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Re: Taking Tembe Kids on Safari with Thulani
Posted: Sat Feb 13, 2016 4:31 pm
by Richprins
Nice escape pic!
Your elephant is also getting gloser and gloser...snap!

Re: Taking Tembe Kids on Safari with Thulani
Posted: Sat Feb 13, 2016 5:04 pm
by Toko
The next morning starts with an early coffee outside the tent chatting to this wolf spider. It teaches me that its very high cephalothorax is good for burrowing.
And another coffee visitor

Re: Taking Tembe Kids on Safari with Thulani
Posted: Sat Feb 13, 2016 5:16 pm
by Toko
An elephant feeding site, ellies go for the roots and they like them - Zulu Podberry (
Dialium schlechteri) a characteristic tree in the sand forest!
It's still greyish and coldish
The roads are imprinted with all kind of tracks, here an interesting one: A leopard with cub on top of an elephant track

Re: Taking Tembe Kids on Safari with Thulani
Posted: Sat Feb 13, 2016 5:21 pm
by Toko
Some thick sand
and the recently burnt open woodland
The reedbucks often wander into the ashes looking for fresh fresh sprouts
A musth bull left his message here: "Hello

I'm in very good condition, follow my dribbles

"

Re: Taking Tembe Kids on Safari with Thulani
Posted: Sat Feb 13, 2016 5:33 pm
by Toko
Re: Taking Tembe Kids on Safari with Thulani
Posted: Sat Feb 13, 2016 5:42 pm
by Toko
A
Macrotermes castel in the thicket

and an antlion trap

Re: Taking Tembe Kids on Safari with Thulani
Posted: Sat Feb 13, 2016 5:51 pm
by Richprins
This is very good again, Dear, like a hidden paradise on our doorstep!
Didn't know you had so much bush knowledge?
That last reedbuck pic with the backlighting is very evocative!

Re: Taking Tembe Kids on Safari with Thulani
Posted: Sat Feb 13, 2016 9:40 pm
by ExFmem
Re: Taking Tembe Kids on Safari with Thulani
Posted: Sun Feb 14, 2016 4:36 am
by Lisbeth
Re: Taking Tembe Kids on Safari with Thulani
Posted: Sun Feb 14, 2016 9:50 am
by Toko
Tembe is a good place to get some bush knowledge: perfect prints everywhere on the sand roads, roadside vegetation not cleared, so you can touch the trees from the car, you can leave the car, noboday cares and the camp is just in the middle of natural sand forest.
Most of the area is thick bush where you don't spot animals easily, this draws your attention to spoor, alarm calls and other sounds
And some of their guides are just awesome, they just know everything, not only their birds

. Overnight price is incl. meals and guided drives, so you can choose whether or not you want to do your own learning trip or just relax enjoying what the guide will dish out of his knowledge. These guys are not the ones who only studied the wildlife in courses in some "college", they are people from the area who learned the bird calls and the plants when they were kids out in the bush herding cattle. Unfortunately this generation of guides will die out soon

.
Self driving in Tembe is something you should not do as a frist timer, you'll simply get lost there or stuck in deep sand when you don't know the area. Try to read the available map and translate it to what you see when you are out there

and you'll find yourself in the middle of some sand tracks in some state of confusion

but it enhances your photographic memory and spatial orientation skills
So next stop was Mfungeni pan
