Shot a few videos to highlight my day @ the Plettenberg Bay Game Reserve.
Africa’s Big 5 all represent. Ostrich mating dance? Something ya gotta see to believe. LOL>
juvenile GIRAFFE, mighty RHINO
Hungry Hungry HIPPO
Dance, OSTRICH Dance
Predator CATS
ELEPHANT Parade
Sleeping in an elephant lodge, super cool experience – but, can’t travel to Africa & not see LIONS, right? Week before flying out, pre-purchased a safari drive in a nearby game reserve. Just me/solo travel, easy enough to tag along with a larger group.
Seeing Africa’s Big 5 today: Rhino, giraffe, lion, hippopotamus, cheetah. Ok, maybe these were my Africa Big 5. More interested in giraffes than Cape buffalo 😊
Breakfast early, elephant lodge checkout, 40 minute dirt-road drive to Plettenberg Bay Game Reserve. Good to be off the N-2. Traded shoulder-driving humans for an active cattle train with zero intention of leaving the roadway. Inched my way through the half-mile caravan, entered the game reserve grounds, ‘nother dirt mile to Reception.
Very different experience from my past 2 days [Elephant Park] conservationist talks. Like going back in time early 1900’s. Animal heads posted to walls, zebra skins tanned & available for purchase. Bully bully. That said, animals actually killed on the reserve were limited to culling growing herds – and didn’t include any of the Big 5. Herd animals (wildebeest/zebra/deer) mostly male, majority later fed to the predatory eaters. Safari hunts today are limited to South Africa’s northern neighbors: Namibia, Botswana & Zimbabwe. South Africa is a mining country, industrialized & heavily populated, no large swaths of tribal wilderness.
Today’s drive: FAR exceeded expectation. Didn’t come with preconceived ideas, so didn’t realize these exotic animals would be roaming free. Predatory breeds were fenced apart/separate & away from herbivores. Found it interesting which animals the guide gave distance [game reserve/notta drive-thru zoo]. Hippos. Unpredictable, most dangerous animal in Africa (most human deaths). Lion. Male dropped his head in the grass, guide backed our jeep & did a full loop through shrubs/hill area. Approached the lion from a direction he did not feel threatened. Elephants. Spook easily, BIG, run fast. Least threatening predator? Cheetah. Limited short bursts of speed. Otherwise, they’re lazy sun worshippers [took no chances/kept a healthy distance in the Jeep].
No Kruger, no Cape Town on my South Africa itinerary. Hard to do it all AND marathon. Another time. Still managed to see all of Africa’s Big 5 plus finish out my holiday living B-I-G in a posh B&B overlooking the ocean. Happy life ❤
- everyday road sign?
- Plettenburg Bay Game Reserve
- wall o’ heads
- wildebeest & zebra
- the mighty Rhino
- juvenile Giraffe
- Hungry Hungry Hippo
- STARE down
- deadliest in Africa – TEETH!
- (endangered) wild dog
- CHEETAH mates
- brothers (same litter)
- Lion King
- ELEPHANT parade
- water-hole social
Sleeping 2 nights overlooking an elephant boma, feel like I’m the guy to ask. Yep, they snore. Sleep on their sides. Wake middle of the night & trumpet. Watched one sleep: one leg up, one leg down. Guessing elephants are as unique as humans. Lucked out visiting during African winter (colder evening temps). Counted 6 in the boma, 2nd night.
Strong family pod. Devour 5% of their body weight EVERY SINGLE DAY. Herbivores — diet varies on the day, varies by the elephant. That’s a whole lotta roughage. HA!
Same lifespan as humans, 80 to 100 years old. Sadly, they last as long as their last set of molars. After their 6th set goes, they slowly starve to death. No way to eat; crummy end. Suppose we’re not so different. Oatmeal & breathing tubes highlight our expiration.
Learn a bunch at an Elephant Sanctuary. Surrounded by guides, absorb facts like a sponge. 6 rooms at the Lodge. Gotta/hafta/must stay at Knysna Elephant Park 🐘 ✔
- African sunset
- herbivore FEAST
- Boma (indoor shelter)
Boma Sleep-Over
Sleep Over with the Elephants
Built within the elephant sleeping quarters, our Extraordinary Elephant Lodge offers guests the unique opportunity to spend the night with a herd of African elephants. The Parks’ elephants enjoy world-class facilities: during the day they roam the property, but at the end of the day they hurry back to their boma / night camp for a pampered night’s sleep.
Enjoy your elephant sleep-over in unique accommodation overlooking the boma; or spend the evening relaxing in the communal lounge, watching the elephants browse, feed and snooze.