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July
Diary : Winter 2006 news
The winter has definitely come to Nitani
and it is always so hard to imagine the usual hot temperatures
that prevail for most of the year are not just a dream. Animals
and people alike all find the first rays of the sun and thaw.
Our animal friends are all doing very well.
Impi, our hand reared serval, is free and wild and we would love
to have any pictures taken by our guests that met him. We have
discovered that of all the many pictures we have of him there
are none of him and Shane together. The reason being of course
that I must be the world’s worst photographer and so any
pictures that could be e-mailed to our reservations office would
be greatly appreciated.
Arni, the hand reared bushbuck has come
of age and has made his debut into the wild. We have every confidence
that he will survive and succeed most admirably and will post
an update as soon as we have news. At present he his wondering
between our camp and the lodge so there are many eyes to watch
out for his progress.
Our animal sightings at this time of the
year are always very good and we have been seeing a great deal
of leopards in the last few weeks. We were privileged enough to
come across what we called a pride of leopards, five in total
comprising of a female, her three fully grown cubs, pictures of
them as newborns were posted on the web last year, and a young
male. Last night’s game drive produced a young female leopard
with a sizable baboon she had killed and wedged into the fork
of a tree. She was obviously very proud of herself and we managed
to get some very nice photographs of her. Victoria, our collared
female leopard has been in a bad scrap and has lost half her tail
which is quite tragic as she had a beautiful sensual tail. We
do have a young male leopard with a short tail who doesn’t
appear to be at all disadvantaged by it.
We have a new resident at our camp, a Cape
clawless otter who has staked a claim to the river below us. We
haven’t seen otters in years so this is very exciting. We
watched something very interesting the other evening, we were
alerted to some very strange growling sounds and saw the otter
amble down the riverbank into the water. A few seconds later,
Pula our resident leopard followed and the two had a growling
competition with the otter giving as good as he was getting. The
otter finally swam off and Pula had to make alternative dinner
plans.
Nitani has other great news, the Shashe/Limpopo
Transfrontier Park agreement was successfully signed on the 22nd
June between the Tourism Ministers of Botswana, Zimbabwe and South
Africa. This will make Nitani part of a 4780 square kilometer
“big five” wildlife sanctuary. While Nitani still
remains private land the animals will move freely and our guests
will benefit greatly by this. Our area is heralded to become the
most unique wildlife experience in Africa.

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