Conscious of our low fuel, we decided
to take our time getting up this morning and take a leisurely drive
along the Voi River Circuit, where we found a small herd of Gerenuk,
including a very energetic youngster, who leapt and bounded around.
|
Boing!!! |
|
Boing!!!...The little Gerenuk catches some air. |
From there we headed along the Pipeline Road for one last look and
came across a pride of five Adult Lions lying under bushes around
90yds from the track. We photographed them for a while and sat back
to watch them. Vehicles came and went, as every tour guide for miles
around tried to guarantee a good tip. Eventually, when we were alone
but for one tour van, the Lions wandered over beside us and spent
some time with us before crossing the track and heading into the
distance. We felt very privileged that they accepted our presence
enough to come and spend time with us.
|
Lioness resting in the shade of a bush. |
|
Everybody needs hugs! |
|
Beautiful Lion Face. |
|
Family Portrait. |
|
The Maneless Male could be a descendent of the infamous "Maneaters of Tsavo" |
|
Grooming the King. |
|
Standing Watch behind the King. |
|
Head-rub greeting. |
After the Lions, it was time to head
off. Back at the Voi Gate, we stopped to purchase some souvenirs at
the shop and the girl in the shop told us that our Landrover is
exactly the same colour as the one the Lion researchers use, so that
is probably why they accepted us. She said she has been out with the
researchers a few times and the Lions often approach them closely.
From Tsavo East, we headed to Voi for
some fuel and then drove round to Ngutuni, where we booked in for
three nights. After three nights camping in the bush, we were
delighted to be able to have a shower and a cold Tusker!
|
Elephant Yoga by the Ngutuni waterhole. |
From our balcony, we watched as more
and more Elephants arrived at the waterhole. There were around fifty
or more, with huge bulls, sub-adults and several tiny babies. If you
want to see pure joy, stick a good waterhole in front of several baby
Elephants! What a fantastic sight they were. There were push and pull
games, splashing, rolling, piling on top – every Elephant game
going. Among the adults, there was some argy-bargy over access to the
best drinking water and some of the adolescent males were putting
themselves about. One in particular was bullying younger babies until
the adults put him in his place.
|
Baby Elephants playing in the waterhole. |
|
The school bully. |
In the distance, a huge herd of Buffalo
sat resting. Some of them came in for a drink and that caused some
aggro with the Elephants. There were moments when it looked like a
pitched-battle between the Elephants and Buffaloes was about to break
out over rights to the waterhole but eventually things calmed down.
Well that's the good and the utterly
amazing but what about the bad?
Unfortunately, we do have to mention a
couple of incidents which left a sour taste with us today.
As we drove along the Pipeline Road
this morning, we spotted two tour minivans around 100 metres off
track; something that is illegal in Tsavo East, to protect the
fragile environment. As we approached, they sped off: we suspect
because they thought the green Landrover might be KWS Rangers coming
to sort them out. Their tyre tracks showed clearly that they had
driven right up to the Lions, to within less than 3 feet! (you can see the tyre tracks next to the Lioness in the first picture above).
This was not the worst incident of
today, however. After we had put our cameras down at Ngutuni this
afternoon, many of the Elephants had left the waterhole and we were
downloading our images when we heard a load “crack crack”.
Looking out from the balcony, we saw a young man in jeans and a
blue-hooped shirt standing on the terrace, deliberately clapping his
hands loudly in a pattern clearly intended to simulate the sound of
semi-automatic gunfire. This had exactly the effect the young
braggart was trying to impress his mates (or girl) with: it cause a
mad panic at the waterhole, as around fifteen Elephants and several
Buffalo and Zebra stampeded into the bush in terror. That was around
two hours ago and no animal has come within a thousand yards of the
waterhole since. Some people are just a complete waste of DNA.