Today we celebrate de Wets Wild’s first birthday!
Thank you to each and every one of our friends and followers; those who’ve read, liked and commented on our posts, for your encouragement and support over the last year!
de Wet Family

Today we celebrate de Wets Wild’s first birthday!
Thank you to each and every one of our friends and followers; those who’ve read, liked and commented on our posts, for your encouragement and support over the last year!
de Wet Family

We found this terrapin resting on his hippo-island beneath the Rathlogo hide in the Pilanesberg National Park
“From Above” is this week’s WordPress Photo Challenge.
On most occasions you’d encounter African Wild Dogs, they’ll be running somewhere, covering enormous distances in quick time. This photograph was taken near the Afsaal picnic spot, in the Kruger National Park.
We’re participating in the online adventure travel and photography magazineLetsBeWild.com‘s Wild Weekly Photo Challenge for bloggers. This week’s challenge is “Movement“.
We’ve enjoyed our final sunset of this Kruger Park visit, and wasn’t it gorgeous?

Tomorrow we’ll be heading back home to Pretoria, but only after we undertake a final game drive. Will Kruger have one more parting gift in store for us?
We’re participating in the online adventure travel and photography magazine LetsBeWild.com‘s Wild Weekly Photo Challenge for bloggers. This week’s challenge is “Birds of a feather” and we’re submitting a collection of photographs of some of the more than one hundred bird species we’ve identified over the last five days that we’ve been spending here in the Kruger National Park.

Blue Waxbill

Pied wagtail

Hooded (left) and Lappet-faced (right) Vultures

Tawny Eagle

Wire-tailed Swallow

Lilac-breasted Roller

Pearl-spotted owlet

White-crowned Lapwing

Yellow-billed Hornbill

Hamerkop

Helmeted Guineafowl

Ground Hornbill

Black Flycatcher

Fish Eagle

Kori Bustard

White-fronted Bee-eater

Bateleur
What a view!
Today we enjoyed our lunch at the picnic spot high above the Mlondozi Dam, from where we could watch pods of hippos and herds of elephants mingle while enjoying a cool drink ourselves.

Thick mist blanketing the Crocodile Bridge section of the Kruger National Park this morning

Good evening everyone!
An overcast start to the day at Pretoriuskop, but the cloud cover dissolved soon enough to reveal another glorious lowveld day here in the Kruger National Park. We visited a couple of dear friends at Skukuza before making our way here to Crocodile Bridge Rest Camp, where we’ll be spending the next four nights.
Crocodile Bridge Sunset (click on the image for a clearer view)
Yep, we’re back in the Kruger National Park – we simply cannot get enough of this paradise!
Tonight, we’re sleeping in historic Pretoriuskop Rest Camp. Depicted below is the nearby Ship Mountain (so named because it resembles the upturned hull of a ship) used as a landmark by transport riders and explorers more than a hundred years ago en route to Delagoa Bay (today’s Maputo in Mozambique).

If our internet connection allows, we’ll again try to post a picture or two on a daily basis while we’re in the Park, and there will definitely be a full report back when (unfortunately) we have to return to the city…
Back to the largest green canyon on earth

We headed for the Blyde River Canyon again over Easter 2013 and had a most enjoyable time, as always, being out in nature. In June 2012, we based ourselves at Forever’s Swadini Resort in the lowveld portion of this beautiful nature reserve, and so this time around we spent three very comfortable nights at their Blyde Canyon Resort up top on the escarpment. While the climate and surroundings of the two resorts differ markedly, both are well managed with good amenities and very definitely worth a visit.

Camping at Blyde Canyon

Comfortable chalets at Blyde Canyon
At Blyde Canyon Resort a number of hiking trails and viewpoints are available to enjoy the spectacular natural surroundings, offering chance encounters with small antelope and primates. During our visit the resort also arranged a very informative talk on snakes, including a number of venomous specimens being displayed, which turned all the more exciting when a live, wild juvenile cobra put in an appearance between the visitors lounging on the lawn – luckily the presenter was on hand to capture it for later release back into the wild.
The resort is an excellent base from which to explore other parts of the nature reserve, such as the Bourke’s Luck Potholes, named after a prospector who expected to find alluvial gold deposits there. Here, at the confluence of the Blyde (meaning joy) and Treur (meaning sorrow) Rivers, the force of the cascading waters carrying with it all sorts of debris have weathered away the bedrock to form a series of very interesting formations. A number of popular viewsites and the Echo Caves are additional attractions in the vicinity to consider.
On the way to Blyde Canyon, we enjoyed a couple of hours exploring the Sudwala Dinosaur Park – have a read here if you’d want to see more of this worthwile destination.