27.08.09 Midday and here i sit in Mopani again. After another excellent sleep i was up very early for a sunrise drive but apart from the usual there was nothing out of the ordinary, everything was as marvellous as usual…although i must say, as i sat waiting for the sun to rise the early morning birds did seem exceptionally noisy which of course is fabulous. All the various types of francolins in particular were really on song.
After a good long shower outside, again surrounded by a perfect rainbow i came through to Mopani where i have been chatting to a field guide for quite a while ( not to mention his party of 6 german females!!)…i wanna be a field guide…lol.
I managed to download my mails again and had some great news in that my little brothers first grandson was born this morning at 3am, Jack be his name and tonight i shall toast his birth with a chilled beer by the fire as i finish off my potjie.
Coincidentally i came to at about 4am this morning, 3am English time when he was born, and i shall look forward to telling him one day about where i was and what i was hearing at the time of his birth.
Through being here and having the luxury of being able to switch off from the stresses and strains of life this has been a brilliant trip for me. I cannot say i have come up with all the answers i need but i have cleared my mind to a very large extent and now know my next few steps in certain areas.
Knowing that i will be doing in excess of 5000 klicks next month when i go up to Botswana i have decided that for the next few days i am going to do very little driving and lots of sitting…listening and watching the birds and just appreciating whatever i may see or hear regarding game.
I have changed my plans slightly and am going to leave tzendze tomorrow to spend the last couple of days at letaba where i will really chill, do some socialising with Ross and Eve and spend time in the camp seeing what i can capture with the camera.
I just walked out onto the terrace for a while and watched a bull elephant close to where i was across from a stretch of water that lies to the right. Almost next to him was a group of 15, grazing impala and as they had been approaching a 12 foot croc came out of the water and was laying behind a ridge of sand waiting for them to reach him. They sussed him out from about ten feet though and scarpered back the way they had come before disappearing into the bush line, some of them with high, long, beautifully graceful leaps that they do over some bushes.
Anyway, it is almost 3pm now so i am going to head out somewhere and park close to some water and trees and hopefully something will come along in front of my lens.
I arrived at the confluence just before 3.30 and parked in my usual spot right on the edge of the bank at the very point where the two rivers join. As i have written earlier there are two large long pools of water, maybe 60 feet long each and about 20 feet wide at their widest point at the joint of the ‘T’ created by the joining of the rivers, albeit mostly sandy dry river beds at this point in time. I had a good scan around and immediately spotted the soft white underbelly of a couple of lionesses just on the bank immediately north of the ‘T’.
North
Does that little diagram make sense? The figure ‘I’ is the river where the two pools of water lay and the dotted line is the other river, if i had the computer skills the two lines would join.
The lionesses lay in low green riverine bush to the north as per the diagram but in actual fact, just to confuse things further North is actually west…lol. I was sitting on the bank under the ‘wing’ of the left hand side of the ‘T’ about 30 metres away and maybe 20 feet higher than them, a perfect view!
Brilliant to see them, then as i looked harder i counted another one, then another and another. There were in fact 6 of them with the sixth one being about 10 metres away under another bush, three lionesses and a male. That was it, my afternoon was sorted!
I got my bigger lens organised, made myself comfortable and settled down for the next couple of hours.
Within 5 minutes there was movement further up the river and i saw a water buck coming down to drink..fantastic and the adrenalin started to pump a little. The buck came closer and closer, a few steps, smelling the air…looking around…a several steps more…until he was just 30 metres away from the water and the lions on the other side.
The lions had seen it about the same time that i had and instantly become alert and still, the one separated from the others in crouch position watching the bucks every movement intently, the others now also crouched and laying as low as possible to the ground behind the greenery. My heart was definitely beating harder…some fantastic pics coming up!!
Then i heard the low rumble of another car, a prado , coming up behind me with three people who i could hear chatting almost as easily as i could hear the engine. They pulled up behind me with a sqeal of dusty brakes and immediately one almost shouted out LION!!…
Well, i don’t know, maybe the buck understood English because virtually instantly he bolted and was gone. Jeez i was so pissed i could not even bring myself to even look at these people.
I think what must of happened is that they distracted one of the lions who turned to look at the new arrivals and the buck saw the movement, it was over in a flash and the lions then all looked up at the bank in disdain and virtually snorted with disgust!!
After a few minutes they all went back into snooze mode and to make things even more irritating the folk in the other cab took a few snaps of them and drove off again. I never understand that at all, all many people really want to see is lion, then when they find them they get bored after a very short while and move on again. Oh well, who am i to judge.
After a while a few more cars did arrive and stay but they were all much more serious about their game viewing and sat patiently in their cars waiting to see what would happen if anything.
For the next hour and a half or so the lions occasionally got up to stretch their legs, or rolled over..one side to the other and a couple of them seemed to far prefer laying on their backs with their legs up in the air.
At about 4.30pm a couple of fish eagles flew in and the one came in to land in a tree on the bank directly opposite me overlooking the pools af water.
I trained my lens on them and sat for at least 30 minutes waiting to get the perfect shot as she took off again, occasionally capturing various moments of them looking up and down or readjusting their position. I kept glancing over at the lions to make sure they were still there, which, apart from a few new positions and the one on its own having joined the others, they still were..
At one point i turned round to get a boiled sweet out of the packet on the passenger seat and the bloody thing flew off at that precise moment!!…can you believe it. My head was only turned for an instance and when i looked back there was no sight of him.
I did not have long to be irritated with myself though, the sun had now gone behind trees to the west and as the shadows fell on where the lions were laying i could see them become restless and start to move.
One by one they got up, stretching themselves and walking around a little, a couple of them in particular seemed more eager than the others. After a short while they stared to space themselves out alongside the river bed.
There was a bit of playing with two of them, the one had moved into the riverbed and lay down low behind a clump of reeds, as her mate approached a few minutes later she leapt out in a feigned playful attack. When they move like that it is easy to be able to see the power and agility within them, not to mention the speed. Of course the approaching female saw it coming and side stepped out of the way with ease, swiping the air with her paw as she did.
I remember once, i was at Moholoholo watching a couple of lions through a wire fence, one had apparently been a circus animal for most of his life and the other an orphan from the wild. I had a little camera with me and had poked the lens through the wire to get a shot. I was concentrating on what i was doing when a third male lion stalked me and out of nowhere leapt up at the fence by standing on his hind legs.
Well let me tell you, if one of those things comes at you with serious intent you would simply not have a chance. The paw was higher than my head and the mouth was level with my eyes with just this thin wire fence separating us, i could smell his breath on me as he exhaled into my face and looked into my eyes with a growl.
A ranger was present and the bugger, having seen it happen before let it be as a joke on me…lol…some joke, but i saw the funny side. In fact i can say that it was actually a great moment to have and an expertience i shall not easil forget!!
Anyway, back to the present, and with the lions clearly setting up their ambush tactics for an early evening supper i had to leave, it was almost 5.45 and is always the case in these situations i begrudgingly started the landy up as the pastel coloured aura left by the sun started to fade into the evening sky.
Although i still have a couple of nights left it felt like the beginning of the end of this trip, and i suppose it was. Fortunately for me this time the feeling is well tempered in the knowledge that after a few days in Joburg next week i shall be off again on my way to Chobe and the Okavango delta in Botswana.
Back at camp i lit the fire, put the pot on to warm up the potjie i had made the night before, and cracked open a beer. The beer was very special tonight as i learnt by mail today that his first grandson, Jack, was born this morning, so i toasted and drank to his birth and good health as the scops owl piped in to be answered by his mate further to the east.
I intended sitting up for a while as the fire died down but the wind started to get up and i decided to extinguish the embers and sleep. Later at midnight i was woken by lightening slightly to the south and quite a serious downpour, a little early in the year for rain but they do say over here that the august winds bring the rain. I got up just to check my tent and lower the awning over my kitchen area so as not gather a puddle and within 10 minutes was back fast asleep again until past 5am.