Tag Archives: travel

Wonderfully Wild Mpila

Mpila, set high on a hill with sweeping views over both the Black and White Umfolozi Rivers, is the main accommodation base in the Imfolozi section of the Hluhluwe-Imfolozi Park. Apart from a single strand of electric wire strung high above the ground, designed to keep the elephants from coming into camp and digging up the water pipes, animals – including predators – have free access to the grounds. This of course make the place just all the more alluring to the de Wets!

This image of a spotted hyena licking our braai (barbeque) grid was taken on a previous visit to Mpila

Hyena in Mpila

Bridge over the Black Umfolozi

One of our favourite spots in Hluhluwe-Imfolozi Park is the bridge crossing the Black Umfolozi River on the road to Mpila Camp. There just always seem to be something of interest to find there!

This picture of a guided sunset drive about to cross the bridge was taken on a previous visit to Hluhluwe-Imfolozi

Wanderlust

 

Timeless Hluhluwe-Imfolozi

The Hluhluwe-Imfolozi Park is Africa’s oldest officially declared conservation area, and as such offers a wonderful escape to a piece of wilderness relatively unscathed by our destructive human nature. Good rains had been falling before our December 2016 visit, and continued throughout our six day stay, transforming the Park into a sea of greenery in stark contrast with the parched landscape we experienced on our previous visit in winter of 2015.

A walk in the Park

There’s no doubt that hiking is the biggest pastime enjoyed by visitors to the Royal Natal National Park. Walking through the mountains allows access to so many beautiful spots. We particularly enjoy the easy trails that lead from the Mahai campsite and visitor centre, like Otto’s walk and the trails to the Cascades and Fairy Glen.

This was the last installment on our December visit to Royal Natal National Park in the uKhahlamba Drakensberg. From here we travelled to Hluhluwe-Imfolozi Park in Zululand, and from tomorrow we’ll be sharing some of what we experienced there.

Drakensberg Birding

The varied habitats of the Royal Natal National Park provides excellent habitat for a wide range of bird species. We’ve already introduced you to the rare Bush Blackcap, which is often recorded in the reserve, and the Lesser Striped Swallows that shared our accommodation unit, but there’s so many other feathered inhabitants in the Park that we can dedicate a whole blogpost just to them – in fact, this gallery contains just a few of the more than 60 species we ticked during our December visit!

Breathtaking Mountains

Come rain or shine, and no matter which way you look, the mountain scenery at Royal Natal National Park, dominated by the magnificent cliff face of the Amphitheatre, will take your breath away!

Bush Blackcap

Lioptilus nigricapillus

Our December 2016 visit to Thendele in the Royal Natal National Park afforded us our first opportunity to photograph the Bush Blackcap, a rarely seen endemic South African bird with a very limited distribution along the Eastern Escarpment.

These small birds occur singly or in pairs in the dense canopy of mountain forests and their verges, moving down to coastal forests (and lush gardens) during winter. Breeding takes place in summer. They feed on fruits, berries and insects. The IUCN considers them “near threatened” due to a small population size (estimated at most around 5,000) and threats to their forest habitat.

Squatters at the lodgings

From the moment we arrived at chalet 27 in Thendele Camp in the Royal Natal National Park in December, we just loved the unit’s setting. And we were not the only ones, as a pair of Greater Striped Swallows were diligently building their mud-walled nest on the veranda, quite unconcerned about the humans sitting below them and watching them go about the task.

Drakensberg Dwarf Chameleon

Bradypodion dracomontanum

Just as we arrived at Royal Natal National Park in the Drakensberg for our visit in December, Joubert noticed this laid-back little chameleon resting an elbow on a fence post in the campsite at Rugged Glen.

drakensberg-dwarf-chameleon

Turns out he (or she) is a Drakensberg Dwarf Chameleon, a species found only in the Drakensberg mountain range in Kwazulu-Natal Province, where they inhabit sheltered forests and bushes in alpine vegetation at altitudes of between 1,500 and 2,500m and feed on small insects. They grow to a length of only about 14cm. Interestingly, dwarf chameleon females give birth to between 5 and 20 live young that develop in eggs inside the female (known as ovivivipary).

Rainbows in the mountains

While enjoying our December 2016 holidays in three of South Africa’s wild places, we experienced rainfall in varying degrees on a daily basis. In a country currently suffering through one of the worst ever recorded droughts, this was a real blessing, made even more special when the sun broke through the clouds at the end of a downpour to reveal beautiful rainbows, like this one at Golden Gate Highlands National Park (the photos really don’t do it justice).