Twenty minutes on one tiny plane: Wednesday afternoon
we were back to the hot Motswiri airstrip to fly to our final camp in the Okavango Delta, Kwara Camp. Our pilot looked like he wasn’t old
enough to have a driver’s license, let alone a pilot’s license. Thankfully, only twenty minutes later, we
landed and were immediately greeted at the airstrip by our guide and
tracker.
One guide and one tracker for six game drives: As soon as he greeted us at the airstrip, our
guide Robbie and tracker AT peppered us with questions: What animals have you
seen already? How long have you been on safari? What do you want to see? In response, Giorgio
immediately began pestering Robbie about wild dogs and was disappointed to
learn that the reserve’s main pack had been spotted the day before and was last
seen moving west to a different concession.
Robbie and AT were not hopeful that they would return to Kwara during
our stay.
Wednesday night, we came
across a pack of six wild dogs on our first game drive. The drive started off quietly, with sightings
of giraffe, elephants, impala, and other grazers. However, the tranquility was interrupted
after forty five minutes with an announcement over the radio of a
wild dog sighting! All three of the Kwara Land Cruisers are
connected via radio, so unlike our self-drives through the South African and Namibian
parks hoping to catch a glimpse of a big cat or rhino, the guides constantly receive up to
date information regarding animal whereabouts.
Immediately following the radio announcement, AT hopped in the passenger
seat (more on this later) and Robbie sped up the Land Cruiser as we bounced along the dirt tracks in
the direction of the dogs. Along the
way, we spotted herds of impala jetting in every direction to escape the pack.
Heading through a small thicket,
we suddenly emerged out into the grass to see six dogs on the hunt, followed
by one of the other Land Cruisers in hot pursuit. (In case you’re wondering, the dogs don’t
seem to take any notice of the vehicles and continue about their
business.) At this point, our off-road
adventures began – the dirt tracks in the concession are hardly roads to begin
with, but since the dogs don’t stick to the tracks, neither did our guide. Robbie drove over trees, through the sand,
across rivers, and amidst thorn bushes to stay as close to the pack as possible in the
hopes of seeing a kill. Sadly,
our progress came to a standstill in a log-filled thicket the dogs had
traversed. If only we had been on
horseback we could have jumped the logs!
Given the dogs’ high speeds, we were unable to catch up, missing a chance
to see a kill. Wild dogs are believed to
be extremely effective predators, with an eighty percent success rate.
Friday morning, we
encountered a pack of four wild dogs less than twenty
minutes after the beginning of the drive. They were stationed in the middle of a large
clearing, with the remains of one unlucky impala. Although we had just missed the actual hunt
(Robbie estimated we were about ten minutes too late), it was
incredible to see the animals interact with one another – although the pack has
an alpha male and female, the dogs share the food, mock
fighting occasionally over the best cut of meat.
One hyena attempting to steal the kill: After watching the pack for thirty minutes, Robbie and AT decided to head out in search of other animals. However, they almost immediately encountered hyena tracks in the dirt, followed by the sighting of a spotted hyena peering out of the tall grass. He was quickly on the trail of the dogs’ fresh kill and we doubled back in the Land Cruiser as the hyena approached the four dogs, setting off a protracted battle for the ownership of the remaining bits of impala. If you look closely at the first photo below, you can see the dogs chasing the hyena away.
Saturday morning, our third and final day in camp, we encountered a pack of twenty-eight wild dogs! This is Kwara’s main pack that had headed west out of the concession the day before our arrival. Just as we were about to catch our flight out of the Okavango Delta, Robbie and AT spotted vultures circling – fresh kill! Once again, we were too late to see the hunt, but did find the entire pack, composed of fifteen puppies and thirteen adult dogs, digesting their meal in the shade of the trees.

Two elephants mock charging our Land Cruiser: One evening, two young bull elephants mock
charged the Land Cruiser, trumpeting their alarm calls. Although after Motswiri, mock charges aren’t
quite so scary.
Zero snakes but one excessively large spider and one scorpion in our shower: Giorgio killed not one, but two very scary animals who had made a home in our tent. He is already a spider-killing expert since arachnids are Steph’s primary fear. However, killing a scorpion was an entirely different, manlier task. It took him five minutes to work up the courage to kill the venomous creature inhabiting the shower and several blows with a shoe before the stinger stopped moving. We decided to postpone all further showers until our arrival the following day in Johannesburg. After all, as Giorgio’s dad always says, “only dirty people shower”.
One leopard spotted in the dark (but not in a
tree): We were privy to one of Kwara’s
first leopard sightings in several weeks when one of the guides tracked the cat
at dusk. In the Land Cruiser, we
followed the leopard through the woods, until he retired underneath a tree with
a small evening snack.
Six lions: Kwara
is home to several groups of lions and our guides tracked them on various
game drives. One evening, they found two bachelor
lions on the prowl through Kwara’s marshes.
The next day, we watched one lioness
stalking unsuspecting impala and zebra for fifty minutes, but sadly missed the
final kill.
The most exciting were two lion
cubs, both ten months old, waiting for their mother to return from the
hunt. The cubs aren’t allowed to hunt
with their mother until they are a bit older, so she had left them behind in
the shade of a tree. As the cubs waited,
they practiced their own hunting moves – “stalking” a few antelope in the water
nearby.
Our final encounter was one
lioness lying under a tree. After
leaving the cubs, our guides tracked their mother, who was found resting from
the afternoon sun before continuing her search for food.
One cheetah: Don and Susan hadn’t yet seen a cheetah on
their safari, so Giorgio asked our guides if they could track one. No problem!
A little under two hours later, they found a
gorgeous male resting under a tree after the day’s exertions.
Three Spaniards who think that no one else in the world speaks Spanish, that Giorgio is Hawaiian, and that Stephanie’s hair looks awful. They left the camp unaware that Giorgio, Stephanie, and other guests were privy to their conversations.
Zero fences around camp and two elephants visiting our tent in the middle of the night: We were used to hearing hippo noises at night, but elephants directly in front of our tent were an entirely new experience. Stephanie was shocked to sit up at three am and see anything at all without her glasses, let alone a large pachyderm directly in front of our porch, knocking over trees and munching on leaves.
One very rare aardwolf spotted so briefly that a photo is not available. Our tracker informed us that he hadn’t seen one for the past two years. Sadly, our request to see an equally rare pangolin went unfulfilled – AT mentioned that he had seen only eighteen of the creatures in his nine years as a tracker.
Countless zebra, impala, tsessebe, kudu, giraffe, hippo, jackal, birds, and many other wonderful animals that can quickly become second nature in the quest to find predators.
Third and final safari by the numbers: We are sad that our travels in continental Africa are now complete and so are our safari adventures. However, we have learned that the word “safari” means “journey” in Swahili and our adventures are now continuing in Madagascar!
#stephandgio (and #donandsusan)
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