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Lions of Sabi Sands

lionuk Offline
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Kambula subadults
Photo credit: dobrowsky


*This image is copyright of its original author

*This image is copyright of its original author
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United States BA0701 Offline
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(10-28-2021, 04:43 PM)Duco Ndona Wrote: I honestly have no idea what's up with that. 
The code that runs that part of the forum must have issues identifying my location or something. The Netherlands should be the correct one. 


Hmm. Othawa and Ximhungwe forming a pride together. Any new cubs will be raised as a mixture of the prides rather than just the continuation of one. So a new name would be fitting.
Othungwe? Ximhawa?

Or perhaps something to remember that the two prides used to be enemies in south african?

Vergewe pride. (Forgive)
Vergifnis pride. (Forgifnis)
Saam pride. (Together)
Vrede pride. (Peace)
Vriendskap pride. (Friendship)
Vyande pride. (Enemies)

Anyway. This is mostly me having some fun thinking of new names. So take it for what it is.

Do you use a VPN?
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United States BA0701 Offline
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I don't recall seeing this posted, even looked back to the middle of October, but it's possible I missed it. But this is some really good footage of the Othawa cubs, scrappy little buggers they are, being lead to a kill.




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Duco Ndona Offline
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Yes. But it does not seem to corollate with any of my locations. Or whether its active or not.
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United States BA0701 Offline
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( This post was last modified: 11-07-2021, 04:58 AM by BA0701 )

(11-07-2021, 04:15 AM)Duco Ndona Wrote: Yes. But it does not seem to corollate with any of my locations. Or whether its active or not.

Your originating country is gathered by IP V4 address, as each country has their own pool of public (routable) addresses (this is a list of public addresses assigned to the Netherlands: Netherlands IP Address Blocks - XMyIP - IPv4 IP Addresses by Country ). However, with IPV6, it is a little different, and typically VPNs have routers all over the world to help in maintaining higher speeds, and thus the public interfaces on those routers would have addresses indicative to the countries those routers are sitting in, which could likely be the cause of your IP address, and thus your registered location, changing so often. Typically your ISP would give the address your router receives that is either static (never changing hard coded) or dynamic (DHCP) with an extended lease, and those are typically private (nonroutable) addresses, so even if that address changes daily, the public address you are actually hitting the web with should not change, whatever your ISP is NAT'ing your private address to, unless using a global VPN service. Certainly the network portion of the public address from your ISP should not change, unless of course your ISP is your VPN service as well and is also a global entity.

Best way to test this, is by going to https://www.whatismyip.com/ when you are connected to your VPN and when you are not. When you are not connected to VPN, it is doubtful that address will ever change, as it is the public interface of your ISP. The host portion may change, as they without a doubt have a pool of addresses to pull from, but the network address (201.201.201.x/24 would have a network address of 201.201.201.0, and anything in the last octet, the X, would be the host) should never change when strictly using your ISP. All of that goes out the window when connecting to a VPN service.

I cannot speak to specifics, as I know nothing of your ISP's network, but this is a very high level generalization of how your originating country might change so frequently. I hope that helped, and didn't only serve to cause confusion. Apologies if I have done so. Now, back to our lion discussions, feel free to PM if you have any questions.
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Sweden Mangw Offline
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Does somebody know how many cubs there were in each litter of the kambula cubs born in 2018/2019, i only know of the litter born in 2019 was 5 cubs
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lionuk Offline
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Click 3:42 to see two Northern Avoca Males south of the Sand River as they follow the shade under a large torchwood tree.




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lionuk Offline
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Apparently Blondie is limping on this video.
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Gijima Offline
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(11-07-2021, 07:25 PM)lionuk Wrote: Click 3:42 to see two Northern Avoca Males south of the Sand River as they follow the shade under a large torchwood tree.





These two remind me of their southern brothers this year. Bold, brave and totally fearless. 

The reason why we all love following lions.
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lionuk Offline
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Tonpa Offline
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( This post was last modified: 11-08-2021, 01:17 PM by Tonpa )

It's happening 

https://instagram.com/stories/jamotyrrel...hare_sheet
by James Tyrell

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lionuk Offline
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Two Sub-adult males from the Talamati pride having a bonding moment.
Photo credit: Elephant Plains


*This image is copyright of its original author
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Croatia Tr1x24 Offline
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( This post was last modified: 11-08-2021, 02:21 PM by Tr1x24 )

(11-08-2021, 01:04 PM)Tonpa Wrote: It's happening 

https://instagram.com/stories/jamotyrrel...hare_sheet
by James Tyrell

Would be good to know where they are exactly, Kambulas with cubs and Bboys territory is in western sector and across the river in MalaMala around Rattray's Camp.

Hope Bboys and N. Avocas stay safe as these guys are roaming in Londolozi.
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lionuk Offline
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( This post was last modified: 11-08-2021, 04:06 PM by lionuk )

(11-08-2021, 02:14 PM)Tr1x24 Wrote: Hope Bboys and N. Avocas stay safe as these guys are roaming in Londolozi.
Yes, and hopefully the Mhangeni pride also stays safe as they have two cubs.
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lionuk Offline
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Tsalala female is showing sign of suckle marks..

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