Tag Archives: vacation

Unusual

Nature has sculpted a whole bunch of unusual rock formations – on both a large and small scale – from the sedimentary sandstone here at Golden Gate Highlands National Park in South Africa.

(you can click on the images to see them enlarged in a gallery)

We’re participating in the online adventure travel magazine LetsBeWild.com‘s Wild Weekly Photo Challenge for bloggers. This week’s challenge is “Unusual“.

Golden Gate: 27 December 2012

A visit to a National Park is not always about the “hairies and scaries” – these photographs were taken while walking around the Golden Gate Highlands National Park today:

Golden Gate: 26 December 2012

We arrived at another of our favourite South African wild places this morning: the Golden Gate Highlands National Park, located in the eastern Free State Province, where our base for the next three nights will be the charming Glen Reenen Rest Camp. Again we will give a proper report back soon, but for now we will try to post one or two pictures daily while we are here.

Today’s weather was overcast, rainy and cool but came sunset Golden Gate was lit in magnificently warm hues.

Golden Gate

Ithala Game Reserve: 23 December 2012

And so the sun sets on our last full day here at Ithala this time around. Of course, we are already planning our next visit!

Ithala sunset

Tomorrow morning we’ll take one last short drive before taking the road back home to Pretoria for Christmas. Luckily for us we are leaving for Golden Gate National Park, another favourite of ours, on boxing day.

 

We wish you and your loved ones a blessed Christmas!

Ithala Game Reserve: 22 December 2012

Good evening again from Ithala Game Reserve!

On our afternoon drive today we came across this female white rhinoceros with her calf in dense shrubbery – we liked the shot so much we wanted to share it as our “pic of the day”.

White rhinoceros (Ithala)

Long may they and their kind have a home here in Africa!

Surprise

This is a likely outcome when you surprise a temperamental elephant bull – he charges, kicking up dust as he goes!

(photo taken near Mopani Rest Camp in the Kruger National Park, South Africa)

For more of this week’s challenge: Surprise!

Ithala Game Reserve: 21 December 2012

We got this picture of “Africa in the sky” this morning at Ithala – does this gap in the clouds also remind you of the shape of the African continent, as it did us?

Africa (Ithala)

Ithala Game Reserve: 20 December 2012

We are blessed to be spending the next four nights at one of our favourite South African nature destinations: Ithala Game Reserve in Kwazulu-Natal, South Africa.

Having left Pretoria just before 03:00 this morning, and driving the 483 kilometres to Ithala’s entrance gate at leisurely pace , we arrived just after 09:00. The reserve is luxuriously green thanks to a lot of recent rain – it started raining again within hours of our arrival. Sitting here typing on the verandah of our chalet in Ntshondwe Camp, darkness has descended around us and the bush is alive with the sounds of the African night –  it’s great to be back!

We’ll be posting a full report on our return to the city but here’s three of today’s photo’s as a teaser.

Exploration

We arrived at Ithala Game Reserve this morning, and will be exploring the area along winding routes like this one for the next four days (you can click on the image for a clearer view):

We’re participating in the online adventure travel magazine LetsBeWild.com‘s Wild Weekly Photo Challenge for bloggers. This week’s challenge is “Exploration“.

Marakele National Park

The aptly named Marakele National Park is most certainly a “place of sanctuary” to much of South Africa’s indigenous wildlife, as the translation of the Tswana name suggests.

Located in the Waterberg mountain range in the Limpopo Province, there are two main reasons for the park’s extraordinary diversity of plant and animal life. Firstly, it is located in the transition zone between the country’s drier western and wetter eastern climatic zones. Secondly, it has an impressive altitudinal range between 980 and 2100m above sea level. Thus the park has a rich variety of habitats housing a wide variety of fauna and flora – many of which is endangered or unique to the area, and as a result it forms a core area of the Waterberg Biosphere Reserve.

The Waterberg cycad (Encephalartos eugene-maraisii) is one example of a rare plant species finding sanctuary here at Marakele. This plant was named in honour of naturalist, author and poet Eugene Marais who spent much of his life here in the Waterberg, his work inspired by the beautiful landscapes, fascinating wildlife and warm people of the region.

Marakele may be home to Africa’s Big Five, but pride of place certainly goes to the population of Cape Griffon vultures that have made their home among the towering cliffs – at 800 breeding pairs it is one of the biggest colonies of these endangered birds left on the planet.

The best place to see the vultures are from the Lenong viewpoint located high on a cliff edge, where they soar by in breath-taking proximity. The very narrow road leading up to the viewpoint may be one of the steepest and most hair-raising drives in South Africa, but the spectacular views from the top is a sight to behold and treasure.

 

 

The Park was originally proclaimed in 1986 (then named Kransberg after a prominent peak in the Waterberg range) and has been continuously expanded to its current size of almost 650km². Accommodation is available at Tlopi Tented Camp while the Bontle Camping Area provides decent facilities for caravanners and campers. Guided activities are on offer, and other facilities include a hide next to a waterhole that provides excellent opportunities to photograph birds and game, and two rustic picnic spots.

Visit Marakele National Park and you will soon realise that humans too can find sanctuary from the humdrum of everyday life here.

Sunset over Marakele National Park