Another OSV coming from Skukuza had pulled up next to us on the bridge, blocking the traffic. Several of his guests were having a particularly hard time spotting the Leopard, but we gave them some assistance and eventually they got onto it. We were keen to head back to the waterhole now, but were boxed in so had to patiently wait for a chance to get out of the scrum.
Then Lyca realised that her camera battery was flat.

I reached onto the back seat to get another one out of her camera bag while she removed the dead one from her camera. As I handed it to her I noticed out of the corner of my eye the OSV take off veryquickly. I subconsciously recognised this as unusual since they are normally quite sedate as they roll away from a sighting, but was too busy helping to solve the non-functional camera situation to give it another thought. It was only when Lyca went to take another photo that the alarm bells went off in earnest.
"She's gone!" Lyca stated in a most perplexed tone. I raised my binoculars and saw a Hyena standing below the tree, but no Leopard. Where was she? Had she bailed when the Hyena arrived? Then the penny dropped...
I pulled out from behind the bus, cleared the bridge, then hung a u-turn to head back across to the waterhole carpark. As we left the bridge and the waterhole came into view I briefly looked to my right.
"I think she's at the waterhole" I said with very little conviction. There was an odd shape there which my brain could not match with what I expected to see, but I thought it had spots. The next chance I got I looked again, and this time my brain figured it out. If its possible for your heart to race and sink at the same time, then that's what mine did.
"She's got something" I informed Lyca.

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I pulled into the short track leading to the already-packed carpark, stopping at a place that afforded us a clear, albeit slightly distant view. If we went any further our view probably would have been obscured by either cars or vegetation.
The Leopard's efficiency was outstanding. By the time we were in position she already had the Impala dead, and soon started dragging it towards the river. In the pictures you can see that her lower half is wet, so she must have ended up in the water during the surprise attack. There had been little time for a stalk so she must have spotted the Impala in a vulnerable position, launched out of the tree and sprinted straight over to the waterhole. If we had stayed put we would have had a front-row seat at the most amazing sighting of our lives, though still may not have gotten any good pics if it was as swift an attack as we think.

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As she disappeared down into the riverbed we took advantage of being out of the scrum and drove back to the bridge. She dragged the carcass right across the river and up the other side, resting for a few moments before hoisting her prize up a completely different tree and out of sight.
And just like that it was over! We took a few deep breaths and started talking madly about what we had just witnessed. It was so unfortunate that we had missed the actual kill, but what a special sighting none the less!
Given that the Leopard could spend the next few hours feeding in the tree out of sight, we decided to bid her a fond farewell and head back to Skukuza for breakfast. We were ecstatic! All the cars we passed on the way saw us looking like this.
