Category Archives: African Safaris and Tourism

Over 340 rhino killed in South Africa this year, says WWF

Mail and Guardian

The number of rhinos poached in South Africa has reached a record high, the World Wildlife Fund (WWF) said on Thursday.

“Statistics from South African National Parks show that 341 animals have been lost to poaching so far in 2011, compared to a record total of 333 last year,” the fund said in a statement.

Three of the five rhino species globally were critically endangered.

The last reported poaching took place in the Free State on October 24.

The carcasses of an adult pregnant cow and another younger cow were found at the Sandveld Nature Reserve near Bloemhof.  Read more…

Max’s travels in Ethiopia – Part 2

Max Levene

Upon our return from Mekele we had a couple of lazy days around the house. One of these days I decided to leave the confines of the house with my helper Haile, to not only meet our local neighbours and see the area, but also to practice some Amharighna (the local language).

Outside the house is what some would describe as shanty but you soon realise it is rather better built then the slum areas; people dry their spices on the streets and sell vegetables, and there are numerous small shacks selling groceries.

The trip was interesting seeing the ‘local stores’ however the Amharighna
did not go so well as I pointed to Lucy (our Ethiopian street dog) and said,” Habesha woosha”, which to my understanding meant ‘local dog’, however it turned out I had insulted the old Lady I was talking to, calling her a dog. Haile later told me adding the word ye in front of my phrase would have worked! Oops!! Read more…

Botswana: 8 tourists killed in Okavango airplane crash

Mail and Guardian

A light aircraft carrying 12 people crashed after takeoff and burst into flames in Botswana, killing the British pilot and seven tourists from France, Sweden and Britain, an official said.

The crash occurred in the southern African nation’s remote Okavango Delta on Friday, according to spokesperson Modipe Nkwe of the Civil Aviation Authority. He said two French tourists and two Botswana citizens survived.

The cause is under investigation, Nkwe said Monday. His agency had issued a brief statement announcing the crash on Friday, with few details. It was unclear why it took three days to announce the fatalities.

Britain and France confirmed they had citizens aboard the flight, but Sweden said it was still investigating the reports.

The chartered Cessna 208, operated by local company Moremi Air, crashed shortly after takeoff from Xakanaka airfield in northern Botswana and was ablaze soon after.  Read more…

Tigre or Bust – on the road in Ethiopia

Max Levene

 

Day 1: After being hoiked into the car and positioned on my new cushion the Levene charabanc sets off, the land cruiser packed to the rafters (mostly my stuff, including a wheelchair, a shower chair and a spare set of wheels and medical supplies; oh the joys!).

We left at 11:00 to meet Leul, a well respected Ethiopian army
colonel and  war hero, who helped fight off the Dergue and is now our Tigrean fixer, translator, negotiator. I was greeted in usual Ethiopian fashion with a kiss on the cheek – something hard to get used to, but in Ethiopia it’s a rather rather warm gesture of friendship.

The day consisted of driving through the beautiful countryside of Amhara, passing through many villages which each curiously seem to specialise in one product, with one village solely selling oranges, the next onions and the next offering car washes.

Read more…

http://ksafricajournalism.wordpress.com/

Kidnappings hurt Kenyan tourism

Mail and Guardian

Built to cool, not to protect, the sisal thatched roofs that dot the Lamu archipelago give a good indication of where priorities lie on the north Kenyan coast.

Whereas Nairobi residents surround themselves with three-metre walls and electric fences, doors made of palm tree fibres are all that stand at the entrance of many homes along the empty sands of islands stretching far into the distance. That may be about to change.

At 3am on October 1 at least 10 gunmen landed on Manda Island and burst into the home of Marie Dedieu. A retired French journalist, the 66-year-old woman had made her home for the past 15 years on Manda, which lies across a narrow lagoon from the village of Shela on Lamu Island, a popular hangout with the rich and famous. The Kenyan navy attempted to stop the boat in which the kidnappers escaped, but despite firing ­warning shots over it they slipped back to Somalia.
Read more…

http://africajournalismtheworld.com/

 

 

South Luangwa: Zambia’s leopard and lion paradise

ZAMBIA’S SOUTH LUANGWA – LEOPARD AND LION PARADISE

It was late morning and we were nearing the end of a  successful game drive.  Usual routine -  up just before dawn, coffee and a few biscuits, wrap up against the cold of  early morning and into the vehicle.

Read more…

http://africajournalismtheworld.com/wildlife/

 

Luangwa leopard and cubsLeopard and cubs

From the Desert to the Delta – Botswana’s diverse treasures

Keith Somerville

Since my first visit in 1993, Botswana has been my favorite destination for
safaris.  Not just because of the wealth of wildlife but also the diversity of its landscapes and habitats. In one day you can go from the arid, dramatic vistas of the Kalahari Desert or the baked saltpans of Mkgadkgadi to the lush swamps and river fronts of the Okavango Delta and Chobe or Savuti rivers.  Alongside it all you can
enjoy the gentle, almost shy hospitality of the Batswana.

On any trip you will get a great view of the bush or bhundu you will be bashing in your Landcruiser (the workhorse of safaris trips) as youfly into the quaint but engaging little settlement of Maun.  It’s the gateway to both the delta and the desert.  Gradually developing over decades from a scattering of houses and rondavels, it is still small and pleasantly understated but has hotels, lodges and is the hub for
the safari companies who operate all the trips.

Gemsbok in the Kalahari

Driving south from Maun to the desert you leave the asphalt after an hour or
two and are on to the dirt and dust.  You’ll drive for a few hours more through increasingly sparse bush and thorn scrub until you reach the vast dry grasslands of the Kalahari Desert. 

It’s a true desert despite the great stretches of grass savannah.  But it’s not like the Sahara or the Empty Quarter of northern Africa and Arabia.  The grass, thorn trees and acacia stands provide enough food for herds of gemsbok, migratory wildbeest, giraffe and springbok.  These and other grazers or browsers provide prey for the predators of the desert – blond-maned lions, leopards, chee

Gemsbok harass cheetah

Four days in the desert brought us a wealth of sightings as well as some of most of the beautiful sunsets I’ve seen in 30 years of safaris.  The scenery is overwhelming in its sense of space, sky and light. Against the background of that scenery, you get fantastic views of the wildlife – a huge lion basking is the early morning sun as you
set out on the road after dawn, a leopard disappearing into the dusk or a bat-eared fox kicking up a cloud of dust in the midday sun as it digs for rodents or insects.

One of the great attractions of the Kalahari is the diversity of the fauna.  Not only will you see, unless incredibly unlucky, prides of lions, cheetah (singly or in bachelor groups), solitary leopards but also the fascinating smaller animals – meerkat gangs, bat-eared foxes, caracal lynx with their amazing plumed ears, tough, tenacious honey badgers and maybe an aardwolf searching for termites.

Lion at sunrise

It’s an experience not to be missed and one you can pair up with the Delta
– where you can add hippos, crocodiles, elephants, wild dogs, shy sitatunga antelopes, lechwe and big herds of buffalo to your viewing list.   And the landscapes change – in the dry season there are stretches of arid grassland but there is always some open water, swampland and water channels. 

Whether you drive around the islands between the swamps or paddle through the the reeds in makoros (localcanoes poled expertly through the maze of channels)  – you will get a great and different experience.  The sound of a hippo dropping into the water as you weave your way through the reeds or the sight of crocodile silently patrolling the the water’s edge waiting for an unwary antelope will send a shiver down your spine.

Wild dog

In both the desert and the delta camping is the best way to get an all-round experience – you are close to nature – elephants will walk through your camp, lions will roar or hyenas whoop as you settle down at night and all in surround sound!

What you won’t see are the convoys of four-by-fours or minibuses that you
get in much of Kenya or Kruger.  There are plenty of lodges and camps but the areas are vast and encounters with other tourists only sporadic.

Encounters with animals are constant – whether a blood-spattered wild dog
fresh from the hunt, lechwe running amidst a shower of spray in the shallows, herds of hippos cooling off in the swamp or huge herds of hunderds of buffalo kicking up their own dust storm, with, as were lucky enough to see, a pride of lions shadowing them waiting for a calf or a weak straggler to fall behind.

In both the desert and the delta the birdlife is as varied and entrancing as the big game.  We were lucky enough to see some of the delta’s rarest birds – an elegant slaty egret hunting for frogs and insects along the edge of the swam and a beautiful, caramel-coloured Pel’s fishing owl perched over one of the channels.

Slaty egret

I’m now planning my next trip and will add Savuti with its wealth of predators to my desert and delta itinerary.