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Lions of Sabi Sands

Czech Republic Spalea Offline
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About #1409:

Those lions were festoying into the muddy water and were marvelous beggars. Their muscles standed out under the Moon light, their murderous eyes sparkled in the obscurity... These photos are really beautifful @vinodkumarn 
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Brazil T Rabbit Offline
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Looks like avoca boys are here to stay. They are scent the area and looking calm.
   
   
   
These boys are the same ones who chased the matimbas at kruger park?

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United States sik94 Offline
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They beat up skoro to within an inch of his life as well.
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United States vinodkumarn Offline
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(03-22-2018, 05:39 PM)sik94 Wrote: They beat up skoro to within an inch of his life as well.

It was 3 Vs 1, Skorro lost his brother before that and was not in his bset as well.
I believe Avocas need some more time to challenge any male coalitions.
They have numbers on their side.
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United States vinodkumarn Offline
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Credits: Sabi Sabi PGR
Mhangeni sub-adults

We enjoyed a much needed 26mm downpour of rain throughout the night leaving a group of 9 sub adult lions slightly wet and bedraggled.


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United States Fredymrt Offline
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Avoca "young" Male lions
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The 3 Avoca ”young” males that is the younger brother to the 2 Avoca ”young” males in southern sabi sands have been spending the last week in northern sabi sands and today they where seen at on Safarilive at Djuma. March 14 2018


3 Avoca young males at chitwa chitwa.
Photos by tristan dicks March 22, 2018
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This male looks like his dad one of the old Avoca males
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old Avoca male (photo taken in 2013)
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United States Fredymrt Offline
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(03-22-2018, 05:18 PM)T Rabbit Wrote: These boys are the same ones who chased the matimbas at kruger park?

Yes, its them.
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United States vinodkumarn Offline
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Two Avocas Brothers in South
Beastly brothers

Credits: Flipside wildlife photography


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United States vinodkumarn Offline
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Credits: Flipside Wildlife photography

Avoca young male



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United States vinodkumarn Offline
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Two of the three Avoca Males in January 2018 in the Manyeleti. Photo by Christof Schoeman
Credits: Christof Schoeman


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United States Fredymrt Offline
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From: Londolozi 

Tsalala Cubs of 2011

James Tyrrell
March 22, 2018



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With the Tsalala Pride flirting with disaster, often going unseen for many days at a time, I was looking back at some old pictures of them when they were featuring far more prominently in Londolozi’s lion viewing. 2011 in particular was a golden time for them. 8 cubs in the pride and pretty localised movements made for some incredible sightings.
All these photos were from that era, but most have never seen the light of day, so I’ve retouched a few and tried to provide some context for each.
Maybe one day the Tsalala Pride viewing will be as prolific as it was 6 years ago, but for now, much of it will just be in memory…

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This photo, as well as the two above, was taken in one of the most remarkable lion sightings I’ve ever been in. The pride with their 8 cubs was moving through a very rocky area, and we were trying to anticipate their movements to get ahead and get some oncoming photos. As we rounded a large boulder, I suddenly realised I had parked us into a dead end, unable to go further because of a large rock, but we were eye-level with the boulder next to us, literally touching distance away on our right. We decided to wait for a few minutes to see if the pride would move past, but were not expecting them to come and lie on the rock almost on top of us, totally unfazed by our proximity. Their height advantage acted as a natural barrier, and the cubs would take it in turns to eyeball us from less than two metres away at times. After a short while they became disinterested in us, and went back to stalking each other, as this one is doing.


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Sometimes lion cubs do relatively stupid things. Quite often in fact. This cub had found something to play with and became totally engrossed in what it was doing, not realising its mother and pride were moving on and getting further and further away. Eventually it looked up and couldn’t see any other lions, so started calling for them. If there is any audible communication between animals going on, especially young cubs, we keep the vehicles switched off so they can hear each other, as ranger Rex Miller was doing in the background here, but thankfully the cub’s mother was already on her way back to fetch it, and upon hearing her contact calls the cub scampered on to rejoin her.


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This is one of the few photos that I can’t quite remember, but I’m 99% sure it was in a sighting on the northern bank of the Sand River, in which the pride had just killed a big kudu bull in the thickets. Tom Imrie was the other ranger there with me. Visibility was limited but after we waited a while, some of the cubs came and lay out in the open. This was also during a time in which I was using portrait style far too much for photographs. 90% of the time shooting in landscape is what you need.


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2011 was also when both adult Tsalala females still had tails. The older Tailless female was still off with the Breakaway pride (later renamed the Mhangeni pride) and would only rejoin much later. This sighting had Richard Ferrier and I think John Holley in it as the other two rangers. The lionesses had killed something, again near the Sand River, and were fetching the cubs to the kill. This was also the first of the two 2011 litters; the second litter had yet to be born, or if they had been, were still too small to be taken to kills.


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All 8 cubs from 2011 can be seen here. The fourth of the younger litter is tricky to see; it’s just behind the left hand one of the front three. The lionesses had been walking with the cubs but had decided to go off to hunt, so left them on this termite mound. In retrospect it wasn’t the wisest place to leave them, as they were visible for a long way in each direction.


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Still being relatively new to the photography thing, my settings were almost always wrong. My white balance was far too warm here (hard to recover if the file is a .jpeg), and I also didn’t think to include the reflection. It’s from situations like these that you learn the most though, as a return to the rangers room to show off the photos you’re so proud of will often be met with raucous laughter from your fellow guides as they point out what your settings should have been. It’s all in a fun, competitive spirit, and your biggest mistakes almost always result in the biggest improvements.


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This sighting was as serious punctuation mark in the Tsalala Pride’s turbulent history, as the young Breakaway females (foreground) had met up with their mothers, and the original Tailless female – who had been caring for them for over 18 months – was rejoining her daughters. No one knew what the outcome was going to be, but this encounter, although relatively peaceful, certainly wasn’t the joyous reunion many of us expected, and as it turns out, the four young lionesses did end up going their own separate way.


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Simple things can provide endless hours of entertainment for young cubs. This small marula tree acted as a jungle gym for more than an hour as all the cubs in the pride took turns chasing each other up, down and around it.


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As I’m sure you can see, this was shortly after the Tailless female (younger one) had lost her tail to hyenas. Her stump (right of picture) had not fully healed, and she had only just rejoined the pride after spending quite a long time away from them while she recovered, even hovering at death’s door for a couple of days. If one looks closely you can see that she was still suckling her cubs, as one is nursing in this photo. One can also see the size difference between the two litters from 2011 starting to be more evident, as the cub doing some grooming is far bigger than the one it is licking.


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Totally unexpectedly, the old Tailless lioness gave birth to a single cub in 2012. Although lions generally abandon single cubs, she made an attempt to raise this one, possibly realising that it would almost certainly be her last litter. Sadly the cub disappeared at only around 4 months, but we still enjoyed some wonderful viewing of this tiny lion while it was with the pride.


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Probably my favourite picture of a Tsalala lion. This was in the same sighting as the top three photos. I don’t know what the cub was looking at, but its expression is, at least for me, enchanting.
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Argentina Tshokwane Away
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Credits to Johan de la Rey - Leopard Hills.

The young Othawa male standing over the female kudu they killed last night.

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Chris Offline
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(03-26-2018, 01:41 AM)Tshokwane Wrote: Credits to Johan de la Rey - Leopard Hills.

The young Othawa male standing over the female kudu they killed last night.

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I feel that we can al agree that he is transforming into a very strong male lion,
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United States NCAT33 Offline
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( This post was last modified: 03-26-2018, 02:57 AM by NCAT33 )

Is the Othawa male part of a coalition? Whose his partner if yes?
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Argentina Tshokwane Away
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(03-26-2018, 02:54 AM)NCAT33 Wrote: Is the Othawa male part of a coalition?

No, not at all. He's still with his natal pride and he's alone, his brother was killed by hyenas a long time ago, more than a year. 

If his fathers can hold on to their land long enough for him to grow bigger and stronger, then he'll have a better chance to find some partner/s, otherwise it's going to be difficult.
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