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January 2006 Newsletter

Greetings and a Happy New Year to you all – welcome to Old Mondoro’s
inaugural newsletter which we are all proud to announce.
The
game viewing and overall safari experience at Old Mondoro has been going
from strength to strength and 2005 was simply phenomenal – guests have
all enjoyed the intimate and wild location of what has become one of
Zambia’s most sought after bush camps and which remains the only bush
camp in the Lower Zambezi.
The camp is genius in its simplicity yet has exemplary
high levels of personal attention and service.
Be it on foot, 4x4 or by boat, the game viewing has never
failed to excite, for instance some unusual behavioral honey badger
sightings, great daylight leopards and our two resident prides of lions
- listed below are some excerpts from Roelof’s sightings diary for the
2005 season – as well as some of his great photos:
-
Wild dog
sightings: 12 ( red data book: endangered)
-
Leopard
sightings: 33
-
Lion
sightings: 68
-
Serval
sightings: 8 (red data book: rare. CITES appendix ll)
-
Sharpe's
grysbok
sightings: 6 (red data book: rare)
-
Aardvark
sightings: 2 (red data book: vulnerable. CITES appendix
ll)
-
2
honey
badgers
climbing about 7m up a winter thorn tree - one of four
sightings of badgers climbing high into trees looking
for hives
-
5 honey badgers
climbing the same tree on the next night looking to open
up a bee hive a long way up a dead hollow winter thorn
branch
-
Bizarre
honey badger
behaviour, when busy digging a burrow one will be
sleeping while the other will be hard at work sometimes
covering the sleeping partner (usually the female) with
the sand of his diggings - 3 sightings of such
disrespectful and nonchalant activity!
-
A
honey
badger
with a live 2,5m black mamba in his teeth (on a morning
walk) watched him for about 20 min and then he casually
walked away with his tender meal.
-
African
rock
python
2m long curled up around a branch in a tree on a island
in the Zambezi.
-
One very
hot afternoon in the Zambezi valley 23 mature
elephant
bulls
walked into camp and entertained Old Mondoro guests for
the afternoon, elephant watching at its best!
-
Leopards
mating. Two lovers started mating only to be joined by
another lustful female. The next night we saw the same
male mating with the same younger smaller female again.
4 sightings of leopards mating (WOW) in 2005.
-
Getting up
one morning I heard impala alarm calling very close to
camp, run out and wake up David Back with the Artillery
group, shoving them in the Land Rover with great haste.
We found the 3
lionesses
and the 3 cubs
not even 300m from camp looking a bit hungry. The young
lioness being a bit of a brave heart spotted a old lone
buff bull and started running circles around him and
playing a death game, not for the bull but for her! She
did get the other 2 lionesses interested in the game and
we watched while the 3 lionesses chasing the bull for
about 2km and then they realized that the bull was a bit
too strong for them so they gave up. While sitting and
watching the lionesses going back to meet the cubs,
another series of impala alarm calling in the direction
of the camp, I raced back to see what all the excitement
was all about, only to find a male leopard with a female
bushbuck in his mouth (!) and in attendance, wait for
it.... a very horny female leopard, this all about 150m
from camp in only a few minutes! We then saw this female
trying to convince the male to mate with her on two more
nights just outside camp.
-
A female
leopard
killed
a female impala
one night where we park our boat, dragged it up the
steps and left it 100m at the base of a termite mound,
returning that same night to collect the meat from right
under our noses !!
-
Then of
course the fabulous
3 lionesses together with the cubs taking down a
elephant calf.
We were watching the lionesses lying on the Chakwenga
riverbed as the sun was going down after a drink from a
pool in the river, after what sounded like a very
stressed out elephant screaming his head of, the
lionesses got up and very slowly and looking very
relaxed started walking along the edge of the riverbed,
I decided to follow but had to drive around because they
were going into very long adrenalin grass... on arrival
we found them all over the elephant calf already on his
side after a full attack by the 3 lionesses. What
followed was Africa at its merciless best right in our
faces as we watched predator and prey fighting to stay
alive, the lions to kill and provide food for themselves
and the cubs, and the elephant calf trying to stay alive
... it took the lions almost 2 hours to finish of the
calf... Africa painting a picture not many people have
witnessed before with sounds, smells...
-
A
herd of buffalo about 800-strong
walking
the floodplains of Old Mondoro.
-
A female
leopard
with a
big male serval
she killed only minutes before we arrived, dragged it
into grass and started eating it, only to leave it and
started stalking impala about 20m from us.
-
An old
male lion
arrived on the lion scene... looking for food and a
chance to mate with one of the lionesses in estrus...
with no canine teeth left in his mouth... Would have
been a lovely male in his prime but for obvious reasons
the lionesses did not welcome him afraid that he will
kill the cubs so we saw a big fight between the female
in estrus and the male, the male being very submissive.
Interesting that the lionesses only made an effort to
hide the male cub of the three and not the 2 female
cubs.
-
The male
lion did however play a role, watching the
lions
rest one afternoon a big herd of buff came down to the
Chakwenga to drink but did not spot the male lion or the
3 lionesses under a winterthorn tree, suddenly the male
got up and without doing much of a stalk walked down
towards the herd of buff... the lionesses sensed that
something is about to happen and were in hunting mode
almost immediately! The male charged the herd creating
confusion and the lionesses ambushed a young buffalo...
Needless to say, the male only got some intestines. We
watched and listened as the lions feasted well into the
dark African night...
-
Good bird sightings
include regular sightings of groups of Lillian's
lovebirds close to the Chakwenga plains and the Mushika
river, bat hawks, broadbilled rollers, swallowtailed
bee-eater, African skimmers, bohms spinetail,
pennant-winged nightjar, freckled nightjar, marsh owl,
white-faced scops-owl, giant eagle owl on nest with
chick, lesser jacana, long-tailed paradise-whydah
breeding male, golden-breasted bunting male, redwinged
pratincole, black- bellied bustard male & female,
western banded snake-eagle, long- crested eagle,
racket-tailed roller, crested guineafowl.
-
Wild dogs
trying to kill a big warthog male, the warthog did most
of the chasing with wild dogs running all over the place
at Jeki plains, they did however kill a young female
warthog about 30 min later
-
Wild dogs killing an impala
on Jeki airstrip on full moon night.
-
A
beautiful blond
male
lion
walked through camp at seven o clock one night with his
tracks all around the dining table as we sat down for
dinner.
-
"Norman"
the camp hippo
comes running through camp often to hide from the
resident dominant bull chasing him, and spends his
nights sleeping at our doorstep and eating winter thorn
tree pods in camp!
-
On a walk
we stood frozen as a family of
dwarf
mongooses
climbed on a termite mound about 2m from our party as if
we were not there. We watched and photographed them for
almost 45min before we left.
-
Spotted a porcupine sleeping in the early
morning sun in a hollow broken down tree trunk and
approached very closely before he scampered away much to
the delight of the lucky guests.
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OLD MONDORO: THE PLACE TO BE
A thrilling
and interesting 2005 safari season
l am sure
2006 will have more wildlife surprises for us so come and visit us soon.
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