started the morning by watching two male elephants as they were feeding at the side of a paved road.  One was so close that if he had taken one step toward us he could have reached us with his trunk.  It was most interesting to observe how delicately he could remove the foliage from the bushes with his trunk, the same trunk he uses to rip trees out of the ground.  After we watched him for a while he expressed his displeasure with us by shaking his head.  Fortunately he withdrew instead of attacking us.
Then we went to a place nearby where another group had spotted a pair of Lions resting on a sand bar.  It was the dominant male of the area with a female.  They were most cooperative in posing for us.  I will attach a photo.
On the way to tea we passed some of the very elegant Kudu bulls.
When we stopped for tea at a large pond there were some Hippos, some Crocodiles, and several kinds of birds including: 3-banded plovers, wood sandpipers, buffalo weavers and a white stork in the distance.
As at every drive we passed many Impala and some Zebras.
I have not explained all of the photos that are attached.  They just represent things we saw that I was able to photograph.

Crocodile

 Egyptian Geese

Lion Couple

White Rhino

 Wart Hog

Yellow-bill Horn Bill
To open a video that show what we saw while staying at Simbavati Safari Camp click on the following YouTube link:

Garonga Safari Camp, Friday afternoon and Saturday morning October 2 and 3, 2015.

                   
Yesterday evening our focus was to see Lions.  They had been found in the morning so we knew where to go.  Before we got to the Lions we saw another type of elk-size deer.  A Kudu female.  It was a weird view of her.  Her tail was directly pointed at us.  Her face was also directly pointed at us.  It looked like the front of his body and the base of her neck were mounted side-by-side on a wall.  


Kudu Female

I will get a animal identification book when I can so I can put names to some of the ones I am missing.  Of course we saw numerous giraffes, a half dozen or more zebras, and over fifty impala.  What an amazing place!
When we got to the two male lions they were doing what lions do during the day - sleeping.  In this case they were sleeping on the road.  There were up to 4 vehicles within 50 feet of them at times while we were there.  Each vehicle had 3 to 11 people in them.  --And the lions slept anyway.  The only time there was even any head motion was when vehicles were attempting to leave on the soft sand road that headed uphill about 20 feet from one of them.  It required full throttle in 4-wheel drive to get up the hill.  The vehicle ahead us us made an awful cloud of diesel smoke in addition to the sand it was throwing when it left.  While we were leaving I tried to keep my video camera trained on the lions.  As a result I think I got the only photo (extracted from the video) showing one of them with his head up.

Lion in the road


After we left they finally had the road to themselves.  Peace at last.
Today we went to see the water buffalo.  That was a long trip so we did not have much time to spend with the giraffes (about 20 of them along with a few zebra) that were grazing in a large area that had trees but minimal underbrush.  And we did not have much time to spend with the zebras that had arrived at a pond for a drink a little further down the road.
Zebras at waterhole



We did find the water buffalo. 

Cape Buffalo




And I haven't even mentioned the monkeys that play around our camp during the day and throughout the night.  Maybe I will be able to get a photo of them to you, but I don't have one yet.  And the photos below are other animals we saw at Garonga.
Elephants bathing




Wart Hog

White Rhinos


Zebras
For a video of what we saw during our stay at Garonga Safari Camp click on the following YouTube link: