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Unbelievably it’s that time once again. The 2000 safari season has rushed by in a blur and I find myself in London preparing for WTM. What a year it’s been, with exceptional game viewing and wonderful support from our suppliers, and I’m wondering if and how 2001 could go any better.

The new honeymoon suite went down a treat and we saw a lot more honeymooners visit us this year. The bathroom is gorgeous as is the tent, and the overall feel is going to be somewhat duplicated in the rest of the tents for 2001. I am actually pinching the tent off the platform for myself (seeing I spend so much time in camp I’ve decided I could do with the space!) and have ordered 8 even larger tents so all the wooden decks will have brand new tents for 2001. The dimensions are generous with extra ventilation and sand coloured interiors. These will be a vast improvement on the current tents, more than double the amount of interior space yet sitting on the same platforms. The pilot/guide tent will now be of the same quality, only slightly smaller than the guests’ tents.

The bathrooms are to be redone, with new washbasins and wood finishing – basically making them a bit more swish, but not too much more! Pictures will be available by Indaba 2001.

Finally, we have decided to delay moving any platforms around for another year, but we have recently moved the access paths to behind the tents. The path now runs along the ridge of mahogany trees behind the tents allowing greater privacy. So, expect an even better Chiawa for 2001, bearing in mind that the simple rustic feeling will not be lost and that we most certainly are not trying to become a lodge.

The new pontoon boats were a great hit this year. Safe, stable and comfortable we have found this to be the best way to explore and enjoy the Zambezi, and no one else has them!

We had two wonderful camp mascots this year. Momba the ground hornbill, who is now notorious nation-wide, opted to yet again not join her wild colleagues. Rather, she (yes she’s a she and has a dark blue patch on her bright red wattle to prove it) continues to terrorise tea trays, red toenails, muffins, and any creepy crawly she can find. And then there was the hippo who never really got a name, but who had been injured in a fight and spent a month in Camp recuperating, or at least trying to. Much to the surprise of guests and bush pro’s alike, he had no fear of man and would happily munch on the winterthorn seed pods at midday around the dining area while we took our meals, sometimes even coming onto the al fresco veranda. What a privilege that was, but sadly the hippo did not recover and died one night right in front of camp. Rather than watch our ‘friend’ get eaten (and smelly) we towed him downstream where the crocs had a wonderful feast. Nature seems very cruel and unfair but when looked at objectively, every action has a purpose and fits into the ever sustainable circle of life. It is usually human action, based on greed or sentiment that throws things off.

We had brilliant game viewing yet again this year. The big cats performed (275 lion and 96 leopard sightings) exceptionally well, including lots of tree climbing lions, a number of lion encounters on foot, and a single morning drive with 4 leopard sightings. We also had 9 wild dog sightings and 2 aardvark! Some of the more memorable sightings included:

-          A lioness diving underwater and coming up underneath a swimming porcupine to kill it without injuring itself

-          A female leopard eating a leopard cub. We think the cub was scavenged by her as it had not been freshly killed – it was eaten in it’s entirety right in front of us

-          A slender mongoose chasing a large grey (Egyptian) mongoose up a tree and then off into the bush. Bear in mind that a slender mongoose is less than a third the size of the large grey, and both are very rarely seen in trees

-          A dramatic fight sequence between Stumpy the resident male lion and Blackie, a mature, new contender. Blackie seemed to have the upper hand but the females sent him packing and Stumpy still remains king of his patch…for now.

-          A centipede catch and eat a tree frog much bigger than itself. Zambia’s top entomologist has never heard of such an occurrence

-          The big pride of lions sweeping through the bush on an early evening hunt, first killing a porcupine, then an impala immediately afterwards, then minutes later finding a leopard up a tree with an impala. The leopard was chased off and then one of the lions got up the tree to the kill and finished it off

-          A serval chasing and catching 2 banded mongooses with deadly speed and efficiency

-          10 lions killing and eating 3 impala in one raid

 

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