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African Leopards

United Kingdom Sully Offline
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#31

Khwai River Botswana Safari: Leopards at Play

Kobus Saayman Reports:

When we left the Lodge this morning, we hardly realized that we were in for an absolutely wonderful final morning ...

We heard that a leopard had possibly been sighted and therefore headed straight to the area, hoping against hope that we could catch up with it.

We combed the bushes, scrutinizing the ground and trees as we ventured deeper and deeper into dense Mopane bush. And then we spotted - not one, but two leopards. Mother and her young cub were high up in a tree with their Impala kill.

We approached closer and closer and watched with amazement - and some amusement - as the two proceeded to start a game up there in the branches of the trees. They leaped from branch to branch, landing gracefully each time before starting off again, sure-footed and giving us more and more fabulous photographic opportunities. It was wonderful! 

We came closer, and ended up a mere 1.5 meters from them so that we could get images that were unobstructed by the dense foliage. The two leopards posed while we took full-frame photos of their heads and sometimes just an eye!

The interaction between mother and cub was enthralling and heart-warming and we were unable to tear ourselves away. In fact, the two kept us so busy that we remained with them until we finally simply and very reluctantly had to leave or miss our flight back home.

So, having experienced sightings and collected a treasury of images of Lions, Leopards, and even Cheetahs that are rarely seen here, it was no wonder that we left with a huge feeling of nostalgia and a determination to return. 

Until next time in this idyllic area ..


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United Kingdom Sully Offline
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#32

March 2014 » Finalist: Willem Kruger – Leopard scape


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United Kingdom Sully Offline
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#33

A lucky leopard in Kruger
Posted on 20 March, 2015 by Armand Grobler  in Animal Encounters 
Posted: March 20, 2015
 
The night sky was alive with millions of bright shining stars, no light pollution to hide their majestic glow. There was a subtle cool breeze whispering through the trees, almost as if welcoming us to its ‘humble abode.’ From my seat on a camp chair in front of the blazing fire, I could hear the eerie “whoop” call of a spotted hyena, the crunching and snapping sound of branches being broken by elephants browsing, and the distant call of jackals as they searched for one another in the complete darkness of night.
I must have fallen asleep because at 4:00am the alarm went off, screaming at me to get up. I got the camera ready, poured hot coffee into my favourite Kruger Park cup and departed for the Crocodile Bridge gate for an early morning drive. Today I had a ‘simple’ request – to see a leopard in a tree! Little did I know what was lying ahead of me that day.
The road would lead us on the ever turning paths between Lower Sabie and Skukuza along the magnificent Sabie River. We encountered elephants swimming in the water that morning, little ones splashing around chasing each other, big ones running, almost falling into the water. Sometimes we would see something poke out the water to realise it was an elephant completely submerged with only the tip of the trunk sticking out for a gasp of fresh morning air.

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*This image is copyright of its original author

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We came to a turn off point and driving slowly we saw nothing; no antelope, no monkeys, no birds, or insects, not even elephant poo on the roads! And as we took the final corner, there next to the road was a dead tree, and in that dead tree was a very lively leopard! I could not believe my eyes!

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*This image is copyright of its original author

This beautiful, majestic cat was less than 2 metres away from our car just, staring at me. For about 30 minutes we sat watching the leopard. She was so close to the car I could almost not take any photos as she could barely fit within the frame (I had a 150-500mm lens and I could almost count the legs of the fleas on her pelt).

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*This image is copyright of its original author

*This image is copyright of its original author

The leopard then quietly hopped off, walked in front of the car and melted away into the bush as she left us completely awe-struck and in disbelief.
- See more at: http://africageographic.com/blog/a-lucky...l8gIp.dpuf

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United Kingdom Sully Offline
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#34

Leopard feeding on a zebra foal – Kruger safari
Posted on February 4, 2011 at 7:25 pm.
Nick and Eric, ranger and tracker team at Pondoro, found a male leopard with a zebra kill on the morning drive on the 24th of January. I went there during the afternoon drive on the 24th and 25th and took these photos.

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United Kingdom Sully Offline
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#35

Kruger


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#36

 
 
 
 
Kruger National Park - at the Centre of South Africa's Soul
By Scott Ramsay |


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Leopard
Kruger National Park. One of the world’s most famous wildlife and wilderness areas. More than 360kms long, and 65kms at its widest. It covers more than 2 million hectares (or 20 000 square kilometres) of bushveld, savannah, koppies, kloofs, woodland, riparian forest and rivers.
Larger than many small countries, it’s a bastion of conservation and one of our country’s most valuable assets, socially, ecologically, commercially – and spiritually. (It’s one of the country’s most visited destinations – interestingly, the two top individual destinations in the country are both National Parks – Table Mountain, and Kruger!).
The past few days, I’ve been exploring the southern areas of the great park. And I feel enormously grateful to be here. I’ve been fortunate on my Year in the Wild journey to have explored some other jewels – I think of the Kgalagadi Transfrontier Park, or Mkhambathi Nature Reserve, or uKhahlamba Drakensberg, or iSimangaliso Wetland Park…or even Table Mountain National Park. All these are exceptional in their own right, and I feel privileged to have visited them.
But Kruger is still the one that stands out above them all. Why? Several reasons. First, it’s huge; the sense of space can only be rivaled by the Kgalagadi. Yet whereas Kgalagadi is predominantly semi-arid throughout, Kruger has so many different landscapes and habitats, and they all seem to stretch on and on and on, changing and morphing, always providing something new to marvel at.

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Rastah Nkuna on our walk
Second, the number of wild animals is something to behold. Kruger is teeming with wildlife, including the iconic species which grip our imagination: elephant, lion, leopard, hippo, buffalo, wild dog, rhino (white and black) and thousands of others which complement the big species. There are more than 300 tree species, more than 500 bird species, 147 mammal species, 49 fish species, 33 amphibian species and 114 reptile species…not to mention the thousands of insect species, including such wonders as the indefatigable dung beetle.

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This family of elephant blocked the road on my way back late one afternoon to camp. Didn't mind at all!

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Giraffes in dry river bed
These animals are living their lives largely free of man’s influence. For sure, there are fences on the western boundaries, and roads, camps, shops and tourist facilities, but for an industrialised and highly-populated country like South Africa, it doesn’t get wilder than Kruger. Almost  50% of the park is designated as “wilderness” – there is nothing man-made at all within these areas, while the other half is predominantly considered “primitive”, and has very few roads or artificial structures.
Finally, the animals and landscapes of Kruger inspire us. We come to Kruger to remind ourselves of the real reasons we ought to be proud of our country. These wild, beautiful animals are our fellow citizens, and they were here long before we were. (In fact, if “anyone” has rights to our country, it should be the wild animals.) They are symbols of our national heritage – they ARE our heritage. We come to Kruger to stop our money-grabbing and market-mongering, to slow down and to connect with what’s truly important: nature, our families and friends and our very own souls. If only we came here more often…
So as I drove into the south of the park a few days ago at Malelane Gate, and made my way to the pretty camp of Berg-en-Dal, set among granite koppies, I bumped into a “herd” of twelve white rhino…what a sight. I’ve never seen so many altogether. It was great to see them, especially considering the rhino poaching that has hit Kruger hard recently.

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Never seen so many white rhino before altogether...

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My hut at Berg-en-Dal
Kruger’s wild animals are conserved and protected 24 hours a day, and the several hundred rangers and staff have a massively difficult job. It’s worth remembering how much hard work and sacrifice has gone into Kruger – and still does.
In fact, it’s almost a miracle that Kruger ever came into existence. In the 1800s, it was considered absolutely normal to hunt as many animals as you wanted, whenever you wanted, and how you wanted. Those who opposed hunting were considered lunatics, such was the entrenched bloodthirst which prevailed at the time. Most of South Africa’s wildlife had been destroyed, and the “lowveld” was the last – albeit shaky –stronghold of the wild animal.
When the president of the South African Republic – Paul Kruger, after whom the park is named – initiated discussions in 1884 to declare a game reserve in the lowveld, he was immediately shouted down by parliament. He tried again and again, and eventually the Pongola Game Reserve was declared in 1894, Africa’s first.
Then in 1898, he signed into existence the “Gouvernment Wildtuin”, an area of 4 600 square kilometres between the Sabie and Crocodile Rivers, which was the beginning of the great game reserve of Kruger.  The president needed someone to look after it, and Lieutenant-Colonel James Stevenson-Hamilton was the man he called on.
Quite possibly, Stevenson-Hamilton had one of the toughest jobs ever in our country. He patrolled the tsetse-, bilharzia- and malaria-ridden area on his horse, avoiding lions, dodging elephants, and all the while kicking out hunters, squatters and fugitives.
He had no laws on which to call upon, for there was no such thing as a national parks act, or any environmental laws. Instead, he used his wits, his charm, his stubbornness and his undoubted love of the bush to inveigle and sometimes bulldoze the people standing in his way. He alone increased the size of the park almost ten-fold to over 36 000 square kilometres, an astonishing achievement, considering the lack of manpower, laws and money at his disposal. He had one goal, and that was the preservation of South Africa’s wildlife.
His staff eventually named him siKhukhuza, or “he who scrapes clear”, in recognition of his single-minded dedication to his job.
So I said thanks to Mr Skukuza as I drove around the south of Kruger, photographing its animals and beautiful scenery. I have seen all of the famous animals already in the last three days – elephant, buffalo, white rhino, lion, cheetah, hippos, crocodiles, fish eagle…and for the first time ever in Kruger, I saw a leopard. The young adult male was playing in a dry river bed, enjoying the late afternoon sunshine, not ten metres from our car. I couldn’t believe my luck…there are few animals more photogenic than a leopard. I whooped with excitement and took way too many photos.

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A big thanks to Stephanie and Christine Roberts who were staying at Berg-en-Dal, and who kept me company for the day. If it wasn’t for their sighting of the leopard the previous day, we wouldn’t have known there was a leopard in the area…and thanks to Stephanie who insisted we go back there! Sure enough, there he was…

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What a beautiful animal...
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United Kingdom Sully Offline
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#37


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I spotted this big male leopard early morning near Shimuwini Camp. He wasn't sticking around. He saw me, then ducked off quickly into the riverine thicket. But an impressive specimen, and probably the biggest leopard I saw in Kruger
 

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The big male leopard patrolling his territory near Shimuwini Camp. It's amazing how these animals melt into the bush. They disappear within a few metres of the road. I can understand why leopards are so revered and feared in many African customs.

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#38

Leopard Photograph - Serengeti Leopard 2 by Larry Linton

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#39

Serengeti


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#40

Leopard hauls reedbuk up acacia tree - Serengeti


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United Kingdom Sully Offline
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#41

I always knew the chances of seeing this elusive nocturnal hunter were slim and so was elated when our eagle-eyed guide spotted this stunning animal up a tree in the Serengeti.

A Leopard has been recorded hauling a 125kg giraffe (twice the Leopard’s weight) nearly 6 metres vertically up a tree! The Leopard blows my mind in every way – seeing it in the wild was incredible.


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United Kingdom Sully Offline
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#42

Leopard with kill in tree . Serengeti 2013 Aug - Paul Grobler |


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#43

Leopard Week.

Stealth..!
I followed this stunning female leopard for a few days as she hunted. At one point there were a few antelope behind my vehicle - the stalk was on..!



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United Kingdom Sully Offline
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#44

Photo from Wim van dem Heever


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#45

The Cubs..!
Yes we had leopard cubs on demand in Savuti..! They were exceptionally playful and the many hours we sat with them was rewarded with a stack of images.
What a privileged..!


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