Saturday, 29 October 2011

Exams, Birthdays, unbearable heat, oh and 2 leopard sightings in one morning!


It has been a full on few weeks since my last blog and it is almost impossible to write down everything that has happened but i will try my best.

We are now 6 weeks in to the course and spent week 5 writing our final Eco training exams which involved a 2 hour theory paper on everything we had learnt in the first 5 weeks and a 1 hour practical assessment out in the bush. My exam went really well and i managed 88% which was awesome. But my practical was a little difficult as i was 2nd to go in our rotation which meant i started the drive in an unknown location and one which was full of mopane trees and little else. Unbelievably i didn't see a single animal and only heard 4 birds call in the hour. As you can imagine this made talking about everything in the bush pretty difficult! I managed to link as much in from vegetation to birds and from poo to mammals as i could. I was pretty thankful to come to the end of it and passed all the exams and assessments with a final score of 80% which is pretty good and in the upper end of the group. Huge relief that it is all over and now we can all relax a bit!

We rounded off our time in Selati with an awards ceremony, written and produced by sarah and myself. Everyone received an award for what they had become best known for. I was lucky enough to receive the worst volleyball player award! As we have a volley ball court on the dried up river bank outside camp! very well deserved i must say!

The final weeks at Selati provided us with some awesome game viewing (although not when i really needed it!). And we had 5 rhino (white and black) encounters, including mother and calf, as well as lions, elephant, genet and bush babies. Mainly the Leopard that continued to escape our grasp and much to our frustration we had one in our camp several nights running!


A week ago we moved to a new camp - Karongwe. Which is just an hour west of Selati and the transfer was in our open top landy's so it was a little wind swept to say the least! Karongwe is a commercial reserve with about 7 different game lodges on it. There are all of the big 5 here although the Buffalo are in a breeding pen right in the north so we are unlikely to see them. The camp is awesome and our tents are pretty big, none of this hitting your head on the roof of your tent anymore which is a nice. We even have 2 shelves each to unpack! What a luxury!! I am still sharing with Sarah, who is really nice. Also english, also went to oxford brookes to study business and also went to harnas 3 years ago where i met her there! small world! 

It was my birthday on the day we arrived and so we went out for the obligatory sundowner where we watched the sun set over the Drakensburg Escarpment  with the hippos playing in the waterhole in front of us! Savannah in one hand and very happy days!

Karongwe has already been full of surprises and we are only 1 week in. The focus of the next 3 weeks here is to recap on everything we have learnt and enhance our tracking skills. Day 2 has been the highlight were we went out on a drive and by listening to the radio (which the guides from the lodges use) we heard about lions and cheetahs. We raced over to the lion sighting and waited our turn to view. After crashing through the bush we came across a pride of 7 lions including a mating pair. The lions were very relaxed and didn't seem to mind us being there, we sat with them for about 20 minutes and it was awesome to see them. Next on the radio was cheetah so off we went again and found 2 male cheetah just off the road in the bush, so we walked into the sighting (guide with rifle of course!) and managed to get within just a few meters of these 2 wild but very habituated cheetahs.They were two males in a coalition and looked like they had just had a good feed. Another awesome sighting and to see lion and cheetah in the same day is almost un heard of.

Karongwe is very different to the wild selati where little roams there and no tourists exist. Karongwe does have many tourists although we don't see them too often. But due to that and the use of the radio the animals are pretty used to people and easy to find. This does take some of the thrill and excitement away but it also provides us with fantastic viewings. 

Last weekend was a scorcher and we hit 45 degrees in the sun. I think the only time i have come close to that is in dubai where we could escape to the air conditioned car, house, building!! Not our here in the wilds of africa. We had to sweat it out and carry on learning and going out on activites in the heat! Luckily the instructors took pity on us and drove us 20 mins down the road to a lodge where we could watch the rugby world cup final (very average game) and take a dip in their pool! It was a bit of light relief before heading back to the sweats of camp! The next couple of days were similar and people have started to feel the effects. Water intake is at an all time high and rehydration salts are in well use! Finally the heat has cooled to a balmy 36 degrees!  at least there is cloud cover now so that provides some escape!

Just yesterday we were very lucky indeed as we headed out on our morning game drive as usual. We headed to the northern end of the reserve, it was a cold and damp morning which was a refreshing change from the crazy heat. We drove down one particular road and came across a beautiful female leopard lying in the tree like all perfect leopard sightings should be. Sadly she got up and jumped down before we had a chance to take photos. But we felt very lucky to catch her, it was our first sighting of leopard in the 6 weeks we had been on the course. So we were happy with our sighting and headed back south towards camp. Chris (our instructor) out of no where shouts Leopard! of course we thought he was joking, there is no way we could see 2 leopards on one morning! But there he was a beautiful big male just strolling through the bush! He was really relaxed and so we could spend about 10 minutes watching him. Highlight of the course!!

Leopard, Lion, Cheetah, Rhino (black and white) so its just buffalo to go to complete the big 5!

The group are all in good spirits despite a couple of tifs here and there which is normal when 17 people spend 6 solid weeks together in each others company!

Life is still good in the bush, off out leading a game drive this afternoon so hopefully we come across something good.

Huge thanks for all my birthday messages, i managed to get into my Facebook to read well over 100 messages which was lovely to receive.

Love and hugs to all. I should be in more contact on the 10th november as we have our 5 days leave then!

xx

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