We’re still enjoying a wonderful time here at Satara in the Kruger National Park, and still finding more to marvel at every day!
We’re still enjoying a wonderful time here at Satara in the Kruger National Park, and still finding more to marvel at every day!
Do the photographers in the family have about 5,000 images each to sort and name and save as smaller images?!!!! You were so dedicated to share your journey with us, and with each post I smiled – as long ago I lived near a small community called, ‘Satartia’ – close enough in spelling to see that Satara’ in your posts and feel as if there was news from home. Satartia was the Indian world for ‘Pumpkin Patch’ – I was told…
Happy New Year to you and your beautiful family – and may we all find ways to dote on the earth and her creatures… You’re doing your part! Thank you!
You’re as kind as always, Lisa – thank you! We’re glad you could follow along on our visit to Satara, which apparently is a corruption of an Indian word meaning “seventeen”. Before the Kruger Park was proclaimed, this stretch of land was being divided into farms by an English surveyor and his Indian assistant, and Satara was the seventeenth farm (or so the story goes).
Happy holidays! I must say I am enjoying your galleries from Satara!
Thanks John! Hope you had a wonderful Christmas!
I watched a short clip online of a herd of elephants chasing off a pride of lions. Quite impressive!
Always exciting to see lions and elephants meet!
I lobe your picture and the knowledge you have about all the animals! You show all side of Africa! Thanks Dries! 😀
It really is our privilege and pleasure, John!
A never-ending joy! 🙂 And the lowly dung beetle is perhaps the most useful.
janet
Our world would’ve looked a lot different if it weren’t for the dung beetles!
And I think people forget that. Also without buzzards and vultures and a variety of “icky” insects. 🙂
I’m very impressed with the variety of species. Fantastic! Happy Holidays! 🙂
Merry Christmas, H.J!