Tag Archive for 'elephants'

Bon ‘up-a-Tree’: Video


The wild dogs are still at the same den, which continues to frustrate me as the area is covered in long grass and the entrance to the den is obscured by bush. AND of course there’s hardly any sun reaching the area either.

Chilled
And to add to that I can’t drive to the den. Which of course makes things not so easy for me as I have to carry everything up there, but I also really need the pups to get used to the vehicle.

At the bar
The pups are now 10 weeks old and the brown/yellow colours are really coming out on them. One pup seems to have the beauty of her mother. She’s the one I named Domino.

10 weeks old
The adults/yearlings are still hunting like demons and more than coping with feeding the pack. And Puzzles is enjoying the easy life staying at home most of the time. She very seldom goes hunting. But then I suppose somebody has to babysit.

Discipline
Yesterday the pups followed the adults hunting for the first time. They ventured a good half a kilometre from the den with the adults repeatedly trying to send them back home, but they were all psyched up for an adventure. Eventually Puzzles came trotting past me to the pups, gave a whine and then trotted back past me to the den with all 11 little ones following hot on her heals.

Puppy control
It wasn’t 5mins and the little guys were back down the hill, this time on their own. Half way down they seemed a little, sort of ‘lost’, I suppose. For 15mins they milled around and then thought better of it and ran back home.
Even with all going on the frustrations grow, as I haven’t had the camera out the box all week! Bleak!
The only predictable shooting we’ve been doing is me in front of the camera for a change. Mark has been shooting me for material needed for the wild dog film. The beauty of this is, I’m getting around the reserve again. And always happy to bump into a bunch of elephant bulls!

Trendy bulls

Splash Master: Video

The wild dog puppies are now 9weeks old!

All the dogs are still going strong. 8 adults and 11 puppies.

Growing pack

They’ve moved den twice in the last week and will probably be moving more often now as the pups become more adventurous and are moving further and further a field. They’re still too young to follow the adults on the hunt but in a few weeks they’ll probably be out there.

Twins

Puzzles is still suckling her pups but only a couple of times a day as her milk is now drying up.

Just Puzzles

The puppies are now true meat eaters and continue to walk around with oversized tummies from the successful hunting adventures of the rest of the pack.

Sleeping heads

It’s only about 1 in 10 days that puppies don’t get fed, but they sure make up for it on the other 9 days as their tummies are permanently swollen.

I can’t wait for the dogs to leave the hills and start their nomadic lives again. I feel I’ve been couped in up their for too long now.

Pup tormentor

The pups colours are now really beginning to change with the browns coming out of the blacks. And then it’s time to try and find ID features so I can name them all. Already we have a Domino, Dice and Delta. I’m still not sure of sexes of all the pups.

Stalking pup

Thankfully the lions have stayed away from the dens although I have seen their tracks again on the track near the den.

All is well in the wild dog world and Puzzles continues to be single. Neither Chevvy nor Kodak are showing any signs of flirting with their mother. No doubt when she comes into oestrus next year things will change.

Cheers

Kim

Lioness not impressed: Video


Puzzles took to the road for the first time this evening. No doubt the pack intend hunting into the night with the moon full. And surprisingly nobody stayed behind at the den to baby sit. Did Puzzles leave it up to me?

Oh little one1
The den the pups are in is really safe so long as the little ones don’t try silly tricks and go a wandering. I’m sure they’ll be fine.
The last few days have been much the same with activity at the den peaking in the evenings after hunting with the moon and the days are pretty quiet.

Rock fig
Except this morning, Dimple had this thing about carrying a pup out the den right down the slope and then all the sub-adults ended up playing with it. Being too far from the den for the little one to know it’s way back, Puzzles would eventually intervene and take it back. This happened 4 times. And each time it was Dimple who took the pups out. She’s very gentle in the way she carries the pups, but I wonder what drives her to do this?

Different perspective
I’ve had an interesting few days myself.
The track up to the den becomes more impassable the more I travel on it and it’s seriously steep. The other day I stalled the vehicle on the slope and being so steep it wouldn’t start. I ended up flooding it, then running the battery flat!!! Stupid me. This meant I had to carry the battery to the nearest decent track, about 1 ½ kms. Then run the 8kms home before it got dark (them lions change their behaviours after dark). I arrived soon after sunset! Collect another vehicle, come back, collect the battery and charge it over night. In the morning I had to do it all in reverse and then before I could get up the mountain I had to do some major road works clearing massive rocks. Anyway it’s all sorted for a few more adventures up the hill. Probably just when Puzzles decides to move her den again…. ☺

Malilangwe hills
Today was the most lovely day and I went kayaking on the main dam, like I do several times a week. The water was brilliantly calm as the nose of my kayak sliced through the mirror images of the cliffs surrounding the dam. True bliss! I passed a small island with a pair of Goliath Herons watching me. They always fly away but the last time I paddled, the one was there and it stayed. And then amazingly today they both stayed. I do hope they are getting used to me. Just around the island is a small bay where some hippo usually hang out. They weren’t there but further on one suddenly broke the surface in front of me and then I noticed another to my right. This one did a huge leap out the water splashing down towards me. I’m used to these games and can easily paddle away. I passed the dam wall where the normal couple of small crocs lie sunning themselves. They never move off. Then it’s the long haul along the eastern bank. Near the top end of the dam the one section is really shallow and I paddle around it as it adds extra drag on the kayak. Sometimes a lone young hippo bulls hangs out here but there was no sign of him today. As I headed up the narrows at the top end of the dam a pair of Egyptian Geese took off briefly to land 20m away while a Great White Egret fished on the shores. I turned around to come back down the narrows and only then spotted the hippo. I must have paddled passed him earlier. He must have been submerged. He didn’t seem too happy to see me and came leap frogging out the water beaming down on me. No problem as I cruised away. A short while later I heard that familiar sound of a hippo catching a quick breath before submerging. I couldn’t see anything not even behind, thinking it to be the dude who’d been chasing me. With the water so calm ripples become extra clear and I noticed some small ripples ahead of me. I kept paddling but veered slightly away from them. Obviously not enough……….. Next thing I felt the kayak being lifted out the water. A hippo was surfacing right under my seat. Of course now I was fully on course to be toppled into the water. As I splashed down I was already on my side and water gushing into the kayak. Frantically I braced to the side with my paddle working it to and fro trying to right myself. It seemed like forever, but I was soon upright again and now paddling at full sprint away from the scene of the crime. Thankfully my friendly hippo didn’t follow. I think he got just as big a fright as I did. The consequences of falling out and having to swim ashore with that huge beast in the water right there were quite sobering!
So passes another lucky day. Thank you Africa!

Two tone

Throw a Hippo a Bone: Video


Kim and I have had a few intensive days of filming a list of sequences for the wild dog film. Our days start in the dark and end way after dark – I’m loving it! Heaven forbid we skip a day on Wildcast, but I think we had good reason, so apologies all round. I’ve been making a habit of spending the mornings up on the hill to provide light for the wild dog den.

Out of the shadows

The afternoon sun shines directly into the den, and provided the dogs are around, it makes for perfect lighting conditions. I’ve also been heading to the den at sunset to be there when the dogs get back from hunting; they’ve been leaving late afternoon and coming back long after dark. Last night they hadn’t killed, but this morning they hunted really early and involuntarily regurgitated for puzzles when she performed her screaming parade. The pups came out into that sunlight today; they seem to be a lot more mobile now.

Cutie

After being out the entire day, I still like to find time on my way home from the wild dogs to pop into the hyena cubs, who are finding my tyres a welcome play toy in the evenings – I worry they might make light work of my tyres when they’re older. For now I can’t stay away from the little guys, even though they’re really fowl smelling at the moment. It is so bad you can smell them before you actually have them in sight, it’s a small price to pay though.

Getting big

I think I connected with one of the mothers last night. When I was heading away from the den she was lying in the road, I stopped next to her and made some hyena type sounds - the best that I knew how. She immediately responded and weighted forward. I was a little surprised when she moved up to sniff my arm sticking off the side of the vehicle, she is fairly used to me coming and going all the time, but she seemed content that she had finally checked out this human sharing their den space.

On the loose with dad: Video


I saw my first glimpses of the pups today!
The moon is almost half and the dogs must have hunted by it in the early hours of the morning. When I arrived at dawn their faces were all bloodied as the moved around the den.
Puzzles was inside and not begging for food. So I presume the pack had got back shortly before I arrived.
In the mornings the sun is behind the den, but I have Mark’s vehicle up there with the lights so I can film inside the den. I’m just so happy to be getting this footage right inside the den. Pretty unique stuff. AND Puzzles is quite happy with me sitting there right at the den entrance.

Atom
She came out the hole in the side of the cave where she has her pups, and attached to her one nipple was a pup, like an oversized tick! The little one fell off as she took a few steps. It can hardly walk, but its eyes are open. Puzzles picked it up and move it back into her little lair.

Colour copying
Some of the subadults are now showing a lot of interest in the pups, especially Nike, but Puzzles will have none of it, screaming and growling at them if they get too close. At times Nike had her head in the hole, but Puzzles would growl her away.

Jaw tester
This afternoon, the little pups seemed even more mobile and Puzzles kept picking them up and carrying them into another part of the den. But I think it’s linked to where she has her hole. Although she seems not to think so and kept moving the little ones to the new hole. AND they’d just crawl back again.
Really exciting times and they can only get better. And the great news is how Puzzles is so accepting of me.

Super Penny
Mark did the video clip of the girls and me before he left. This was shot before the dogs started denning.

Romance on the moon: Video


Still no sign of Puzzles’ pups, but then they are only 10days old. I don’t expect to see them for at least another 5days to a week. But the little ones are becoming more and more vocal by the day.

Submissive smile
Puzzles is venturing further and further from the den too, although she’s very quick to retreat when any of the other dogs come into the area. With my constant presence at the den entrance, she’s come to trust me and will even leave the den with me sitting right there. She’s becoming my number one bitch very fast!

Puzzles home
As usual I’ve been den bound all this time too.
The pack have been hunting very successfully with the moon, which means I get to see even less action in the day with Puzzles.

Morning ray
Having left the den at dusk today when the pack left, we visited the hyaena den only to find the dogs had got there before us and the party was on. The 2 adult hyaenas as the den were having a rough time of it as the dogs were relentless in nipping their backsides, but they still hung around to accept the abuse. I wonder when payback time is coming?

Cocky pose
Mark and Kylie are away for a few days leaving me to take full control of the reins. Standby for real action!