| This is the incredible moment a leopard leapt from a height of 40 feet to snare a spot of lunch.
The cunning big cat dives from a tree into a herd of startled impala, quickly pinning one of the animals down. The African antelope moved to graze underneath the tree, unaware that the crafty predator was lurking in the branches several metres above them.
View to a kill: This is the incredible moment a leopard leapt from a height of 40 feet to snare a spot of lunch in Botswana after spying some impala from a lofty branch
The only way is down: The leopard (circled) plummets towards the unsuspecting herd of impala, grazing peacefully beneath the branches The spotted animal carefully sized up her prey before dramatically launching herself at her target on the ground. The sneak attack caused the impala herd to flee in fright – except for one poor animal that was stuck in the female cat’s vicious grasp. Within seconds the attack was over – and the leopard held her prize in her jaws. Down to earth cat: The leopard here is just a split second from hitting the ground The sneak attack caused the impala herd to flee in fright – except for one poor animal that was stuck in the female cat’s vicious grasp Yasmin Tajik, 41, from Las Vegas, USA, was on a morning game drive with her family and a ranger in the MoremiNational Park in Botswana when the guide spotted the leopard concealed in the tree. She said: ‘Within a few minutes, the leopard postured, ready to attack, and then leapt from a height of about 40 feet above the impala, directly on to her unsuspecting target below. ‘Camera shutters were clicking, adrenaline rushed through our veins, and the remaining unhurt impala quickly scattered and commenced their bark-like distress calls. Success: The leopard drags its prey off, the rest of the herd having sprinted to safety ‘In what felt like mere seconds, the struggle and kill was over, as the leopard dragged the carcass away.’ The group watched as the leopard unsuccessfully tried to climb a nearby tree with the large carcass in its mouth in order for it to avoid rival predators that may have come across the kill. Yasmin said: ‘Her failed attempt only wet her appetite, so she opted to commence her meal with the impala carcass right on the ground, risking attracting other predators who could swipe her hard won meal.’ After the brief feed, the leopard tried to hoist the remains of the impala up another tree – but failed again. Defeated, the cat hid the carcass at the base of tree and took a midday nap – a welcome respite from the eventful morning. Yasmin added: ‘I was in shock, but was more focused on trying to capture what was happening on camera. ‘It was an incredible, once-in-a-lifetime event and I’m so happy that I was able to experience it with my family too.’
Climbing expedition: The leopard tried and failed to drag the carcass up two different trees to hide it from opportunistic predators |
Category Archives: Overlanding / Offroading / Africa
My new TPMS
I had a Tyre Dog TPMS on Bo , but don’t like the valve cap sensors. So I bought the an Aleen 509 solar unit to test on the Colt first.
Click on any pic for a larger view
I ordered it with 5 internal sensors
Sure you need to have them fitted by a tyre fitment place , but once that is done , they are totally unobtrusive and it is very easy to reprogram the receiver whenever you rotate wheels
The receiver comes with a 12v cable , but I have found that the smallest amount of exposure to sunlight will give the unit enough charge to operate without ever needing the 12 v supply
The display rotates between the 4 main tyres and the spare , and you can also display the temperature .
There are user selectable settings for Bar/PSI , C/F and you can set maximum / minimum pressure warnings per axle , as well as maximum temperature
I ordered my unit online from Dawood at Tyrealert and it was delivered within 2 days.
He also has a range of other options available.
Bruce Turner’s Botswana Trip Report
The diary of a Kariba Transplant
Stolen from Eric Sommer
The diary of a Kariba Transplant!
August 1
Just got transferred with work from London, UK to our new home in Chawara , Northern Kariba ..
Now this is a town that knows how to live!
Beautiful, sunny days and warm, balmy evenings.
I watched the sunset from a deckchair by our pool yesterday.
It was beautiful.
I’ve finally found my new home. I love it here.
September 1
Really heating up now. It got to 31 today.
No problem though.
Living in air-conditioned home, driving air-conditioned car.
What a pleasure to see the sun every day like this.
I’m turning into a sun-worshipper – no blasted rain like back in London !!
September 15
Had the back yard landscaped with tropical plants today. Lots of palms and rocks.
No more mowing lawns for me!
Another scorcher today, but I love it here.
It’s Paradise !
October 1
The temperature hasn’t been below 35 all week.
How do people get used to this kind of heat?
At least today it’s windy though. Keeps the flies off a bit.
Acclimatizing is taking longer than we expected.
October 15
Fell asleep by the pool yesterday.
Got third degree burns over 60% of my body.
Missed three days off work. What a dumb thing to do..
Got to respect the old sun in a climate like this!
October 20
Didn’t notice Kitty (our cat) sneaking into the car before I left for work this morning.
By the time I got back to the car after work, Kitty had died and swollen up to the size of a shopping bag and stuck to the upholstery.
The car now smells like Whiskettes and cat shit.
I’ve learned my lesson though: no more pets in this heat.
October 25
This wind is a bastard.
It feels like a giant fucking blow dryer. And it’s hot as hell!
The home air conditioner is on the blink and the repair man charged $200 just to drive over and tell me he needs to order parts from fucking JHB
The wife & the kids are complaining.
October 30
The temperature’s up around 40 and the parts still haven’t arrived for the fucking air conditioner.
House is an oven so we’ve all been sleeping outside by the pool for 3 nights now.
Bloody $600,000 house and we can’t even go inside.
Why the hell did I ever come here?
November 4
Finally got the fucking air-conditioner fixed.
It cost $1,500 and gets the temperature down to around 35 degrees. Stupid repairman. Fucking thief.
November 8
If one more smart bastard says ‘Hot enough for you today?’ I’m going to fucking throttle him.
Fucking heat!
By the time I get to work, the car radiator is boiling over, my fucking clothes are soaking fucking wet and I smell like baked cat.
Fucking place is the end of the Earth.
November 9
Tried to run some errands after work, wore shorts, and sat on the black leather upholstery in my car.
I thought my fucking arse was on fire.
I lost 2 layers of flesh, all the hair on the backs of my legs and off my fucking arse.
Now the car smells like burnt hair, fried arse and baked cat.
Fuck. Fuck. Fuck.
November 10
The Weather report might as well be a fucking recording..Hot and sunny. Hot and sunny, Hot and fucking sunny.
It never fucking changes!
It’s been too hot to do anything for 2 fucking months and the weatherman says it might really warm up next week.
Fuck!
November 15
Doesn’t it ever rain in this damn fucking place?
Water restrictions will be next, so my $5,000 worth of palms might just dry up and blow into the fucking pool.
The only things that thrive in this fucking hell-hole are the fucking flies.
You don’t dare open your mouth for fear of swallowing half a dozen of the little bastards!
November 20
Welcome to HELL!
It got to 45 fuckin’ degrees today.
Now the air conditioner gone in my car.
The repair man came to fix it and said, ‘Hot enough for you today?’
I wanted to shove the fucking car up his fucking arse.
Anyway, had to spend the $2,500 mortgage payment to bail me out of jail for assaulting the stupid prick.
Fucking KARIBA!
What kind of sick, demented fucking idiot would want to live here!
December 1
WHAT!!!! The FIRST day of Summer!!!!
You are fucking kidding me!
Cheetah Encounter
Ex The Overland Forum
The young male jumped onto the bonnet to look for prey but with nothing in sight turned its attention to the front seat passenger Lee Whittam, 39.
He said: ‘In 21 years of guiding, this is the first time it’s happened to me.
‘But once we’d recovered from the initial shock we enjoyed the extremely close views and inquisitive looks from this young male as he sniffed, licked and chewed bits of the vehicle that intrigued him.’
The unusual sight was captured in the northern Serengeti, Tanzania.
Many cheetahs have become accustomed to the scores of game drive vehicles that visit the national parks and some use them as vantage points to scan the savannah for prey.
Mr Whittam, a tour operator with Essential Africa Guided Safaris, said he was never worried about being attacked even when the predator was just inches from him.
‘Cheetahs are rarely aggressive and it was clear the animal was being curious not aggressive,’ he added.
‘Young animals are often inquisitive but it’s not often that they actually make physical contact with a vehicle – and it is certainly not common to actually jump up on one.
‘What will probably happen in this case is that the young male will outgrow his inquisitive nature and stop jumping onto vehicles – but it’s very likely that he’ll remain totally relaxed in their presence.’
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Zim Tourist Authority INFO – BEIT BRIDGE BORDER POST staff to assist tourists coming into Zim
From the Overland Forum .
GENERAL INFORMATION.
To all visitors and persons involved in tourism in Zimbabwe.
The Zimbabwe Tourism Authority have staff stationed at the Beitbridge border specifically to assist any visitors or tourists coming into Zimbabwe.
They are positioned at the end of the bridge in the car park as you cross into Zim, and will assist you right through the border, sorting out all the formalities, Road toll, Customs, Road tax, Immigration, Visas, Interpol, etc. and then see you right through to the exit gate, they will handle everything for you at absolutely no charge whatsoever.
That is their job and they are very proud of it, and it is to show the tourist that you can enter Zim without any problems and at no unforeseen costs.
I have personally used them and they were really friendly and gave a fantastic service, well worth using.
The Area Manager is Bertha Mutowembwa on 00263-286-23640/1 office, or 00263-772 344317 or 00263-712 320428 email. berthamuto and the Marketing Executive is Lindarose Ntuli on 00263-772 409373 or the above office No. email. lindarosentuli
All you have to do is drop them a mail the day before you expect to cross and then phone them before you cross over and they will meet you at the bridge to sort you out.
For any further information give me a call, KB Kariba 0777 965250.
Don’t date a Defender (or Crooza) owner
From the Overland Forum ….
He is the one with std short back and sides. He will only pay R50 for a haircut.
His T-shirts will be full of holes and oil stains of various shades from 15-40w, EP90, Dot 4 and Dexron III, kudos if you can identify each one.
He will have stubble or a beard not because it suits him just because its easier. His skin is burnt with multiple tan lines (especially the right arm), open wounds, bites and scars, nearly all of which will be visible. But for every scar there is an interesting story.
You might find him in a back street garage in the pit or under a ramp, or at a book store browsing the Haynes Defender manuals although he “only uses them for reference.”
Don’t date a Defender , owner because he treasures experiences over shiny material possessions (olive drab or desert tan material possessions are acceptable), function over the comfort of a tarted up gay 4×4, a hand-woven paracord bracelet over a Rolex (unless it’s the Explorer, the Explorer is cool).
He will scoff when he hears the evil words, Toyota, Cruizer, Hilux, or Prado.
Don’t date a Defender owner because he’s not focused on a single life goal but enlivened by many.
Don’t date an Defender owner He is stubborn, direct and near impossible to please. The usual dinner-movie date will suck the life out of him (he may even refuse!). He craves for new experiences and adventures. He will be unimpressed with your R 1000 haircut and your overpriced shoes especially when you struggle to gracefully get out of his lifted Defender rolling on BF MT’s, trying not to get your Dior dress dirty.
Don’t date a Defender owner because he will insist to clear customs and immigration on his own at every border crossing.
All the while he is busy preparing his Rig for the “Big One”.
He won’t party at Fabric or Pasha and he will never splash R 1000 Â on a night of clubbing as this is equivalent to three weeks diesel supply, 100’s of kilometres of no roads and endless wild camping some-place far, far more exciting.
Chances are, he’s probably daydreaming about moving on. He doesn’t want to keep working his ass off for someone else’s dream. He has his own and is slowly working towards it.
Don’t waste his time complaining about your boring job that your stuck in, he doesn’t want to hear it. If you don’t like it do something about it.
(here’s the original http://siroccoverland.com/2014/02/10/dont-date-an-overlander/)
De Wildt Trail February 2014
Dark Kalahari – Photos by Hannes Lochner
Wildlife photographer Hannes Lochner spent 750 days in the harsh surroundings of the Kalahari Desert to chronicle
the life of a female leopard and in doing so delved into a dark and fascinating nocturnal world of big cats and other predators.
Through his incredible project, Mr Lochner, 41, documented the struggle of Luna the leopard to raise cubs in one of the most
punishing environments on earth, where big predators become more active at night, and when the photographer’s visibility is
severely diminished. Undeterred by the threat of the big cats, Mr Lochner spent thousands of hours in his Jeep at night, capturing
remarkable moments with Luna, a pride of lions, a pack of jackals and other predators.
Striking: The life of Luna the leopard was documented in stills by photographer Hannes Lochner over a two-year period
Mr Lochner travelled a colossal 100,000km during his time at the Kgalagadi Transfrontier Park in South Africa.
The images, collected in his new book ‘The Dark Side of the Kalahari’, capture the awe-inspiring beauty and breathtaking
diversity of life in the region. Shooting mostly at night, the Cape Town-born photographer had to brave night-time temperatures
of -13 in the winter, while trying to catch up on his sleep in sweltering 40C heat in the day.
‘I have always been fascinated by leopards, and my dream was to follow and document a leopard raising cubs in this Kalahari
hostile environment,’ Hannes said.’There are few female leopards in the south of the park, and we started tracking one with a cub
of 12 months old.
Magical: Filming Luna with her cubs was the highlight of Mr Lochner’s two-year project immersed in the Kalahari Desert,
describing the special moments with the cubs as ‘incredible’
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Framed: Luna was the focus of Mr Lochner’s attention throughout the two years he spent in the desert,
following her day and night, but she was most active at night
‘She was not very accommodating, and took us at least three months to get used to us. She didn’t have a tracking device
so we had to track her the hard way. Lots of hours in the bush.’
Entertainment: During his two-year project, Mr Lochner was privy to a host of fascinating and often comical moments in the animal kingdom
in the Kalahari Desert, including this fox cub playing with a mouse
Baffled: These two owls appeared to be bemused and fascinated by an insect that scurried between them
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All creatures great and small: Animals both large and small were snapped by Mr Lochner during his time in the Kalahari,
including this tiny lizard (L), snapped scuttling across the sand at night, and another lizard (R) captured balancing on a seed pod
as it blew in the wind
Also, unusually for leopards, she was regularly joined by ‘family man’ Oscar, the father of all three litters.
Lochner was accompanied on his travels by his partner Noa Koefler, who did all the film work for the project.
Her video clips can be seen on the App that will be released at the end October to accompany Lochner’s images.
First light: Luna had three litters of cubs throughout the two years she was photographed, the first and last set survived, the middle
set of cubs were taken by hyenas
Predator: Among the many predators in the desert that would eat Luna’s cubs were the lions
Close up: Fearless lions could easily take Luna’s cubs is the opportunity arose
High alert: Luna was alone in the desert protecting and feeding herself and her cubs; the lions worked in a pride and there were always
members on high alert for opportunities for food
Deadly: The roar of the lions and other greeting calls could be heard from miles across the desert
During the day, the pride of lions would often rest – as would Luna – as the temperatures rose and the flies came out
Pack: A group of jackals also posed a threat, capable of taking Luna’s cubs if hungry. Here they fight over the remains of a carcass
in the Kalahari, South Africa
As the sun set, the big cats, including Luna and her cubs and the lions, would seek out opportunities for food and Mr Lochner
would begin taking his photos
Attentive: The striking looking female leopard scoured the desert when night fell searching for threats and opportunities for food
Asked to nominate his favourite moment from his two years in the Kalahari, Lochner goes for his time photographing Luna’s cubs.
‘They are amazing animals and incredible to photograph, we spent time at at least 12 different den sites,’ he added.
Snarl: A close-up of a leopard’s mouth shows a healthy set of sharp teeth to the camera
Dramatic: Night time work produced some incredible shots, including this lioness trying to sleep as thunder storm raged nearby
Beneath a blanket of stars, one leopard was captured walking past a magnificent lone tree in the desert
Serene: A single owl flew into a stunning night-time landscape of the Kalahari Desert, as lightning lit up the horizon
Silent: A lone leopard scans the vegetation from a rocky perch on a starry night, captured in this incredible time-elapsed photo
of the night sky
Photographer Hannes Lochner spent much of his time taking photos at night from his jeep while his partner Noa Koefler did all
the film work for the project
Mr Lochner’s book ‘The Dark Side of the Kalahari’ chronicles the life of Luna the leopard and her struggle to raise her litters of cubs






















































