Tag Archive for 'game'

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

Earless Injury: Video


Over the last few nights, the hills have been resonating with the roar of lions coming from all directions. Not only that, the cubs had been spotted daily near one of the camps. I decided to go find myself some lions; I climbed the highest point to get a direction, but got no help from my receiver. I might have had the faintest beep, but I thought I was hearing crickets in the grass. I headed in the direction anyway and out of some miraculous positioning found signal.

Awesome Afternoon Light

Simon and the crew had climbed aboard and we were hot on Manyari’s tail. In the tall grass she popped her head up not looking very surprised to see us and carried on sleeping. As it got dark the lioness began moving and then began roaring, this is the most awesome thing about lions, when you’re close and can literally feel the thunder of their call.

Beaten track

Today the dogs slept in at the den and I cruised around not finding much happing. Later at the hyena den we waited for the cubs to come out…something was wrong. I thought that when it got dark they’d pop their heads out so I went looking for the dogs again, but ended up back at the den.

Misbehaving

Now I knew they were not there. A few hundred meters south the hyenas were calling so like homing pigeons returning home we made a way through the Mopane where there seemed to be no way. Like a secret weapon, a hyena den positioning system, I landed up straight on the doorstep of the other den. All six cubs and two adults greeted us, I was very relieved, they are such fun little guys! I’m glad we have the position on the new den now and can stay on the cubs as they grow up, they may still return to the other den though, they might have been spooked by something on the other side.

New Den

A Horny Game: Video


Jiggy hasn’t been living up to his name as the big killing machine. For 3 days now he hasn’t eaten, but the rest of the pack have.
The pups killed the other day and Puzzles and Jiggy never got to the kill. But when the pups joined them Puzzles made sure they regurgitated for her. She begged from 4 pups and they all fed her well, but there was none for Jiggy.

Not sharing
The next day the dogs were right in the south and when I got to them I saw one dog on the opposite bank of the Chiredzi river. Not able to drive down there I ran down to the river to see where the other dogs were. No sign. Then I saw an adult male impala running along the far bank of the river. It looked tired. It ran around the bend, so I had to run down the river too. It got to a donga/ravine and tried to jump across but fell short, being so tired, and thumped into the side with its chest. It lay there a while, then got up and ran on before disappearing into a thicket. Then I saw the wild dog pup came tearing along the bank. Got to the donga, sniffed around, then carried on. Got to the thicket, turned round and headed back the other way. Then turned again and back to the thicket. Just then the impala ran out and across the river.

Perfect spot

It’s very shallow now and mostly sand. The impala was exhausted and had already nearly stopped in the sand when the pup grabbed it. I had to sprint back to the car in the soft river sand. Drove further down and then tried to drive down into the river. The bank was steep. Then I was on 3 wheels. Then teetering on 2 and finally came to a grinding halt on a huge tree stump. I couldn’t go further, so grabbed my camera and ran to the dog and impala. The pup was now full and leaving to call the others. The impala was still standing with its backside having been eaten. I managed to get some footage before it collapsed on the ground. The pup was gone a while so I ran back to the car to try and jack it off the stump. Then I saw the other dogs arriving and had to rush back to the kill. This running in soft river sand is tough going. The dogs were great, even with me running at them they scattered at the last minute but only briefly and were back on the kill. I spent the next couple of hours with them in the river feeding and playing with them all around me. Even Puzzles. Just amazing to have this experience and to be accepted like this. Truly awesome.

Reflective kill
When the dogs eventually left I was left to dig myself out. Jacking the car wasn’t getting me off this massive tree stump. In the end I had to chop through this tree, nearly 2ft in diameter, and only then did the car start moving. Many more jacking attempts and digging and eventually about an hour and a half later I was out!

Can't float
With all this going on Jiggy got to the kill about half an hour late. There were still scraps but he didn’t even bother, as if too proud to eat from their kill.
And today the dogs were just being domestic. Just acting like domestic dogs. Lying around, playing a little and not up to much.

Playground
A herd of wildebeest got the pups attention for about 10mins and then all was quiet again, until sunset when the pups heard a white rhino nearby and decided to hassle the bull. It looked like a lot of fun with this huge tank repeatedly charging them but they were too quick. Unfortunately it didn’t offer me any opportunity to film it.

Blue waters

Painted dogs versus stripes: Video


It makes me even more anxious looking at these pictures of the dogs and the video shot a few days ago. I wonder how they’re getting on just hoping they’ll be back on Malilangwe when I get back tomorrow.

Playing
For now I’m just having a wild time with my daughters.

Oh you!

Pups hassling hyaenas: Video


It’s me back in the saddle. Well not that I haven’t been in the saddle, I just haven’t been in the Wildcast saddle.
The wild dogs are all doing great but still no sign of Wave. It really is a mystery as to what happened to him. He was a great dog and big friends with Chevvy. Since then Chevvy seems to be spending most of his time lying up alone. But then Chevvy always was a different boy. He’s a great hunter and is often out there leading the pack.

Fuji smiles
The dogs were having one of their tribal games this morning well before sunrise when we found them. They’d cornered a couple of hyaena in some thick bush and weren’t letting them out of there. Although, actually the hyaenas just didn’t want to leave. They could easily have left out the back door, but seemed to be quite happy playing the game.

After play
When another hyaena arrived the pups were quickly onto it, it too taking refuge in thick bush but by the sounds of it, it wasn’t having such a fun game.
In these games neither party has the intention of trying to kill the other. They might nip each other on the backside but that’s about as bad as it gets.
When I got out the car to join the pups in their game, the game ended abruptly when the hyaenas took off because of me. I like to think this scored me a few points with the dogs.
The pack still seemed full from yesterday’s killed and weren’t keen to move off, especially when it started raining. But try as I wish, I wasn’t able to film them in the rain as it came it little spurts. Some were actually quite big spurts, enough to soak me while my Mike Dolan, my script writer and Barend, my editor took cover under the tarpaulin.

Taking cover
The dogs had no plans on moving but we did and headed off in search of elephants again. We’d searched yesterday to no avail. Not even a track. Mike, out from Washington, was on his first visit to Africa and I just had to show him all my movie stars.
We got lucky around midday when a breeding herd of ellies came down to Tsuvuka pan. The soils there are red and once the herd had tucked in to that mud wallow we were left with these terracotta sculptures. A little calf was having piles of fun and soon some young bulls joined him, all putting on a great show for Mike.

On the way
We were back with the dogs in the early afternoon and already they were on the move heading south. Thankfully they kept to the track most of the way but once the chase was on we had to abandon our mission. The rains have left the soils really soggy in that area and I wasn’t keen to be digging myself out of clay for the rest of the day.
I presume they killed in there, as their signal didn’t move by the time we left them at sunset.

Dogs in Waterworld: Video


Thankfully the wild dogs came down from the hills at dawn, Puzzles leading the pack again. It wasn’t long until she was back on the main road heading south with her pack in tow.

Listening
2kms down the road she did a ‘U’-turn, back north up the main drag for a kilometre and then west. Now she was heading straight into impala-land.
Soon impala were ‘flying’ everywhere, most with a dog hot on their heels.
The kills came quickly. I think 3 of them, but I only found Jiggy and one pup feeding on the one kill. They left and I found others on another kill and from the sounds there was yet another to the south. All kills within 200m of each other and all after only a short chase of less than 500m.

Stained
The dogs were now all in great shape with rounded tummies. Again Puzzles took them north, all resting in a pan to cool off. It was already hot and the dogs had been on a long hunt. Of course I expected them to spend the day here, but 2mins later Puzzles had the pack on the run still heading north.

Cooling off
It was only half an hour later and several kilometres further that she eventually pulled up in the shade of mopanie trees to rest.
The pack hardly roused and soon before sunset the pups were up playing in a pan. And when the games ended, so did everything else and nobody went hunting tonight. For a change they were spending a night at home.

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