Archive for Animals

Reading advice for new readers

Welcome:

If you are a new reader here, make sure you go to the archives (upper right hand corner) and click on July, to see the beginning of the trip.

You will have to click on each month to go through the trip. Unfortunately, that’s the way they have it set up here.

Thanks for dropping by – and Sala kahle,

~granny m

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and more video . . .

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More video

This little girl would come and drink out of the tap at the foot of the stairs of the computer room if I left it running and I could stand right in the door a couple feet away and watch her.

http://www.livevideo.com/video/1EF6A1E20A2F4CBE8F3B0E74EE8AEB37/bambi.aspx?m_tkc=8206715

Zebra having lunch by the roadside:

http://www.livevideo.com/video/B553670C74FE49A6A5A54E9952174E5E/zebra.aspx?m_tkc=8206880

Cape buffalo in the road with their oxpecker hitch hikers:

http://www.livevideo.com/video/FA8F930F243649AFA68036B4E4CAF994/cape-buffalo.aspx?m_tkc=8207189

Vervet monkeys playing near my porch:

http://www.livevideo.com/video/80036F781DD440FE904C87ECCD6AE55B/vervet-monkies.aspx?m_tkc=8208903

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OK, now I’m loading video,

but this will be a *long* on-going process, as even a little video takes half an hour or more to load.

Lions in Jozie:

http://www.livevideo.com/video/2BFEE60BC05247859A5B36DE0C4D913E/lions-in-jozie.aspx?m_tkc=8177994

Lions 2

http://www.livevideo.com/video/2F8898B9E2674B0BA8CFE9D19EACA7D6/lions-2.aspx?m_tkc=8178800

Lions 3

http://www.livevideo.com/video/204A28D2D1BD46CD878B80FC93DE9950/lions-3.aspx?m_tkc=8178976

Lions 4

http://www.livevideo.com/video/E302173592D1473884000F2A4F16522F/lions-4.aspx?m_tkc=8180194

Lions 5

http://www.livevideo.com/video/370A43E556B54A898CECB94FE887B41F/lions-5.aspx?m_tkc=8181377

Giraffe

http://www.livevideo.com/video/13C46F5BC6464454962F9AB80794D67E/giraffes.aspx?m_tkc=8183704 

None of the sites I can find for video will take any clip larger than 100MB, so I’ve had to edit these down.  Maybe I can figure out how to compress some future clips and leave them longer – but who knows.   Hope you enjoy what is here.  More soon . . .

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Tea for two? (Me and a monkey?)

Here are some pictures of the lovely tea plantation. The ride was hairy (See ‘Oh, my tired self’, Oct 18th), but the view was worth it. And the melktart was incredibly tasty.

A roadside restaurant on the way from Tzaneen to the tea plantation

Banana plantation

View from the patio of the tea plantation

Another view

View 3

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Lawn and patio

Melktart and real tea from loose leaves

Somebody’s eyeing my tart

Watching for an opportunity to ‘teef it’

Entrance to tea shop

Community near the tea plantation

Another glorious sunset

The very sad thing about the tea plantation is that it is no longer working. There is apparently a land claim against it – I understand much like our native land claims here, so meanwhile it sits and goes to seed (or whatever tea plantations do) while I expect the government will take it’s own sweet time deciding who owns it.

There were many breathtaking views in S A, but this was one that you could never tire of looking at.

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No explanation needed – culling giraffe

What really gets to me is how these guys can grin like this when they’ve just killed a beautiful living creature.

Sleeping beauty

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Looks like fun, eh?

You wouldn’t believe how thick the skin is

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No respect at all

Skinning is hard work, but these guys are experts

The meat is butchered and ready to go

Some of the meat is used to bait the leopard cam for the researchers use


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Good morning, sunshine . . .

It is a GLORIOUS day today.  I’m in Cape Town, in a hotel right across from the ocean, and the sun is beaming down.  It’s really welcome and so energizing.  Unfortunately, my hotel room doesn’t look out on the ocean, but onto another building next door, but if I really crane my head when I’m on my balcony, I can see the ocean between the buildings, and after the traffic dies down at night I can hear it.  It really roars around here.

I’m trying to book some tours, as Cape Town is too large and spread out to find my way around in the time I have, and most things are way outside the city with no public transport.  I don’t want to drive in town as it’s just too confusing and too easy to get really lost in a strange city.

I’ve got a winelands tour booked for this afternoon, and the city tour and the whale tour are both full today and tomorrow, so might not see too much while I’m here – but I’ll try.

Another spectacular trip through more mountains yesterday, though it was raining again, so the views were more gloomy than I’d have liked.

The bus station arrival was the usual chaos – Lise you’ll know about that.  You literally get swarmed by taxi drivers, people wanting to carry your luggage, vendors, beggars – all those and more – and it can be really intimidating if you’re not prepared to deal with it.  I just chase everyone away – and you really have to be firm – and then when it has settled down I’ll approach someone who looks reliable – usually a taxi driver -  and ask for hotel recommendations if I don’t have one booked, or whatever else I need.

This is really the first time I didn’t have something booked, though the booking did fall through in Grahamstown.  It’s so damp and/or humid in most parts of SA that it seems that it’s really hard for hotels and such to keep the musty smells away, so I’m having to put up with that a lot.  You can tell that they try hard, and the places are very clean, just a very difficult task here.

Anyway, got to go look at my flight options for Polokwane.  I’m pretty excited about getting up there and seeing that territory, so more later.  Would be lovely if this place was open evenings – I’ll have to check.

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It’s raining, it’s pouring . . .

Well, thanks for the good weather wishes, MT, but no such luck.  It has rained every day since Sept 24th, or whatever day I left Tembe.  And it just gets worse.  It rained so hard today, that it was almost impossible to see the road when I was driving.  Of course, the locals are dancing in the streets, after 2 ‘rainy seasons’ with no rain.

I stayed in Tsitsikamma Lodge after I left Grahamstown, as it seemed a good jump off point for what I wanted to see.  Really nice place, and great staff.  It sometimes pays to just show up with no reservation (and of course, sometimes not . . ) since the only thing Tsitsikamma had left was a 6 bed cabin, which I’ve had for the last two nights.  Wait until you see the pics and video – *so* much nicer than the web photos.

There was a whole tree full of weaver birds, and many other kinds of birdlife there too.  So you know I was happy.  I also went to Birds of Eden, I think it’s called.  It’s a huge acreage under *very* high netting, where all the birds fly (relatively) free.  There is a no touching, no feeding policy there, except at the cafe, where of course it could never be enforced, given that birds are world champion moochers.  So sitting at the cafe, having a sandwich, and this big cockatoo starts calling ‘Hello’ to me.  As soon as my food came, a grey flew down to the table, followed by a pair of louries.  The grey had learned how to get the plate covers off the food, and the louries were along to get the left-overs.  So many birds came down to try and beg, it was just a hoot.

Meanwhile the cockatoo was still sitting on the branch, mournfully calling hello, so I went over and picked him up, and as cockatoos do, he immediately snuggled up for a scratch.  Then, as cockatoos also do, he refused to get down, so he rode on my shoulder for the next half hour while I looked at more birds.

They had a huge number of species represented there.  It was great, since I haven’t had a bird fix since the bird park in Durban.

Then I went to Monkey World, which is right next door, and is a sanctuary for all sorts of monkeys, apes and lemurs. Well, the monkeys are not mooches, they are outright thieves.  We were warned to take all our jewellery off and to have nothing in our pockets as they even jump you and search your pockets for food or shiny things.  I didn’t see to many different kinds of things there as it had darkened down and was threatening rain, but those I saw were pretty interesting.  Spider monkeys, capuchins, vervets and three kinds of lemurs.  The guide was really interesting though, and I learned lots about several different facets of monkey-dom.

But then, a monkey peed on me from high in a tree.  The guide, a lovely French-African from Congo, the type of gentleman who always carries a handkerchief, tried wiping me down, but it didn’t do much good.  Then to top it off, when we went back to the seating area where everyone gathers before they take the tour, I sat down to rest, right in a pile of monkey-poo, which is just a perfect match for the shade of the wooden seating.  Man, did I ever need a shower and some clean clothes!!   At least monkey-poo scrapes off more easily than bird-poo.

I took the ’scenic route’ to get there, as advised by the hotel staff, (Hwy 102 MT – do you know it?  It’s called Bloukrans Pass) and it was so breathtakingly beautiful it was hard to drive.  And the changes in elevation were so large and so frequent that you were popping your ears like a hip-hop star pops his limbs.

I had to go home after the monkey park as it had started to rain, so I was glad I’d taken the scenic route to get there – but I missed several other things I wanted to do in the area.

Last night it started pouring, a real tropical downpour, and it hasn’t stopped.  I’m cold and wet, but I did stop at the elephant sanctuary today, even though it was raining.  The elephants were inside as they apparently don’t much like the rain, and they let visitors take a tour of the barns, and feed the elephants a pail of mixed veg and fruit.  The baby was so cute, and really played on his ability to charm folks to get a more than fair share of the goodies.  One of the elephants wasn’t happy with just taking one piece at a time with his trunk – he just opened his mouth wide and wanted his food shoveled right in.  I get the feeling that they see more of tourists than they want to though.  It’s hard to justify putting animals through that even if it leads to so much more awareness of their situation and having their lives saved.  But who am I to talk – if it’s an animal or bird place, I’ll be the first one in line.

Got to go and find the bus schedule info, and the info about where I have to catch it and drop the car off.   If I can’t get it today, as Sundays seem to be run at less than half-speed here, I my stay another day, and at least have a chance to go out and see the whales before I head to Cape Town.

Hope you all had good turkey . . . I’m just giving thanks over my Steer burger for all kinds of things.

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On the road again

Tomorrow, that’s where I’ll be.

Just got out of ILAM, and am absolutely cross-eared – if that makes any sense at all. But you know what I mean. Also got video of the Kalimba group practising for tomorrow night’s performance. Wish I could be here to see it, but have to move on.

I’ll hit the highway tomorrow and plan to see Smith River, Plett and Kynsna by Monday, and will turn the car in at Knysna and then take the bus to Cape Town. I may not get to a computer until Cape town, but you all are going to be so busy fixing turkey, then so lazy from eating it that you’ll probably not visit until then anyway, eh?? Happy Thanksgiving to you all anyway.

There is a monkey park, a bird park, a sanctuary for orphaned elephants and a possibility of a whale/dolphin cruise on the list of “Things To Do” for this leg of the journey. There is a canopy tour available apparently, where you tour the forest by sliding along cables up in the tree-tops, but I’m not sure I’m up for that. We’ll see . . . Meanwhile . . .

In the orchid house

Resident of lily pond

In the orchid house - the first one wasn’t - my mistake

King of the evening skyline

Interesting looking guy

ILAM instruments

Hard to see, since it was dark and my camera couldn’t focus, but this little frog was about the size of my thumbnail

More instruments.  Ruth and Lise, you’d love it here

and I hope the kids all save their postcards, so I can figure out the names of these birds again.

See you all soon.

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A little piece of heaven

The place I’m staying now is so beautiful. This part of the country is so peaceful and quiet compared to the big city, and it’s very foot-hilly, not like the savannah and sand forest of the park and area where I was.

I’ve spent all day at ILAM (International Library of African Music) and it’s the most amazing place!! Gonna spend all day tomorrow there too. I’m working my way through sampling – and sometimes getting lost in – all of Hugh Tracy’s collections that have been digitized.

Only problem is, it’s winter again here, and I’m really unprepared, clothes wise, so freezing my butt off. The weather is totally unpredictable, and doesn’t even wait for a 24 hour cycle to go from freezing to frying. Not sure how people keep up with this, but I guess if you live here and have all your layers in your closet, it wouldn’t be too bad.

Sad news about Rhodes U here. It’s just gained the world’s notice as being the Uni with the top consumption of alcohol per student capita (can I say that?) in the world. Residents here say that it’s pretty bad, and they hope that more will be done to educate the young folks about how much harm they can do themselves and others.

I’m still pretty lost in the music I heard today. Can’t think about too much else. Actually, I do remember the donkey I saw walking past the police station yesterday, and wondered if he was on his way to work, or on his way home <G> Only animal I’ve seen in town here, except for the usual cats and dogs.

My cabin actually sleeps 6 people and I have it all to myself still for tonight, then have to move to another room as a family is coming in to take it over. *sigh* It was really great.

My cabin

View from my cabin

My favourite tree so far.  BTW, I truly dislike jacarandas - the colour makes me cross-eyed

sorry, guys.  I gotta go and get warm in my cabin.  It’s truly freezing here.

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