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Showing posts with label hawk. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hawk. Show all posts

14 April 2015

Exploring the Addo Elephant Park

Addo Elephant National Park is the second largest wildlife reserve in South Africa after The Kruger National Park and is home to over 600 elephants. Mum and Mike have been there several times and have raved about it, so it was exciting to get to visit it.  It certainly didn't disappoint.

Priceless moments
  • Being inspired by lots of fascinating facts from Chrisèl who did a wildlife guiding course in The Eastern Cape just a few months before.
  • A wonderful sighting of a herd of elephant arriving and frolicking in a water hole, including the cutest youngsters.
  • An extremely close encounter with a female elephant and her calf as they ambled right past our car while parked at a dam.
  • Getting extremely excited when Chrisèl suddenly said "Leopard ... !"  Then a second later, she broke the spell by saying  "... tortoise."  It wasn't a leopard at all.  Just a leopard tortoise!  I then discovered from Chrisèl that there is such a thing as the Little Five: the elephant shrew,  buffalo weaver, leopard tortoise, ant lion and rhino beetle. What a great concept. You don't just have to be excited about big animals.
  • Watching two male tsessebes have a bit of a fight.
  • Sighting of the endangered Addo flightless dung beetle along the road.
  • Lots of sightings of Eland in large groups.  And cute warthogs eating on their knees.
  • Discovering that the park shop sold granadilla lollies.  Ice-cream sticks don't come better!
  • Staying at The Orange Elephant Backpackers and buying loads of fresh ingredients from a local shop and making an enormous salad to have with our babotie. 

Less happy moments
  • Walking out barefoot onto the lawn at the backpackers at dusk to do my meditation, then discovering on the way back that is was land-mined with multiple thorns and getting stabbed in both feet several times.  So weird that it didn't get me once on my way onto the lawn!
  • Discovering the local restaurant had Diemersfontein Chocolate Pinotage on its menu which we really wanted to try after hearing about it from Antony. Then being told they didn't stock it. Ah, the disappointment!! 
  • A ravenous but very stealthy mosquito accosting us the one night.

Pale Chanting Goshawk

Weaver

Black-headed Heron

Fiscal Shrike

Egyptian Geese

Fighting Tsessebe


Elephants, the reason the park is most famous...

... with beautiful babies too.






I love the symmetry of this one ...

... and this one too.

Zebra, always so beautiful.


Mum's favourite, the warthog.  So ugly, they're beautiful.

We loved the way they went onto their knees like this.

Me with my own personal wildlife guide!

27 December 2012

Birds (Nambucca Heads)

The farm where I spent Xmas abounded in birds.  I was ecstatic to see Regent Bowerbird - a beautiful species with black and gold plumage that I've wanted to see for ages.  Another new bird species for me was the Pacific Baza which was hard at work collecting twigs for a nest.  Dani took a great photo of an Eastern Spinebill - an extraordinary achievement with her 55 mm lens!!  The King Parrots that visited the farm in the early morning were also gorgeous and quite tame.  Colin, Dani's dad, is a great lover of birds and wildlife, and it was great to share his enthusiasm.

Regent Bowerbird

Eastern Spinebill (photo by Dx with a 55 mm lens!)

King Parrot

Pacific Baza collecting twigs

2 July 2011

Hike to Flint and Steel Beach (Kuring Gai National Park)

Inspired by Andreas and Ingrid's visit, I decided to do this hike myself.  And I'm really glad I did.  The beach is secluded and tranquil with beautiful colours in the rocks, especially at dusk.  Well worth the somewhat steep climb back out again.










Dusk light





Feathered friends

I took my 400 mm lens with me as an afterthought and am glad I did as some of the local birds put on a good show.








Proof I was there

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