Tag Archives: wildlife

Biyamiti Bushveld Camp, Kruger National Park

Our most treasured memory of Biyamiti takes us back many years while visiting with our good friends, the Ristows. A pride of lions caught some hapless prey animal just after sunset in the riverbed in front of camp. Soon after, a pack of hyenas starting mobbing the kings of the jungle and tried taking over the kill, only to have their hysterical, blood-curdling giggling silenced in a most impressive fashion by the booming, window-rattling roaring of the lions. It was a night-time African symphony that will remain fresh in our memories forever.

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Biyamiti Bushveld Camp is beautifully located on the bank of the seasonal river of the same name, in the far south of the Kruger National Park. This is one of Kruger’s most popular camps, and it is often a hard task to book accommodation there even a year in advance. It’s a small camp, with only fifteen 4- or 5-sleeper, self-catered accommodation units, most offering a view over the river bed in front of the camp and all very privately situated. Bushbuck make themselves at home on the jackalberry-shaded lawns, and a wide variety of birds provide the background music throughout the day and night. There’s no restaurant or shop in Biyamiti, adding to the peaceful atmosphere.

Herd of elephant in the Biyamiti River in front of the camp

Herd of elephant in the Biyamiti River in front of the camp

Biyamiti cottage

Biyamiti cottage

This is one of the Kruger’s most prolific game-viewing areas, and as an added bonus the 22 kilometres of riverine road that leads to Biyamiti is only accessible to guests actually staying in the camp, ideal for those who don’t like sharing their big-five encounters with throngs of other tourists all jostling for the best view. Additionally, guided walks and drives are available and the night drives especially come highly recommended.

The Biyamiti-area has two very scenic highlights to offer. The first is the causeway over the Biyamiti river, on the gravel S114-road between Malelane and Skukuza, where a little weir and several rock pools ensures a reliable source of water year round to which a wide variety of birds, reptiles and big game is drawn throughout the day.

Biyamiti scenery

Biyamiti scenery

Biyamiti weir is a beautiful but dangerous place

Biyamiti weir is a beautiful but dangerous place

Biyamiti scenery

Biyamiti scenery

Another treasure is a hilltop viewsite, only about two kilometers from camp, providing a panoramic vista over a broad bend in the river below. This is an ideal place to breathe in a spectacular African sunset before taking a slow drive back to camp and still be in time for the gates closing.

Biyamiti viewsite

Biyamiti viewsite

Biyamiti viewsite

Biyamiti viewsite

Biyamiti is a tranquil slice of game-viewing heaven and certainly deserves its popular reputation.

The Biyamiti at its confluence with the Crocodile River

The Biyamiti at its confluence with the Crocodile River

Companion

Exploring South Africa’s wild places is always nicer when the experience is shared with good company!

Companion

Pictured here is Joubert and his friend Louw getting acquainted with one of the bushbuck that have found a safe, predator-free home inside Letaba Rest Camp, in the Kruger National Park.

“Companionable” is this week’s photo challenge from WordPress

Olifants Wilderness Trail, June 2013

Through our eyes

A small group of people are inspecting a dung-covered thorn-bush out in the African wilderness, the sun having just peeked over the eastern horizon, listening enchanted to their guide explaining the scene: “Long ago, the hippo lived on land with the elephant, the rhino and the buffalo. But Hippo complained bitterly to the Creator that his skin was far too sensitive for the African sun and pleaded to be allowed to live in the water. Crocodile wasn’t at all pleased with this arrangement though, fearing that the bulky hippo would eat all the fish in the river. Hippo then promised to spread his dung with his tail so that Crocodile could check that there was no fish bones in it. But the crocodile was still not convinced, as he’d have to go onto dry land to check Hippo’s dung, so Hippo put Crocodile’s mind at ease by saying that the rangers would check the dung on his behalf. And this is what we’re doing now, just checking that Hippo is keeping to his agreement with Crocodile”

My brother Niel and I arrived early morning on Saturday 15th of June for our annual brothers-trip to the Kruger National Park. We’d slowly make our way up to Satara Rest Camp that day, before joining the Olifants Wilderness Trail on Sunday afternoon at Letaba Rest Camp. Lots of time for relaxed game-viewing and photography along the way, and Kruger delivered the goods as always.

At 15:00 our Trail Guides Aaron and Louis meet up with Niel and I and the six other participants with whom we’ll be sharing our much-anticipated wilderness experience for the next three nights. It’s a two-and-a-half hour drive to the base camp, with frequent stops to appreciate the scenery and rich bird and animal life for which the Kruger Park is so renowned, and by the time we arrive darkness had already engulfed the small rustic camp.

The unspoiled African wilderness quickly makes friends of strangers, and there’s nothing to help the process along like a camp fire – or bush TV as Louis describes it because it’s so hypnotic. In the light of the dancing flames and with the grunting of hippos in the background, Aaron explains our schedule for the next three days and goes through some basic safety pointers for walking among dangerous wild animals. There’d be two days of walking, each starting with an early wake-up, coffee and rusks before dawn. At first light we’d drive a short distance into the wilderness before setting off on foot, spending four to five hours in the veld and enjoying a light picnic breakfast at a scenic spot, before returning to base for lunch and some quiet relaxation. The afternoon walks would be at a slower pace, taking in the setting sun from a beautiful vantage point, where after we’d return to camp for dinner before relaxing around the camp fire again. We’re also introduced to Shadrack, the shy camp caretaker and the cook responsible for the hearty traditional South African meals we’d enjoy for the next couple of days.

When walking in the bush, the focus shifts from the big hairy scary creatures to the smaller features that would normally go unnoticed while driving through the Park, although there’s always a good chance of encountering big game along the way. Easy to understand therefore why your heart would start racing when a scrub hare unexpectedly jumps up next to your feet while walking through the tall “adrenalin grass” next to the Hlahleni stream!

The Olifants Wilderness Trail has been running since 1979, and the little base camp is as rustic today as it was then. Four A-frame huts, each with two beds, provide accommodation to the trailists, who enjoy their meals and each other’s company at the communal boma and fireplace which has a commanding view over the Olifants River and the Lebombo Mountains. At the back of the camp are the pole-enclosed toilets and hot-water showers. There’s no electricity (or cellphone reception) at the camp, so in the evenings and early mornings paraffin lamps add to the camp’s peaceful atmosphere. This is wilderness at its uncluttered best, and a rich variety of birds and animals visit the camp and surrounds throughout the day.

Sitting atop a large boulder next to a deep river pool, watching the sun set over the Olifants while hippos are snorting and splashing just metres away, was the absolute highlight of our Olifants Wilderness Trail experience; an abiding memory that will remain with us forever.

All too soon the time came to return to civilisation. The mood on the vehicle was a lot more sombre on the way back to Letaba, and it was with heavy hearts that we said goodbye to Aaron, Louis and our fellow trailists.

Kudu calf

Kudu calf

Bateleur

Bateleur

Giraffe bull

Giraffe bull

For Niel and I it was time to head back to the city, but Kruger had one more surprise in store for us on the way to Phalaborwa Gate. Masthulele, currently the biggest of Kruger’s Tuskers, accompanied by two younger bulls, was enjoying a drink from a pool in one of the dry river courses. How nice it was to bump into this familiar old friend!

Masthulele

Masthulele

Crocodile at Sable Dam

Crocodile at Sable Dam

Curves

I took this photograph of an elephant bull with widely splayed tusks just outside of Letaba Rest Camp on our way out of the Kruger National Park yesterday, after my brother Niel and I had completed the Olifants Wilderness Trail (more on our fantastic trail experiences to follow later!).

Curves

“Curves” is the current photo challenge from WordPress

Fleeting

A fleeting glimpse of a sounder of bushpig rushing across the road south of Cape Vidal, in the iSimangaliso Wetland Park

Fleeting

“Fleeting” is this week’s WordPress photo challenge.

Camouflage

Thanks to their dappled coloration, lithe bodies and stealthy habits, leopards are supremely camouflaged, even when out in the open. We found this one lazing away the midday heat in a marula tree near Nhlanguleni, in the Kruger National Park.

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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 “Camouflage“.

Isilo of Tembe

In the presence of majesty

It’s mid-afternoon at Tembe Elephant Park, and we’re watching a number of elephant bulls milling around Mahlasela Pan. Occasionally the peaceful scene is disturbed by two or more of the younger bulls mock-fighting and testing one another’s strength with heads held high and tusks and trunks interlocked, sending nervous nyalas and impalas running for cover…

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Slowly, royally, a magnificent tusker moves out from behind a clump of bushes to drink from the pan. The day before, when our guide Patrick asked us what we’d most like to see at Tembe I was very quick in replying “Isilo please!”. And now, perched in the game-viewing vehicle, we’re speechlessly admiring South Africa’s biggest living tusker – a wish granted, a prayer answered. We’re looking upon one of the most awesome animals in all creation and nothing could wipe the smile from our faces.

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Isilo. “The King”. What an apt name.

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We watch enthralled as Isilo moves around the pan, stopping often to quench what must be a massive thirst. The old gentleman is looking frail; at an estimated sixty years of age, he’d be having trouble eating the woody vegetation that has sustained him all his life. His tusks must weigh about 60 kilograms each, and in excess of 2.5 meters in length – what a strain it must be on the neck to keep those massive ivory pillars from scraping on the ground as he moves. Yet there’s no feeling of pity. This is the King!

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Taking his leave now of the pan and the younger company around it, Isilo ambles westwards into the woodland. We follow alongside, hoping to spend as much time in his audience as he will allow. Occasionally he stops to enjoy a tender creeper or succulent young shoot.

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My heart skips a beat as Isilo turns towards us, moving ever closer, gently and peacefully passing within touching distance of the admiring humans in the game-viewing vehicle. No one says a word. There’s no need to; the expressions on our faces tell the full story.

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As we follow a while, Isilo slowly walking along the sandy track into the sunset, there’s no denying that we’ve spent a tiny fraction of our lives in the presence of majesty. Sala kahle Isilo. Stay well.

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We went to Tembe Elephant Park in search of Isilo, and it was every bit the exhilarating experience we had hoped it would be. But Tembe turned out to be so much more: have a read here for more of our impressions of this South African treasure.

If you’re interested in South Africa’s big tuskers, you can see more pictures of these magnificent animals, from the Kruger National Park this time, here and here.

Tembe Elephant Park

In the far north of Kwazulu-Natal province, on the border with Mozambique, lies a uniquely beautiful, but little known, wilderness gem. Diminutive suni antelope forage along the sandy forest floor, a reminder that this area was an ancient seabed millions of years ago. Magnificent elephants carrying impressive ivory amble through the thickets, undeniably the star attractions of this show, while lions loudly proclaim their rule over the marshes and pans.

This is the Tembe Elephant Park.

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Leopard, buffalo and rhinoceros (both black and white) complete the “Big 5”, while giraffe, plains zebra, hippo, warthogs and several kinds of antelope, including massive numbers of nyala and impala, have found sanctuary here. The incredible variety of habitats found in this area – sand forests, extensive stands of palms, dense woodland, open bushveld, the expansive Muzi marshes and seasonal waterholes – abounds with birdlife, and over 340 species have been identified here already, including some rarities like the African Broadbill.

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For centuries humans and elephants have shared this piece of Maputaland, although never harmoniously, as conflict arose around shared water sources and when elephants raided the crops on which the people relied. This changed in 1983, when Chief Mzimba Tembe set aside 30,000 hectares of tribal land as a refuge for the last remaining free roaming elephants in this part of the continent. His community agreed to resettle outside the reserve so that its boundaries could be fenced and animals that had long been exterminated from the area could be reintroduced. Not only was this a visionary investment in the wellbeing of his people, but Chief Tembe also gave a precious gift to the people of South Africa and the world. Today the reserve and lodge still belong to the Tembe people, who benefit from employment in the tourism and conservation sectors, the natural resources protected there and the profits generated through tourism.

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The elephants now number more than 250 animals, and Tembe has become renowned for the large number of elephant bulls carrying impressive ivory. As an added bonus, these beautiful animals are extremely relaxed in the company of people – be ready for some close-up encounters when coming to Tembe!

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Upon arrival around noon, the warm welcome we received from the officials at the gate immediately made us feel right at home. Formalities completed, the lodge was informed of our arrival and within minutes our transport had arrived. Only 4 x 4 vehicles are allowed on the extremely sandy tracks inside the reserve and we were therefore escorted to a secure parking area near the gate where we could safely leave our vehicle.

Transferred into the game-drive vehicle we departed for the nearby lodge, but almost immediately encountered a massive elephant, named Ucici, walking along the road in our direction. Guide Vusi switched off the engine and we sat absolutely mesmerised as the huge tusker came confidently ever closer, eventually stopping a mere meter or two away from us, before moving to the side of the road so that we could pass, not in the least perturbed by our presence. What a welcome!

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At the lodge, some of the staff members had gathered to greet us on with traditional song and dance. After checking in and enjoying a nice cool drink of fruit juice we were escorted to our accommodation – a beautifully decorated, and very roomy, safari tent with en-suite bathroom, to which our luggage had already been delivered – to settle in before lunch and the afternoon game drive.

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Not even an hour has passed since our arrival, and already the scenery, wildlife and warm people of Tembe have made a deep impression on all of us. We had three nights to spend here, and it was clear that we were going to enjoy every minute of it.

We quickly settled into the lodge’s leisurely routine. An early morning wake-up call is available, but being early birds you’d have to be up pretty early yourself if you wanted to wake up the de Wets! Before setting off on the early morning game drive at first light, guests can help themselves to a selection of cereals, toast, fruit salad and yoghurt to put pay to any hunger pangs that might have arisen through the night.

Clambering into the game-viewing vehicle everyone gets a blanket to keep the worst of the cool morning air at bay before heading into the wilderness, the guides scanning the sandy tracks for fresh signs of predators. Our guide Patrick and soft-spoken tracker Nkosi was born and raised in the Tembe area and thanks to their excellent knowledge of the plants, animals and culture of Tembe, and their warm and friendly nature, every drive turned out to be a most pleasant experience.

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Half-way through the morning drive the guides will park at a lovely spot where hot coffee, tea and rusks are by now a very welcome treat before heading back to camp. Have you ever enjoyed your morning tea accompanied by the roaring of two magnificent wild lions just meters away? Thanks to Tembe we can now say that we have!

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On arrival back at the lodge, guests head for the dining area where a full English breakfast, nicely rounded off with a bran muffin or two, will be served.

Guests then have the late morning and early afternoon to laze around the camp – a small library, a couple of reed enclosed lounges and a sparkling pool are available for guests’ enjoyment or you could head to your secluded safari tent to relax on the veranda. You can even arrange for a massage or you could also ask your guide to deliver you to the hide at Mahlasela Pan to spend a couple of hours there watching the animals and birds come and go. We enjoyed walking around the camp grounds taking in the rich fauna and flora.

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Everyone gets together in the dining area for lunch at around 2pm. Who knew that Kudu Burgers are that delicious!? The lodge staff will go out of their way to ensure that every guest’s specific dietary preferences are met, so don’t worry that you’ll go hungry if you like vegetables more than meat!

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It’s time again to head off into the bush in search of Tembe’s feathered, hooved, tusked and clawed inhabitants. It was during one of our afternoon drives that we encountered the magnificent elephant bull Isilo, South Africa’s biggest living tusker. Just as the sun reaches the western horizon there’s time to park off again in another beautiful location and enjoy a cold refreshment while taking in the unparalleled beauty of an African sunset. With darkness now swallowing the wilderness the spotlight comes out for the drive back to the lodge, picking up the eye-shine of some of Tembe’s nocturnal animals and birds along the way.

In the Background (Isilo)

Isilo of Tembe (click on the image to see more of this magnificent animal)

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On arrival back at camp, a very inviting camp fire awaits the guests and quickly everyone is relaxing around it, excitedly chatting about their day as if they were old friends who have known each other for years. As soon as dinner is ready the camp staff comes around, inviting everyone to their tables. More mouth-watering meals; kudu wors and steak, impala kebabs and chops, all served with crisp home-grown vegetables, salads and maize porridge, the African staple, to be enjoyed under the curious gaze of the bush babies clambering around the trees that surround the dining area. Of course you’d expect a delicious desert at the end of such a delectable meal, and the Tembe staff won’t disappoint in that arena either!

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Three guests were lucky enough to celebrate their birthdays at Tembe during our stay. After dinner, the lodge staff presented them each with a beautifully decorated cake accompanied by the obligatory “Happy Birthday” songs in English and Zulu. After the meal, it’s time for entertainment in the form of traditional Zulu song and dance performed by artists from the Tembe community.

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Retiring to your accommodations for the night, you will find the beds neatly turned down, the electric blankets heating it all cosily, and on your pillow a small chocolate and short note with information about Tembe’s people and animals.

Now that’s a routine we could all get used to. Lying in bed at night, listening to the far off wailing of a bush baby or hearing a tree snapped nearby by a foraging tusker, city life and its daily grind is but a distant memory…

Be warned – leaving Tembe is bound to be a lump-in-the-throat affair. Being seen off by the staff in front of the lodge, wishing you a safe trip and hoping to see you again soon, you’ll already be making plans to return to this beautiful place, its amazing wildlife and the warm, hospitable people who are so proud of their culture and their reserve, and what they have achieved here.

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DeWetsWild is proud to include Tembe in the portfolio of destinations we offer our guests and clients, secure in the knowledge that they’d be treated like royalty for every minute of their stay at South Africa’s most affordable full service game lodge in a “Big-5’ game reserve, while enjoying breath-taking encounters with legendary wildlife and a glimpse into fascinating local culture.

When you start putting together your bucket list, be sure to leave a space for Tembe near the top!

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In the Background

We’ve just returned from a long weekend at the beautiful Tembe Elephant Park in the north of Kwazulu-Natal Province. In this photograph  South Africa’s biggest living tusker Isilo is seen next to a waterhole he was sharing with a number of other, smaller, elephant bulls. We’ll share more on Tembe and the magnificent Isilo with you in later posts.

In the Background (Isilo)

“In the background” is this week’s photo challenge from WordPress 

Strolling in Tembe

We spent a lovely long weekend in beautiful Tembe Elephant Park in the far north of Kwazulu-Natal Province. This picture shows a pathway leading through Tembe’s thick indigenous woodland.

Pathway in Tembe Elephant Lodge

Pathway in Tembe Elephant Lodge

We’re participating in the online adventure travel and photography magazine LetsBeWild.com‘s Wild Weekly Photo Challenge for bloggers. This week’s challenge was “Hiking” and we’re very happy to have been awarded another honourable mention!