![]() |
MAMMAL WATCHING.COM | ![]() |
| south africa |
Home Country Guides: Books, links and trip reports whale and dolphin watchingFocus on Australia Mammal watching: Some tipsWorldwide Mammal Info: Books and links with a global coverage Mammal Watching Blog: Read and Subscribeme and my mammal watching |
I visited South Africa in 2002 and 2007 and again - Just to Plettenberg Bay - in 2008 . See my 2007 Trip Report for more details of the second trip. In June 2002 I spent only a couple of weeks in South Africa. But I crammed heaps in. After 2 nights in Pilanesburg (near Pretoria), I flew to spend 3 nights with friends in the Kruger. From there, I flew down to Cape Town, hired a small car and drove 6,000 km in 8 days. Budget Rentacar were surprised when they took the odometer reading. After cage diving with White Pointer Sharks (Great Whites) at Gaansbai, those 8 days were spent north of the Cape on an Aardvark finding expedition. Aardvarks are seldom seen in the places I visited. But ‘seldom’ is pretty good when it comes to Aardvarks. Indeed I came frustratingly close to seeing one – leaving Addo NP the night before they saw one, to arrive in the Karoo NP the night after they had see one. Aardvarks remain on my top 5 most wanted list. I liked South Africa. The crime problems I’d heard so much about weren’t apparent out of the cities (or perhaps I was just blissfully naive); the national parks I visited in the south were stunning and quite different to the more traditional bushscapes of the Kruger, and southern Africa generally; and the food was delicious and cheap. It was a much easier and cheaper country to travel round than the few other places in Africa I’ve been. Some good mammals too.
Eastern Cape Cape Mountain Zebra National Park, 4 hours July 2002 – I stopped here to see Black Wildebeest which were pretty easy to find. Also saw Bontebok and Mountain Zebra. The park is reputedly good for Caracal. De Hoop Reserve, 1 night June 2002 – a fabulous little nature reserve, with stunning coastal scenery, a heap of Right Whales in the winter and some nice mammals. The accommodation was excellent too. I cannot recommend it highly enough. Yellow Mongoose, Mountain Zebra, Rhebok, Common Vlei Rat, African Clawless Otter (a family at both dusk and dawn below the small 'cliffs' near the Tierhoek picnic site. Prolonged viewing sometimes from only 10m above the animals. This is a regular spot for them), Four-striped Grass Mouse, Zorilla, Southern Right Whale, Bontebok (Blesbok), Chacma Baboon, Eland, Cape Hare. Hermanus, 2 nights, June 2002 - the Fernkloof Nature Reserve here is worth a look and a bush walk. Saw Cape Gray Mongoose and Egyptian Mongoose there during the day time and spotlit a Cape Grysbok in the scrubland outside the park. Southern Right Whales were cruising off the beach and Cape Serotines were flying around the streetlights outside the restaurant near the harbour (I recommend their Cajun Squid).
Karoo National Park, 2 nights July 2002 – rumoured to be an Aardvark hotspot, I arrived here the night after one had been seen (‘the first in months’). I took the regular night drive then chartered a second longer private one (a very cheap option). During my 2 nights and 1 day stay I saw Mountain Reedbuck, Aardwolf (the Karoo is one of the best spots for seeing these), Gemsbok, Springbok, ‘Quagga’ (not genetically a Quagga but the closest approximation on the planet - selective breeding of Zebras in the Karoo is well on the way to producing something that looks very like the extinct desert Zebra), Rhebok, Bat-eared Fox, Cape Hare.
Plettenberg Bay, 2 boat trips July 2002, – the bay is famous for its whale watching. Bryde’s Whales are resident there and seen on 70% of trips (but neither of the trips I took in 2002). Did see Bottlenose and Humpbacked Dolphins though as well as South African/ Australian Fur Seals. In November 2007 I returned and saw the same species plus Humpback Whales. Bryde's Whales were around but not the day I was out. In April 2008 I saw lots of Bryde's Whales plus the first Southern Right Whale of the year.
Tsitsikamma National Park, 1 night July 2002 Storm's River - Cape Horseshoe Bats roost in the cave at the end of the Mouth Trail. Blue Duiker and Clawless Otters are often reported here. In November 2007 I spent two nights in Nature's Valley, a section of the park near Plettenberg Bay: Bushbuck and Chacma Baboons were common here and I saw a Bushpig plus what was probably a Blue Duiker. During a quick stop at Storm's River I saw a Small Grey Mongoose. Gauteng Kwazulu-Natal
Limpopo Northern Cape
Western Cape In November 2007 I returned for 2 nights and saw Caracals, Four-striped Grass Mice, Heaviside's Dolphins (off Yzerfontein), Dusky Dolphins and Cape Fur Seals (Saldhana), Southern Right Whales, Bush Karoo Rats, Large-spotted (Cape) Genet, Cape Porcupine, Red Hartebeest, Grey Duiker, Steenbok, Cape Hare, Springbok, Gemsbok, Bontebok, Rock Hyraxes, Cape Mountain Zebra and one possible Water Mongoose. Other People's Trip Reports Sabi Sands Leopards: Phil Perry's site has some fabulous pictures, focusing on leopards in the Sabi Sands reserve. Kruger National Park, 2006: Leon Marais (Lawson's Wildlife Tours), 1 week and 34 mammals. South-west Africa, 2005: Don Roberson, 1 month and lots of mammals (including an Aardvark). South Africa, 2004: Richard Webb, 1 month & 80 mammals (including Blue Duiker, Brown Hyena, Caracal and another Aardvark). Around the World (South Africa), 2003: Richard Webb, 3 weeks & 57 mammals. Mkuze, 2003: Richard Webb, 3 days & 20 + mammals (including a Red Duiker). The Kalahari and the Cape, 2002: Richard Webb, 2 weeks & 40 or so mammals (including a Brown Hyena and a Caracal). South Africa, 2000: Richard Webb, 2 weeks & 40 mammals (including a Pangolin). South Africa and Namibia, 1999: Richard Webb, 3 weeks & 50+ mammals (including an Aardvark). |
|
||||||
|
||||||||
![]() |
||||||||