All posts by David Carlson

Who knew cheetahs had first world problems?

Khaya Ndlovu Safari Manor, Hoedspruit,South Africa
Dec 8 – Dec 12 2025

Khaya Ndlovu Safari Manor sits near Kruger National Park, within its own 5,500-hectare (13,500-acre) private nature reserve. Unlike the conservancies and parks we visited in Kenya and Tanzania, this reserve is fully enclosed by an electric fence. The larger animalsโ€”giraffes, lions, cheetahs, wildebeest, rhinos, elephants, zebras, kudu, and various impalas and gazellesโ€”canโ€™t leave, though smaller creatures can slip through or burrow under. Because itโ€™s a closed ecosystem, wildlife populations are managed to keep everything in balance, though Iโ€™m not entirely sure how. Sammy, our guide, mentioned that some of the animals were brought in from other countries when the reserve was first established, so there must be a regulated wildlife trade to support this.

The manor itself is lovely, with sweeping views from the restaurant, the adjoining outdoor seating areas, and the infinity pool. The food has been excellent, the staff warm and attentive, and our air conditioned rooms very comfortable. We’re not glamping yet! Interestingly, the owner has been selling residential lots within the reserve, though not near the manor. Apparently about 35 lots exist, on which 24 houses have already been built. If safari life is your passion, you can literally live it every day.

Weโ€™ve been doing both early-morning and late-afternoon game drives. Although Iโ€™m not fond of โ€œticking animals off a list,โ€ we certainly saw plenty including our first close-up rhinoceros. The horns grow continually, so these particular rhinos have their horns trimmed every few years by local authorities, making them worthless to poachers and therefore much safer.

We also came upon a group of five lionesses that had recently taken down an adult giraffe. They had eaten so much that each one looked as though it couldn’t get comfortable, and they were regularly rearranging their lying position. Yet they were still unwilling to abandon the kill. The vultures perched in the nearby trees waiting patiently for their turn to feed, while thousands of flies swarmed the carcass. The stench was overpowering and the noise of the assembled flies was just a little less than a ‘jet plane’ reading on a dB meter.

On an afternoon game drive, we spotted a cheetah staring forlornly through the electric fence. As we got closer, we realized the small animal it had been chasing must have thrown itself at the fence and forced the wires just far enough apart to squeeze through. Conditioned by growing up with the electric fence, and too big to fit through the small hole, the cheetah couldnโ€™t follow. Who knew cheetahs had first world problems? To be fair, I think this is actually the first world causing cheetah problems.

Iโ€™ve been getting lots of use out of my larger lens and I’m very happy with the results. There are many more detailed close-ups than I was able to take in our previous safaris, especially of birds. I’ve already forgotten all the bird’s names, but I’m sure google lens will be my saviour!

This will be the first of two posts from the Manor. Weโ€™re doing a boat tour of a canyon near Hoedspruit on Wednesday, then spending Thursday in Kruger National Park. Weโ€™ll wrap up with one more game drive Friday morning before flying back to Johannesburg. Iโ€™ll cover all of that in the second post.

Disappointed cheetah at the electric fence
Marking its territory
5 full lionesses
I ate too much again!
maybe if I lay this way for a while...
Sammy, our guide, on the right. Vusi, the spotter, on the left
Steenbok (an antelope) . Those are flies on its face
Pale chanting goshawk
Red billed oxpecker - you see these on all the large mammals eating fleas/ ticks
Southern Giraffe - look for the oxpecker near its right horn
Southern giraffe - Mother and child
its easier to walk on the road
Dung beetles
The female dung beetle hitches a ride while the male rolls the baseball sized dung
Yellow billed kite
Lesser Kudu
Zebra (Burchill's Zebra according to google lens)
morning game drive
African hawk eagle
Rhino
Woodland kingfisher
Southern red-billed hornbill
European roller
Southern white crowned shrike
Elephant towel art in our room
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Disappointed cheetah at the electric fence
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Munich and Johannesburg

We flew on Lufthansa from Vancouver to Munich and then on to Johannesburg. Each leg was nearly ten hours long, with a nine-hour layover in Munich.

Since we found ourselves in Munich at Christmastime, we decided to make the most of our long break and visit the Christmas market at Marienplatz. We took the train downtown and arrived at the Glockenspiel just in time for its noon performance. Marienplatz was packedโ€”uncomfortably crowded, in factโ€”with a forest of phones raised to record the show. I donโ€™t think Iโ€™ve been in a crowd that dense since I was a young teenager with my parents at the Scoppio del Carro on Easter Sunday at the Duomo in Florence. Still, we managed to enjoy bratwurst and hot chocolate afterwards in a slightly quieter nearby square before heading back to the airport.

I visited Senegal two years ago to do some consulting for a South African engineering firm. Weโ€™ve kept in touch, and Drew arranged to meet us during our day in Joburgโ€”or Jozi. We spent a very pleasant afternoon with his family at home, but he first took us to the Apartheid Museum, which was excellent and deeply sobering. I think I mentioned on our Peru trip that we Europeans have a lot to answer for. Thatโ€™s certainly true in South Africa as well: centuries of slavery, followed by the discovery of gold and diamonds, all culminating in the formal entrenchment of apartheid.

The words of the South African Constitutionโ€™s preamble are displayedโ€”dignified, hopeful, and surprisingly moving to read in that setting:

โ€œWe, the people of South Africa,
Recognise the injustices of our past;
Honour those who suffered for justice and freedom in our land;
Respect those who have worked to build and develop our country; and
Believe that South Africa belongs to all who live in it, united in our diversity.

We therefore, through our freely elected representatives, adopt this Constitution as the supreme law of the Republic so as to:
โ€ข Heal the divisions of the past and establish a society based on democratic values, social justice and fundamental human rights;
โ€ข Lay the foundations for a democratic and open society in which government is based on the will of the people and every citizen is equally protected by law;
โ€ข Improve the quality of life of all citizens and free the potential of each person; and
โ€ข Build a united and democratic South Africa able to take its rightful place as a sovereign state in the family of nations.

May God protect our people.
Nkosi Sikelelโ€™ iAfrika. Morena boloka setjhaba sa heso.
God seรซn Suid-Afrika. God bless South Africa.
Mudzimu fhatutshedza Afrika. Hosi katekisa Afrika.โ€

Reading those words, and then stepping through the exhibits that document how far the country had to climb to reach them, was powerful. What struck me most were the uncomfortable parallels between South Africa in 1948, when apartheid was legislated, and aspects of the current political climate in the United States. Sobering, especially considering that it took South Africa forty-four years to undo the consequences of what was formalized in a single election.

Weโ€™re off to Hoedspruit and Kruger Park tomorrow for the first of our safaris.

Spicy bratwurst
christmas market in Marienplatz
Hot chocolate
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Spicy bratwurst
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Prep for the next vacation

South Africa, Zimbabwe, Zambia & Botswana โ€” Christmas Safari 2025

Weโ€™ve booked our Christmas vacation this year to South Africa, Zimbabwe, Zambia, and Botswana โ€” another round of safaris, with some extra time in Cape Town. No kids this time, but Sarah and I will be joined by her sister Victoria. Sheโ€™s easily one of my top four favourite sisters-in-law, so it should be fun.

Most of the safari part (the “lion’s share”?) of the trip is organized by Overseas Adventure Travel (OAT) โ€” the same company that handled our Peru and Ecuador trip last year. All the reviews of their Africa tours have been very positive, so our expectations are high.

This page is mainly a test of the new camera and a refresher on how to update the website. Unlike our Peru and Ecuador trip, Iโ€™m going to make an effort to post updates as we go. Iโ€™m still annoyed at myself for losing my notes from that last trip.


The New Camera Gear

Earlier this year, I replaced my old Olympus OM-D EM5 II with an OM System OM-1. Iโ€™d planned to get the latest EM5 replacement travel camera, but OM System were clearing out the OM-1, and it was only about $100 more than what I intended to spend โ€” an easy decision as the OM-1 is a much better camera than what I was considering.

My lens lineup includes:

  • a new M.Zuiko 12โ€“100mm f/4 PRO
  • a new M.Zuiko 100โ€“400mm f/5-6.3 IS II
  • a lens from my old gear: Leica DG Summilux 25mm f/1.4 prime

I agonized over buying the 100โ€“400mm lens, but finally picked it up during this yearโ€™s Black Friday sales โ€” thanks largely to Thomas Eislโ€™s excellent YouTube review. Since the OM-1 has a Micro Four Thirds sensor, the 35mm equivalent doubles the lens focal length โ€” giving me an equivalent coverage of 24โ€“800mm when combining both zoom lenses.

The new setup is larger and heavier than my old kit, and I hope the weight doesnโ€™t become an issue. Iโ€™m going to stick with a wrist camera strap rather than a neck or shoulder strap, so Iโ€™ll only look a little like a camera-toting tourist.


Camera Test Runs

To put the OM-1, and particularly the larger zoom lens through its paces, Sarah and I took our grandson to the Calgary Zoo a few weeks ago. Then, back home in Victoria, I headed to Swan Lake for some bird photography. Iโ€™m still working on capturing a sharp bird-in-flight shot: stay tuned.

As before, the photos here are on a slider โ€” use the arrows on the photo or pick from the row of thumbnails to progress to another picture.

Note: Thereโ€™s no post-processing on these images. The camera produces both JPG and RAW files; these are straight-from-camera JPGs, resized only to fit the website.

Meercat at Calgary zoo
Lioness at Calgary zoo through a chainlink fence
Western Lowland Gorilla at Calgary zoo
Western Lowland Gorilla at Calgary Zoo
Bald Eagle near Swan Lake, Victoria
I think this is a Ring Necked duck.  Swan Lake, Victoria
Lots wrong here. This is why I want to practise!  Not fast enough shutter speed, and it's flying the wrong way... but it was the only thing flying that I could catch
Peacock at Beacon Hill Park, Victoria
Peacock at Beacon Hill Park, Victoria
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Meercat at Calgary zoo
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Ecuador

Oh for heavenโ€™s sake! Iโ€™ve misplaced my notebook with all my notes from the trip. I couldnโ€™t find it this summer at the cottage, so I assumed it must be in Victoria. Now that weโ€™re back in Victoria, I still canโ€™t find it. Iโ€™ll have to look more carefully when we return to the cottage โ€” thereโ€™s no way I would have thrown it out.

We spent some time in Quito and the Galรกpagos. I do still have all the photos, so Iโ€™ll post some and tell the stories behind them before our next vacation. Since we leave in three weeks, Iโ€™ll have to hurry!

By the way, our guide told us about the tortoise taken by Darwin in 1835 and subsequently named Harriet… but the guide did not know where Harriet ended up. We could fill in the blanks because we saw Harriet at the Australia Zoo in 2002 . The zookeepers there confirmed that this was Darwin’s Harriet at age ~171. I understand she has since died.

Marine Iguana
Land Iguana
Sea Lion
American Oystercatcher \
Galapagos tortoise
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Marine Iguana
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Iquitos and the Amazon

27โ€“30 October 2024 โ€“ Ceiba Tops Lodge, near Iquitos, Peru

27 October

Our luck with the weather could not have been better. It began raining just after we arrived at the Iquitos airport and boarded the bus, and it stopped just before we stepped off the bus and onto the boat. When we reached the lodge, the skies opened againโ€”right as we sat down for lunch.

After lunch, the rain stopped and we joined our new local guide, Luis, for a nature walk. The massive Ceiba treeโ€”namesake of the lodgeโ€”was as impressive as the great kauri trees we once saw in New Zealand. The Ceiba tree is also called a Kapok tree and you may remember that kapok fibres provided the floatation for lifejackets in WWII. The trees are so big that I think one tree could have provided the kapok filling for all lifejackets used in the war!

We spotted plenty of birds and a few tamarin monkeys along the trail. Later, the group cooled off in the pool before retreating to the lodge for a pisco sour. What a lovely tour group we ended up with.

Then it rained steadily through the night.

The only ones in our group truly affected by the rain were Paul and Phyllis, whose thatched roof had a leak that dripped all night. The tour group arriving after us got the worst of everything: their flight into Iquitos was delayed several hours by a thunderstorm, and when they finally made it to the lodge, they were greeted by yet another downpour as they made their way from the boat to the lodge.

28 October

We were up bright and early at 6 a.m. for a planned birding tour, but with rain threatening, we shifted gears and visited the market in the nearby town of Indiana, Peru. (Not to be confused with Peru, Indiana!) I may not have the details exactly right, but I recall that the townโ€™s founder had studied in Indiana in the United States and named this settlement after it.

Later that morning, we crossed to the far side of the river to visit a very small village and its school.

In the afternoon, we tried our hand at piranha fishing. Paul got a bite, but the rest of us managed only a few tiny catfish. On the boat ride back, we saw both pink and gray river dolphins. The pink dolphins truly are pink and live permanently in freshwater, while the gray dolphins swim all the way from the Atlanticโ€”more than 2,000 km away.

After dinner, we joined a night walk where we spotted a small snake, katydids, frogs, turtles, and even a baby caiman.

29 October

Another early startโ€”up at 6 a.m. for the canopy walk. Getting there was an adventure in itself: a boat ride to Indiana; a tuk-tuk trip to the Napo River; a second boat to the Explornapo Lodge; and then a one-hour walk through the forest to reach the canopy walkway. The platform is incredibly high, offering sweeping views of the canopy, though the birds are apparently most active at sunrise. (Perhaps we should have spent the night there!)

Back at the lodge, we were visited by a shaman who described traditional herbal remedies and performed a cleansing to sweep away our bad energy.

We ended the day back at Ceiba Tops Lodge with a swim, a drink, dinner, and another night walk.

30 October

We took an early morning birding trip by boat, spotted more dolphins, and returned once again to Indiana. In the afternoon, we visited a Yagua village closer to Iquitos, where we watched a traditional dance, tried a blow-dart demonstration, and even got to meet a pet sloth.

Iquitos has no roads connecting it to anywhere. It is essentially an island on the mainland, with everything arriving by barge or plane. That is changing, however, with a completed bridge and the upcoming construction of a highway to Brazil. The highway will pass very close to this Yagua village, and Iโ€™m sure their lives will change completely. Progress?

31 October โ€“ Departure

We left Iquitos and flew back to Lima.


Amazon Summary

This will have to wait until I find my notebook with all my detailed notes. I couldnโ€™t locate it at the cottage this past summer, so I assumed it must be in Victoria. Now that weโ€™re home and it still hasnโ€™t turned up, Iโ€™ll have to search more carefully when we return to the cottage. Thereโ€™s no way I would have thrown it out.

After our Amazon stay, we continued on to Lima, then travelled to Cusco, Machu Picchu, and Sacsayhuaman. Thankfully, I still have all the photosโ€”so Iโ€™ll share those and reconstruct the stories behind them.

Lima

25 October 2024 – Lima Pre-trip / Day 1

Machu Picchu and the Galรกpagos have always been on our bucket list, so it didnโ€™t take long to say yes when our cottage neighbours, Mark and Cindy, invited us on an organized tour with them. In all our years of travel, weโ€™ve never joined a tour like this, so Iโ€™m curious to see what the experience will be like.

The journey to Peru was long: Victoria โ†’ Seattle โ†’ Miami โ†’ Lima. The actual flying time was only about 11 hours, but with layovers it became 28 hours of travel. We met up with Cindy and Mark in Miami and continued on to Lima together. We arranged to arrive a day and a half before the tour officially began, just to get our feet under us.

A minibus arranged by the tour company picked us up at the airport and dropped the four of us at the Jose Antonio Hotel in Miraflores, an upscale district of Lima. We celebrated our arrival with the mandatory Pisco Sourโ€”though I still think Sarahโ€™s father makes a better one. Perhaps weโ€™re simply used to the lemons he prefers, while Peruvian bars typically use limes.

The next morning, we walked along the Miraflores escarpment overlooking the Pacific. Despite it being a Friday, the paths were busy with people enjoying the ocean air. The terraced tennis courts were full, and the waves seemed perfect for beginner-intermediate surfers.

In the afternoon, we took the Mirabus double-decker tour as an easy introduction to the city. Lima has 11 million people, and it felt like all of them were drivingโ€”the traffic was astonishingly bad. It took us 1.5 hours to travel 9 km back to the hotel. Our driver, however, was remarkably calm, suggesting this is simply daily life here. We later learned that the traffic was worse than usual for two reasons: (1) each district has a road-improvement budget that must be spent by December 31, so construction ramps up in the fall, and (2) a main access road to the coastal highway was closed for repairs, forcing everyone onto alternate routes.

Limaโ€™s historic centre dates back to 1535, shortly after Pizarroโ€™s conquest of the Incan Empire. The early churches, convents, and civic buildings were first constructed in the mid-1500s and have been rebuilt or added onto many times after โ€œRing of Fireโ€ earthquakes. It was startling to remember we were in the Americas; in Canada, aside from a few old forts, virtually no continuously used buildings predate the earlyโ€“mid 1800sโ€”almost 300 years younger than central Lima.

Iโ€™m fascinated by how different cultures developed across the continents. According to Dr. Google, the Incas, Aztecs, and Mayans built strong central governments and cities with millions of people, with even earlier cultures preceding them. Meanwhile, North American Indigenous groups developed smaller, family-centred social structures. Climate must have played a major roleโ€”surviving harsh northern winters leaves less time for building giant urban centres. One day Iโ€™d like to spend more than a few minutes reading about this!

We met the rest of the tour group and Ivonne, our local guide, on Saturday morning. After lunch at a local restaurant, six of us took a trip to Pachacamac, a major religious centre founded long before the Incas. You can trace the siteโ€™s history through the changing construction materials used over the centuries.

As interesting as Pachacamac was, the shanty towns around Lima captured my attention even more. If I understood correctly, about four million people live in these informal settlements that ring the city. Homes typically begin as a single brick room and expand over time as families grow and can afford additions. Eventually the city installs water and sewer services, and residents start paying taxes. The worrying part is Limaโ€™s seismic risk: when (not if) a major earthquake hits, these largely handmade brick structures will be dangerously vulnerable.


26 October โ€” Lima, Day 2

We met the full 11-person tour group on Saturday morning. Other than Mark and Cindy, we were all strangersโ€”Americans from various states, plus the two of us. Itโ€™s a different way to travel. With group tours, you gain a knowledgeable guide and everything is arranged for you; you simply โ€œhold onto the ropeโ€ and go. The trade-off is that we did very little research before arrivingโ€”something weโ€™d normally consider essential for independent travel. We did read Turn Right at Machu Picchu by Mark Adams, but really should have done more.

We repeated our walk along the Miraflores cliffs, then after lunch, six of us took a small bus to Pachacamac. The site, founded around 400 AD, was once a major spiritual centreโ€”about a thousand years before the Inca Empire. You can see the layers of history in the evolving building styles and materials.

Again, the shanty towns left the biggest impression. About four million people live in these sprawling settlements, building their homes gradually as money allows. Eventually the city formalizes services and taxation. But being on the โ€œRing of Fire,โ€ Lima is highly vulnerable to earthquakes, tsunamis, and volcanic activity. When a major quake hits, these homemade brick homes could collapse, putting millions at risk. Yikes.

After the tour, a young guide shepherded us to the airport, reminding us roughly 50 times to go to Gate 3, and then snapping a group photo as we headed into security. Larry joked that the photo was probably for her supervisorsโ€”as proof she had successfully delivered her โ€œpackageโ€ of 11 tourists, much like an Amazon driver. Job done!

Next stop: the Peruvian Amazon.

Paris, Zurich, Tenerife, London & Dakar

December 17, 2023 โ€“ January 21, 2024

These may seem like an unusual combination of destinations, but thereโ€™s a good explanation.

Although Heather comes back to Canada almost every year, it has been far too long since we visited her in Europe. The last time we were there, she was living in Geneva, had not yet finished her PhD, and was not married. Since then, weโ€™ve attendedโ€”via Zoomโ€”both her wedding in Zurich and her PhD defense in Geneva, and we still had never met her German parents-in-law. COVID travel restrictions slowed everything down, so we had some catching up to do.

We definitely wanted to spend Christmas with Heather and Hannes at their home in Zurich. Because of our family connection with WestJetโ€”and the fact that WestJet currently only flies to Paris, London, and Barcelonaโ€”we decided on a routing that made the most sense: fly to Paris, take the train to Zurich for Christmas, join Heather and Hannes on their holiday in the Canary Islands, and then return home via London. Barcelona will have to wait for another trip. However, midway through the journey I was asked to visit a client in Dakar, Senegal, so the plan evolved: Sarah returned home from London, and I continued on to Dakar.

Weโ€™ve been to Paris several times, but the last visit was over 20 years ago during the RTW trip with the kids. Central Paris looks much the same; only the fashions and the cars have changed. One thing that stood out was how many more bicycles are on the roads and bike paths now. I also donโ€™t remember noticing just how many small shops line every street and every building. Of course they were always thereโ€”boulangeries, pรขtisseries, cafรฉs, restaurants, and specialty shops that could only survive in a city like Parisโ€”but this time they felt impossible to miss. Just down from our hotel was a clarinet repair shop, filled with instruments in various states of repair. We even saw an Ikea that couldnโ€™t have been more than 20′ x 20′ (6 m x 6 m), serving only as a mail-order pickup and return point. In the evenings, the streets and restaurants were packed with locals.

Notre-Dame is still undergoing major reconstruction after the 2018 fire. They hope to reopen it to visitors in December 2024, though I suspect exterior work will continue for some time after that.

And, of course, Paris is gearing up to host the 2024 Summer Olympics.

Still in draftโ€”more text and photos to comeโ€ฆ

All the wildebeest in the Serengeti

22 December 2018 โ€” Mbugani Migration Camp, Lake Ndutu, Tanzania
Written 22 January 2019, Calgary, Alberta, Canada

We were just leaving the Mbugani Migration Camp. Heather and I had our bags slung over our shoulders as we rounded the corner of the dining tent toward the truck. Up ahead, Salim and three of the camp staff were already gathered, laughing about something. As soon as he spotted us, Salim grinned and said, โ€œOh goodโ€”the father needs to be here for this.โ€

Apparently, one of the young staff members had confided to Salim that he found Heather quite attractive. Salim had shared with the group the earlier assessment by the Datoga that Mark’s payment for Kirsten should be set at 400 cows.

Heather, of course, leapt straight into the negotiations. Without missing a beat, she raised the price to 500 cowsโ€”on the logic that she could hand over 400 to Mark and still come out ahead.

The young man paused, considering this, and then his face lit up.
โ€œHow about 500 wildebeest?โ€ he countered.

Given that this was the migration campโ€”and given that we were effectively surrounded by wildebeest in every direction, with more arriving by the hourโ€”it was a shrewd opening bid. But then he went all-in:

โ€œNo, waitโ€ฆ all the wildebeest in the Serengeti!โ€

There are well over a million wildebeest in the Serengeti. And, letโ€™s be honest, Heather isnโ€™t getting any younger. By next year, the offer might drop to only half the wildebeest in the Serengeti. Itโ€™s the kind of decision a father needs to weigh carefully.

This whole โ€œold-world dowryโ€ system certainly opens up intriguing possibilities for the modern, capitalistic parent. Up until now, the kids have been a highly lovable money pitโ€ฆ

That’s a lot of wildebeest

Just the pics, Ma’am (not cell phone friendly!)

I know: reading is hard.

Here is a page with only the pictures. These are the same pictures as the rest of the web site, but you don’t have to read all those pesky words. Just keep scrolling down, and then select the individual photos in each section by clicking on the thumbnails . If you do want to read the story associated with any of the pictures, then click on the link above each group of photos.

And of course, don’t forget the videos: There’s no reading there either. Here’s a link to my youtube channel for all of them.

There’s some reading here, but everyone likes a map. See a google map of where we went.

To make this page size smaller, I’ve limited it to pictures of the safari days. And I included Zanzibar because I like the two monkey pictures from the national park. But it’s still a huge number of pictures to download. You’ll need to be on a full time internet connection to see these in any reasonable downloading time. Don’t use your cell phone’s data plan!

07/12/2018: Saw lion 10 minutes after leaving airport

Elephants line astern
 
Elephants line astern
Yes, we were this close
I'm happy to meet you. Why don't you come over for a chat?
Oh barf:  more tourists
This is my angry face
Can you take my passport picture? I need a visa
Hippo & his posse
termite mound
africa scene
You looking at me?
Baboon & baby
Sarah's photo & favourite picture
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08/12/2018: Giraffes and more

You'd peak around corners too if your neck was 9' long
 
You'd peak around corners too if your neck was 9' long
Masai Giraffe
Impalas: Our guide told us the black M on their rump  signifies they are McDonalds for Lions
It's all fun and games until someone puts their eye out
Our guide Daniel on the left, and driver/guide Julius on the right
Trendily dressed Kudu
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10/12/2018: Lions and cheetahs

Two Mums
 
Two Mums
Cub in the rain
Cats in a pile
Mum & cub
We've got it surrounded...
cropped shot
Dom, our guide in Samburu
THis is about the same age as the ones we saw in Nairobi
Grevy Zebra
Male Impala
Dik Dik
Velvet Monkey & baby
Reticulated Giraffes
Warthog
Oryx
Elephants eat 18 hours a day!
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14/12/2018: Even more lions and cheetahs

Cheetah Mum
 
Cheetah Mum
The cubs have ruffled fur behind their necks
cheetah cubs playing
cats playing
cats playing
Topi for dinner
Sundown at Olare Motorogi
Topi at sundown
Young male lions at play
Lion practical jokes:Hit your friend in the head just as the picture is being taken
Looks and sounds like a cat drinking
Toying with a baby gazelle
Run!
Keep running!
Mum & 4 cubs
three week old lion
three weeks old
Masai Giraffe
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18/12/2018: How did he see that?

At top of hill near Sangaiwe gate to Tarangire park
 
At top of hill near Sangaiwe gate to Tarangire park
The professionals have arrived
Baobab tree
Lots of elephants
Spot the Leopard. Now imagine you were not looking through a 300mm lens.
Sleepy but alert leopard
Sleepy but alert leopard
Dung beetle!
Mud bath
Silly cat - being sick after eating grass
They should call this a kaleidoscope of zebras, not a herd
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22/12/2018: Real Housewives of the Serengeti (Lion edition)

Handsome leading man
 
Handsome leading man
The 'happy couple', or so we thought
NSFW
drowning his sorrows
Hyena ralaxing in a mud puddle
Hippo
Big and little
Big mouth
James Bond would escape by running on the hippos
Topi Posing
It's not cold. There's too many flies!
Don't touch my meat!
4-5 months old
Life doesn't get better than this
Game spotting is easy: Just look for the other vehicles!
Serval Cats - this mother and  kitten are about the same size as our siamese cats were
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19/12/2018: 400 cows

the '400 cow' lady is on the left
 
the '400 cow' lady is on the left
bracelets 'r us
We were pretty close to this one
Riding on Mum
Night time....
Day Time!!!!!
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21/12/2018: Did civilization miss something?

Bushmen
 
Bushmen
Salim talking to the local masaai kids after lunch
small scale wildebeest migration
Sibling cheetahs. Note how full the left one is
Bat eared fox
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25/12/2018: Merry Christmas from the Ngorongoro Crater

Merry Christmas!
 
Merry Christmas!
Keeping a watchful eye out: If a hyena arrives, the cheetah will leave in a hurry
Pride Rock? 3 lions visible top left
Oldepai gorge
The Ngorongoro crater is about 20km in diameter. Those are the volcano walls surrounding the crater.
crater floor
baby cape buffalo
crater floor
crater floor warthog
There is one forested area on the floor
Ngorongoro Crater
Another day of topping and tailing... and gossiping
Colourful Arusha Central Market
Selling pet chickens in Arusha
Arusha - Is Sarah getting shorter?
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31/12/2018: Happy New Year from Zanzibar

One of many Dhows at low tide
 
One of many Dhows at low tide
Another day at the beach - the ocean was too warm
Sunset at the Promised Land Bar
Beach soccer in the cooler evening temps
She came and sat behind me
She came and sat behind me
She came and sat behind me
She came and sat behind me
She came and sat behind me
Mark keeps winning at Connect 4, & Sarah has finger nails!
Red Colobus Monkey
Sykes Monkey
Vendor in Stone Town
Vendor in Stone town
Future vendor in Stone Town
Playing Bao in the market. The younger generation just played on their phones
Photobombing my picture of this Stone Town door
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08/01/2019: On the home stretch!

Watching the hippos on the Rufiji River
 
Watching the hippos on the Rufiji River
Sunset on the Rufiji
Nicely backlit African Bee Eater
The mother leaves these alone at three weeks old. 90% of the baby crocs don't make it.
This crazy yellow bird builds nests with the entrance at the bottom
When the water is deeper, hippos run a long the bottom and then porpoise up for air
2m tall... and less than a week old. THe umbilical cord is still attached
These colourful birds would follow the jeep, catching insects that we stirred up
Another safari lunch... with bottles of Stoney Tangawizi
Boudoir shot
African wild dogs.
A little eye cleaning action
praying for food
Cessna 208b Grand Caravan - workhorse of the fly-in safari
Pup
A crocodile acacia tree.
Look closer: Clothes ~and~ bike wash station
School house on the drive to Camp Bastian
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13/01/2019: Last Game Drive

Ken - you don't need all those fancy tractors!
 
Ken - you don't need all those fancy tractors!
 All trucks went at about 10km/hr on this steep road.  The blue truck was passing the gas truck by driving on the opposite shoulder!
Baby hippo & Mum
Greater Kudu
Another winning Scrabble word - the Rock Hyrax
We watched this guy chew his cud. You could see it, like an adams apple, travel all he way down his neck... and then come all the way back up and he would start chewing again.
Elephants caused the hole in this baobab
Another baby
The Jackals chased off the vultures to snag this kill
Lots of baby crocs
View off our balcony at the Ruaha River Lodge
The bigger elephants tried to keep this ~1 week old hidden
View off our balcony at the Ruaha River Lodge
View off the balcony at the Ruaha River Lodge
View off the balcony at the Ruaha River Lodge
Riding in the pop-top
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Here’s a list of all the posts

It can be difficult to find stuff in wordpress because you need to go forward or back one post at a time. Here is a list of all the posts. But before I do that, here’s a handy map of where we went.