Wild Dogs feed pups: Video
Published by Wildcaster 3 months, 1 week ago Tags: adventure, africa, african, animal, animal kingdom, animals, blog, blogumentary, bush, bush knowledge, conservation, documentary, ecotraining, education, endangered species, experience, experience adventure, flickr, GLTP, gonarezhou, Great Limpopo Transfrontier Park, hunting, kill, malilangwe, mashable, narrowcasting, Open Content Alliance, pamushana, peace parks, photo, photos, podcasting, predators, puppy, teach, video, wild dogs, wildcast, wildcasting, wilderness, wildlife, wildlife documentary, youtube, zebra, zimbabwe.When I arrived at the den in the dark this morning one of the adults barked at me and left. And for the rest of the day there was no sign of the adults or the pups. I could hear the pups squabbling in the den but they didn’t venture out without the adults there.
Midday I left the den for a few hours. This is usually a time when nothing happens. (I’ve noticed it with these dogs and also the previous pack I’ve followed. Midday is their main sleep time. Night time too.)

Back again in the early afternoon and still not a peep from the adults.
As the light was fading and only just enough for me to film, the pups came out to play on their own without the adults being there. This is brilliant news. So hopefully in the days to come they will now be brave enough to play outside the den!
At very last light the alpha female and alpha male arrived to feed the pups. They were both well fed. I’m not sure if they killed this afternoon or if this was from the morning’s hunt.
They seemed oblivious to me in the hide. Great stuff. But after a while when I moved the male saw me and barked. But only once. The pups of course scattered but were soon out again looking for scraps.
As it got dark I packed up. This time the dogs were a little more serious in their barking but I like to think they’re getting used to me. Not too likely after only a week or so at it.
It also seems that these are the only 2 adults in the pack. There’s been no sign of the other female. Has she maybe gone off and had pups on her own? Has she teamed up with Whisky? Wouldn’t that be the best!









The pups are cooped up for hours at a time in their den without leaving-how do they manage calls of nature, so to speak? Is there a designated area within the den? Or outside the den that they make quick dashes out to?
What a beautiful and joyful sight!! And Momma Dog has the most spectacular markings. Did you say the dogs would get rabies shots, and if so how would you go about it and when, K
I would love to see some shots of them hunting from your new plane like in Planet Earth.
Eve: they just seem to do it anywhere. in and out the den.
Karen: we’re going to have to dart each one and administer the drug. That’s why we need them habituated so we can get close to them
Scienceguy: if you don’t ask you don’t get. but hey man we’re not there yet. Those massive budgets are hard to come by!
Haha. Yeah, tell me about it. Funds are a bit low everywhere.