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Lions of Manyeleti

Poland Potato Offline
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#91

(02-26-2020, 02:56 AM)Tr1x24 Wrote:
(02-26-2020, 02:29 AM)Potato Wrote: Lion sightings have been plentiful. The Nharu Pride have moved further south away from the Main Dam area due to prey not being so reliant on this large water source for now. The Red Road male is often seen with them and this confident, large male continues to dominate the central Manyeleti. The Koppies Pride are mating with the Orpen Males and are frequently found around Honeyguide. The Orpen males seem to have lost control of the Skorro pride and don’t even move into the Kruger much these days. The Mbiris have been found a lot around Tintswalo lodge and the oldest lioness seems to be battling this summer and is losing a lot of condition and often lagging behind the Pride. The Talamati have not been seen much in the south but all 9 cubs are still doing well.

So did the Sumatra and Hercules males takeover Scorro pride? They where seen mating with few lioneses near Orpen Gate.

So were Mbiri males, so I do not know.
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Poland Potato Offline
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#92

Orpen males

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Poland Potato Offline
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United States sik94 Offline
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#94

Birmingham Pride 

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#95
( This post was last modified: 03-08-2020, 03:03 PM by sik94 )

https://www.facebook.com/aruna.pavithran...689576322/
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#96

Junior Nkuhuma rests between bouts of mating near Orpen Gate north of Manyeleti.
Image by amca0807, Feb 28, 2020


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#97

https://www.facebook.com/caughtinprovidence/videos/376799669695462/
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The Red Road Road male and a Nharu female mating at Manyeleti. With Buddy under the weather and unable to give Junior solid back up, the Red Road male has, for the moment anyway, the run of central Manyeleti. Posted by beingelemental March 10, 2020


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Junior Nkuhuma checks out potential meals at Honeyguide in Manyeleti. Posted by Estrella Brand, Feb, 2020


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https://www.facebook.com/aruna.pavithran.../?sk=h_chr
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The Orpen Males

JR NKUHUMA & Buddy

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Poland Potato Offline
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THE LIONS OF TINTSWALO: GREEN SEASON
As the green season reaches its lushest, the Lions of Tintswalo continue to amaze guides and guests alike -- as their movements, mating and magnanimous presence in the Manyeleti make game drives all the more enthralling.



The bush is thick and beautiful, and there’s plenty of cover for hunting, so it’s very rare that the lions are hungry and without a kill. The days are also hot and humid, so the lions tend to sleep a lot -- and then hunt in the cool hours of the night.

The huge Scorro Pride are still residing in the north of the reserve -- all eleven of them -- as they rule over one of the largest and most remote regions of the Manyeleti. But there is a new threat in their midst -- two new, big, unknown males who are pushing in from the Orpen section. They seem to be putting some pressure on the big Orpen males further south of the Koppies area. That’s not to say that the new males have taken over. The Orpen males are still mating and ruling with the koppies pride of four lionesses. They managed to father a cub with the Koppies Pride recently, but the cub seems to have passed away.

Closer to the lodge, we have got the resident Mbiris -- eleven lions in total now. They seem to have lost one of the original females who went out on her own -- or died. We have not seen her since. The young Mbiri males are reaching teenage size, and just like any teenager, they are causing lots of trouble in the pride by fighting over kills and generally overpowering their mothers and aunts at the dinner table. It’s time they move on and formulate their own territory.


Further south of the Mbiris, the Nharu Pride have joined up with the Red Road Male. It looks as though they are moving further south towards the main camp.

 
The mighty Talamati Pride remains in the deep south of the reserve, with all nine cubs, five lionesses, and the one northern Avoca. And finally -- further to the south and west -- the two Shemongwe females are still active around dixie dam.

Food has been abundant in the Manyeleti, with lots of rain, lots of young antelope to hunt, making the competition between the prides and predators less of an issue. The buffalo, on the other hand, are fat and healthy, and able to ward off most attacks by the lions. But as the rainy season passes, and the pans begin to dry up and the grass fades, the Lions of Tintswalo will once again wage war on the buffalo -- and we will be in for some amazing sightings.


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I wonder who that 2 big males will turn out to be. I guess soon they will be seen in Manyeleti as they will follow Skorro pride and we will find out.
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United States Matimbalani Offline
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(03-11-2020, 06:08 PM)Potato Wrote: THE LIONS OF TINTSWALO: GREEN SEASON
As the green season reaches its lushest, the Lions of Tintswalo continue to amaze guides and guests alike -- as their movements, mating and magnanimous presence in the Manyeleti make game drives all the more enthralling.



The bush is thick and beautiful, and there’s plenty of cover for hunting, so it’s very rare that the lions are hungry and without a kill. The days are also hot and humid, so the lions tend to sleep a lot -- and then hunt in the cool hours of the night.

The huge Scorro Pride are still residing in the north of the reserve -- all eleven of them -- as they rule over one of the largest and most remote regions of the Manyeleti. But there is a new threat in their midst -- two new, big, unknown males who are pushing in from the Orpen section. They seem to be putting some pressure on the big Orpen males further south of the Koppies area. That’s not to say that the new males have taken over. The Orpen males are still mating and ruling with the koppies pride of four lionesses. They managed to father a cub with the Koppies Pride recently, but the cub seems to have passed away.

Closer to the lodge, we have got the resident Mbiris -- eleven lions in total now. They seem to have lost one of the original females who went out on her own -- or died. We have not seen her since. The young Mbiri males are reaching teenage size, and just like any teenager, they are causing lots of trouble in the pride by fighting over kills and generally overpowering their mothers and aunts at the dinner table. It’s time they move on and formulate their own territory.


Further south of the Mbiris, the Nharu Pride have joined up with the Red Road Male. It looks as though they are moving further south towards the main camp.

 
The mighty Talamati Pride remains in the deep south of the reserve, with all nine cubs, five lionesses, and the one northern Avoca. And finally -- further to the south and west -- the two Shemongwe females are still active around dixie dam.

Food has been abundant in the Manyeleti, with lots of rain, lots of young antelope to hunt, making the competition between the prides and predators less of an issue. The buffalo, on the other hand, are fat and healthy, and able to ward off most attacks by the lions. But as the rainy season passes, and the pans begin to dry up and the grass fades, the Lions of Tintswalo will once again wage war on the buffalo -- and we will be in for some amazing sightings.


*This image is copyright of its original author


*This image is copyright of its original author


I wonder who that 2 big males will turn out to be. I guess soon they will be seen in Manyeleti as they will follow Skorro pride and we will find out.

Could be the Mbiris roaming further into the Orpen Gate area after abandoning Timbavati.
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Tr1x24 Offline
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(03-11-2020, 06:39 PM)Matimbalani Wrote: Could be the Mbiris roaming further into the Orpen Gate area after abandoning Timbavati.

I think those are more likely Hercules and Sumatra males who where seen in that area recently. Mbiris are further north, east of Ngala and  Shindzela into Kruger. I doubt they would leave Mayambula pride.
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Poland Potato Offline
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( This post was last modified: 03-12-2020, 01:30 AM by Potato )

Both this duos were seen around Orpen Gate recently. I do not think distance between current Mayambula's pride territory and Orpen Gate is so big that it couldn't be controlled by one coalition. I do not think Mbiris would have to abandon Mayambula pride in order to take over Skorro pride.
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