A dawn start on 18 August saw us packing up camp, shopping for fresh rations (we have no fridge so have to buy daily or live off tins) and then leaving for
The next day, 19 August, saw us up again at dawn. We drove in the half light to Mandavu Dam some 8 miles away for a breakfast of muesli and tea whilst watching hippo and crocodile in the water. Rock hyrax scampered through the undergrowth within feet of us. As the sun rose we drove on, seeing little except more elephant, until the afternoon. Then, at Nyamandhlovu Pan (a well known haunt to Mike Moody and me from years gone by) we watched growing numbers of game coming down to drink, risking the hunger pangs of the three resident crocodile in the process. A small group of hippo had adopted the Pan (about one hundred metres wide) as their home and lay submerged in the centre. Fifteen giraffe drank quietly. At intervals of 30 minutes or so small herds of some 20 elephant came down to drink and then dawdled around the edge of the pan, intermingling with the ease of old friends. In all we saw over one hundred elephant at this pan in the space of three hours. Several kudu gracefully but timidly approached to drink but a couple of young adolescent bull elephants charged them like young hooligans at a seaside brawl, trumpeting with ears outstretched and tails held rigidly behind, to chase them away. Impala came and went with little fuss and dodged the lurking crocodiles. Yellow billed hornbills ate undigested seeds from the elephant dung. We left with reluctance just before dusk to find our lodge in Main Camp before the gates closed and supped in the small restaurant to save cooking uninspiring tins of processed food.
We rose an hour before dawn on 20 August, our last day in the Park, so we could be back in the bush as the sun rose. It was very cold. Ian’s thermometer registered just over 6 degrees Centigrade (it rose to 34 degrees by noon) and we shivered in the sharp wind as we sat silently in a hide watching for game. The bird life was prolific but few animals came to drink and then we heard cheetah had been seen some miles away so we set off in pursuit as Tony, who flies back to the UK tomorrow was longing to see one. Our search was fruitless however so we packed and left for the three hour long drive back to Victoria Falls to camp overnight before putting Tony on a plane to Jo’burg and then
As I write this blog the sky above me has clouded over slightly. The first clouds I have seen since early July. The wind has got up too so we may be in for a stormy night – no rain of course because this is the dry season. Tomorrow, having dropped Tony at the airport, the other three of us will begin the long 350 mile, two day drive along dirt roads to
Takes us right back! The Q's x
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