This was our first real day on the Serengeti. We hadn’t gone far before we drove by a pool
and discovered a group of Hippo’s (which by now were popular with the
kids). This group was only metres from
the vehicle so we got a very good look at them along with a large crocodile
that was sneaking around waiting for unsuspecting animals to take a drink! We discovered just how big Hippo’s can yawn
(up to 150 degrees) and how noisy they can be!
It’s hard to take them seriously, they seem to just wallow and float but
once in a while, you’ll see this explosion in the water when two of them decide
to go at it and you get a sense of just how dangerous they really are.
Lots more Wildebeest, we found another huge block of them…
in fact one large herd was approaching our road so we stopped and they crossed
about 100’ in front of us. Without a
word of a lie, the herd continued for at LEAST 15 minutes. It didn’t occur to me to count them until the
herd was nearly gone but at one point, they stretched from one horizon to the
next. At any given time, there would be
three of them on the road and they were booking it so there must have been
thousands, if not tens of thousands in that one herd… and we saw many that
day. You really have to see it to really
get how many there are… and all without seeing a single lion or predator!
By the time I thought to get a picture, the herd was thinning out a bit... but this gives you an idea of the density of the line. This was quite typical... now imagine this goes for 10 miles in either direction!
We drove about 100kms south of the lodge and found a cheetah
not far from the road, lots of wart hogs and other animals but at nothing like
the density of Lake Manyara or Tarangira.
We also found a few rock rugs (lions) hanging out on the top of some
Kjobes. When they are sleeping, they
really do drape over the rocks like a rug.
About 1000’ down the road, we pulled over to have a picnic
lunch however the flies drove Shawn and me nuts and back into the 4x4 but
Jen/Rachel were determined to stick it out.
The flies were sort of like our house flies but much lighter. They didn’t bite but they liked to land
around your eyes and lips which would drive you nuts. Gladly enough though, we’d only seen about 3
mosquitos on the whole trip and about as many Tse Tse flies (in
Tarangira). After a bit, the flies
seemed to lose interest in us so we hung around and just enjoyed being out on
the plains in the middle of nowhere without another human within 20 miles.
Soon after that, we turned back north to head back towards
the lodge and I made a comment about how good the 4 wheel drive seemed to be on
the Land Cruisers. Sam immediately said,
they aren’t great and he’d much rather have a Land Rover but the problem with
them is that they break down every two or three safari trips. He said there were places he just wouldn’t go
with the Land Cruiser because he didn’t trust it. It wasn’t 1 km later that we got stuck right
up to the axles in a mud hole!
Out we jump again, out comes the jack as we tried to get some
large rocks under the wheels but we couldn’t lift the thing high enough (or
rather our jack would sink into the mud faster than we could lift the vehicle
despite putting some large patio stone sized rocks under it). Just how far down does this mud go?
Anyway, after about 10 minutes of horsing around with the
jack, this ranger comes along in a light Land Rover about half the size of our
Land Cruiser. Our guide brings out this
tow rope that looks like one of the ones we get at Princess Auto for $5 (the
jack was the exact model of Chinese jack I’d bought at Princess Auto as well)
and hooks on. Unfortunately, our vehicle
is just too bogged down… and the Land Rover was just digging a hole for
itself. Just as it was apparent that
wasn’t going to work, a large 4x4 dump truck rolls along, pulls up and we hook
up the tow rope to it. The driver didn’t
even wait for Sam to get behind the wheel and started pulling. The cheapo rope of course couldn’t take it so
it came apart at the seams (just like the one Dad bought about 2 years ago), so
they search around in their truck and come out with a cable (really just a 75’ length
of solid wire bent back on itself three times).
Anyway, they hook this up to us, Sam gets in and they drag us out, no
muss, no fuss. They all high five each
other and then off they go. A day in the
life in Africa!
Anyway, we head through a bunch of other likely spots and
don’t see a lot of activity but a few new animals here and there and after an
hour long drive back on the plains had just about given up when we came across
this pride of lions lying in the short grass right at the side of the
road! We stopped and admired them,
again, lazy darn lions sleeping it off… and then one in another patch we hadn’t
seen sticks his head up and its Mufasa again!
This pride was 14 lions… quite
cool.
Then we headed back towards the lodge and past the hippo
pool again, and this time there is a lone hippo out wandering around in the
grass not 25’ from the road! She’s
HUGE. You don’t really get a good sense
of how big they are until they are right beside your vehicle! No way are you getting outside with one of
them around! Apparently they spend all
day in the pool (pooping) and then come out at night to feed on the grass. They “only” eat 35 Kgs of grass a day –
compared to over 300 Kg’s for an elephant but their digestive system is many
times more efficient. You can see it in
the spoor. Elephant poop is nearly
undigested whereas the hippo is the green slop I’m used to cleaning up after
pigs.
It’s getting dark, so we have to be off the roads so race
back towards the lodge and come across a strange looking antelope with orange
feet – a Topi. They are quite a bit
bigger than most of the antelope but have this strange habit of coating their
horns in mud to make them more impressive.
A quite cool end to a very long day.
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