We were stoked with the sighting and the temptation was to hang around a little longer in case the cheetahs reappeared, but we had been in the car a few hours already, so Lower Sabie toilets took priority.
We reconvened in the Lower Sabie car park and decided to travel a little up the H4-1 towards the Lubyelubye area in case the local lions were around and they were, however they were laying scattered around in the riverbed sleeping. Eventually 1 lioness woke up and looked at us for a few seconds before going to back sleep.

- 14.jpg (159.06 KiB) Viewed 691 times
A few km further up the road we encountered a massive traffic jam and the road was virtually gridlocked.

- 15.jpg (107.31 KiB) Viewed 691 times
I managed to chat to a passing OSV driver who had worked his way through the jam and he indicated that it was a leopard sleeping, but that the visual was bad. This chaos wasn’t my cup of tea, even though it was a leopard, so after a brief discussion, we decided that it wasn’t worth the stress, turned and ducked back down towards Biyamiti.
In the south of the park, due to the amount of day visitor traffic, the “other” lane is never going to be kept open, because nobody is going to sit behind parked cars with no visual for hours and if they overtake and suddenly get visuals, they aren’t going to turn a blind eye to the sighting because the “lane” has to be kept open, so it’s naïve to think otherwise. (Besides the fact that many OSV drivers in the south behave like taxi drivers and seem to spend their time parked in the middle of the road at busy sightings).
The drive back to Biyamiti didn’t produce anything new except a couple of ground hornbills cruising next to the road.

- 16.jpg (201.23 KiB) Viewed 691 times
Our plan for the afternoon was just to relax around camp, backup pictures, sort out any packing required for our long drive back towards KZN the next day, and to have our traditional last night in KNP wood fire/braai.

- 17.jpg (151.54 KiB) Viewed 691 times