Beware..... A Long Post
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Pair White Rhino |
After Palapye the next week or so would be spent away from
the hustle and bustle of 21st Century life. OK the two nights spent
in Kharma Rhino Sanctuary were not that
“away from it all” but we would have no electricity and would be cooking
on open fires. We had stopped at KRS for a night back in 2013 and liked it so
we found time for 2 nights this time round. The camp sites have water and hot
showers but not a lot lese. What you do get is wild camping with the animals
all around you. The Sanctuary is also home to about 61 Rhino, both the White
and Black but both are very elusive and often difficult to see. It is a huge
place with miles of bush track to drive often in thick sand. The whole place is
guarded by the Botswana Army against poachers that seem to be prevalent
everywhere. On our first drives we managed a couple of rhino plus lots of
antelope, Zebra and giraffe. The bad news for us was I managed to run over a
buried metal spike that destroyed on of the tyres. We had 2 spare but feel we
needed 2 spare so it was a trip 50 miles of so back to Palapye to try to get e
new one. It also happened to be a Bank Holiday so most places seem to be closed
but we did find one, albeit a slightly different size and had it fitted. Back
to KRS for some evening drives and a superb experience of finding about 15
Rhino heading to a waterhole from many directions in the setting sun. Most of
them seemed to be females with calves including some very small calves. It is
not often that you can see that many Rhinos around.
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Impressive (and Valuable) Horn on this female |
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Mum and Calf walking into the sunset |
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What a cute baby |
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Jan and Rhino |
The next day was a long drive of 350 kms to Central Kalahari
Game Reserve. 350 Kms may not seem too bad but on African roads it is quite a
long time plus the final 100kms were over sand, often deep, to get to our first
nights camping at Sunday Pan. We had been to CKGR back in 2013 for 4 nights and
this time is was going to be 5 in total. CKGR is totally wild camping where you
have to take everything with you. There is no water, fuel, electricity or food
available so all have to be carried in and all rubbish taken out with you..
There are also no fences so animals are totally free to wander where ever they
like. Humans stay on the few tracks that are around in park the size of Wales.
Camping is allowed in several places and these pitches and unlike anything else
around. The camp site may only be 1 pitch possibly with luxuries such as a long
drop toilet, hole in the ground with a wood fence around it plus a bucket
shower, same structure with a bucket you hoist up on a frame. You have to take
your own water of course. Often the next pitch may be 10-15 Kms away or
further. Animals are all around you including serious predators such as big
cats like lions, leopard and cheetah plus hyena and wild dogs. Among the rest
are lots of antelope, a few elephants and many of the smaller animals plus of
course lots of birdlife. The area is very dry and is just sand with scrubby
vegetation. We are here in the dry season when rain is almost unheard of but
like most Brits, we do like to take the weather with us and yes it rained
during our first night here but that cleared up by early morning and it soaked
quickly into the sand.
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Our campsite overlooking Sunday Pan |
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Hornbills |
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Ground Squirrels are everywhere |
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Ardwolf up close |
Sunday Pan has a waterhole but unlike last time we were here,
the waterhole had very few animals around. The adjacent Pan (The pans are
ancient lake beds now dried up and are flat expanses of shorter grass) In the
wet season they can get boggy but this time of year they are hard) had quite a
few animals with Impala and Gemsbok (Oryx) in abundance plus quite a few
Giraffe wandering through. In the early morning and evenings you could also
find Jackals, Bat Eared foxes and Other rarities. We were lucky to see and
photo a couple of Ardwolf one evening.
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The rare and elusive Aardwolf |
This was a first for both of us to find
these rarely seen creatures. We also managed to find an African Wildcat one
evening in the grass as well, although the sighting was not the best. Our camp
overlooking Sunday Pan also have many birds visit us looking for scraps and
crumbs as well as water that we put out in a shallow dish. We also managed to
get a friendly Slender Mongoose come into the camp and spend several hours there
inspecting the car and us. It didn’t seem at all frightened.
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Mongoose |
At night, with the
aid of a powerful torch we managed a White-faced Scops Owl plus a Barn Owl
flying around.
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What are you looking at? |
After two nights in Sunday Pan it was time to move on and
our next camp was at Deception Pan, an area made famous by Mark and Delia Owens
in the book “Cry Of the Kalahari” where they write about the time spent in this
valley researching animals. We took a long route as the camp was not far away
and went via Passarge Valley where we camped 2 years ago. Here we managed to
find a pair of male Lions sleeping under a bush in the sun. They didn’t seem
worried by us being just 10 metres from them and carried on snoozing and
cleaning themselves, probably after a hard nights hunting. We left them to
continue down the valley to the camp we stayed at before then returned back the
way we had come. The lions were still sitting under the same bush which allowed
more time to watch them. We were with them for about an hour in total and they
only moved to get either more shade or more sun.
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Sleeping lion |
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OK time for a wash |
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Don't come any closer |
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Impressive Male Lion |
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Pair of Lions |
We have now travelled again from Deception Camp site all the
way down Deception Valley to our 3rd camp of the 4 we will be
staying in. This one is bleak and desolate up on a ridge above another Pan.
Valleys and Ridges imply hills but that is not really the case. Yes the valleys
are lower but we are talking 10-20 feet height difference. Surrounding each of
the valleys are small ridges that are barely noticeable in height difference.
What is more obvious is that the vegetation in the valleys is often poor
shorter grass with the occasional small copse of trees, on the ridges it varies
from sparse woodland to scrubby longer grass with bushes which is exactly what
we have here at Phokoje Campsite. It is also very windy today so we are settled
using the car as a windbreak and sitting in the sun. Very few animals are
around in the heat of the day so we will continue looking for animals later.
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Phokoje Camp in daylight |
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Phokoje Camp at night |
Cooking is done over an open wood fire. The wood we have had
to transport in along with everything else. It is not allowed to collect wood
in CKGR. So far we have had lots of Braai (BBQ to the Brits) but also have
managed a veggie curry and Pasta
Arrabiata. Yesterday I tried bread again with some success. Ok the fire was a
bit hot so it burnt a bit on the bottom but the rest was good. All in our
Potjies Pot.
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Nightime in camp |
We are now in Maun and finished our journey across the
Kalahari. I finished the first part by saying we were at Phokoje and it had a
biting wind. Well little were we to know but that night turned out to be one of
the coldest for many years with temperatures down well below freezing. When we
got up the bowl of water we had left out with a sponge in was frozen solid. It
stayed cold for the next night as well in Motopi Pan. We had been here before
and had seen lions so we were hoping again. No lions though but certainly cats.
The first one was a simple “moggie” in a tree trying hard to hide and catch
birds.
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Not your ordinary Moggie |
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This wildcat may look cute but go near it and try |
It may look like “tibbles” but you would be warned not to touch it as it
is an African Wild Cat, another rarely seen animal. When driving back from that
encounter we saw the back of another larger cat but the sun was directly in
front so we didn’t get a good sighting. What we did find at that time were its
tracks and we believed we had a leopard close by. After sitting in the shade of
a bush for 30 mins or so by the waterhole sure enough, out popped a leopard on
the edge of the long grass. It checked us out then came to the waterhole so
another great sighting.
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Leopard in sunset |
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Leopard |
As we put, we are now staying in a hotel in Maun for a
couple of days, partly to make use of the bathroom and washing facilities and
partly the internet as well as to replenish all the supplies we have used over
the last week and no where to get any more.
Hope you enjoy this long blog but the CKGR is very special,
very desolate and wild yes but it has a beauty and being with the animal with
no fences and very few other people is fantastic even if it was very cold at
night.
Please feel free to comment as we look forward to reading
them
Mike and Jan
5 comments:
This sounds amazing. The pictures are magnificent and you really gel like you are there. Jan's onesey was not o be missed! Keep enjoying and please keep posting the blogs very interesting reads.
Hi Carole
Jan says she would have loved a "onesie" but sadly for her and more for me that was my big zipped jacket she had pinched so I was the one freezing while trying to make coffee and pack all down so we could get out to see what game was around. Pleased you like it and we will keep posting as and when we have the internet.. Trust all good with you and Clive, all good here relaxing in a hotel for a few days while we wait for our new fridge to catch us up as it is being delivered to us from South Africas and should be here tomorrow in Maun
Sounds like you are having a great time. Love the photos and blog.
Sarah here, cannot get rid of this big sister name!
Hi Mike and Jan! It's so good to catch up with you and see the AMAZING photos. They really help to explain what it's like where you are. Looks like you were the only campers for miles. Hope you're enjoying the new fridge. Dennis and I are wondering where all this time is supposed to be that people said we'd have on our hands when we're retired. We're still feeling like we're on holiday.
Hugs to you both.
Great Work! Thank u for wonderful information.
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