Content Filed Under "game drives"

The White Rhino

Under the hot African sun, rhinos find a suitable water hole and roll in its mud, coating their skin with a natural bug repellent and sun bloc

Africa's wild dog

Wild dogs were once widely distributed throughout sub-Saharan Africa. Today, viable populations may exist in only a handful of countries. Habitat loss and human persecution are the main causes of decline. Wild dogs fall victim to snaring, shooting, and speeding vehicles on roadways.

Zebra with her foal

Each zebra has its own unique set of stripes, which are as distinctive as fingerprints

Thirsty work!

Having a long neck is great for feeding where no others can but makes drinking slightly tricky!

Time for a drink

Water holes are great for wildlife viewing

A pair of white fronted bee-eaters

Photo taken by Robert Staritz who came 3rd in ACE's photo competition. The white fronted bee-eater, Merops bullockoides, gets it's name from it's distinctive white forehead and diet of insects , which is almost always honey bees. These bee-eaters live in a very complex society, nesting in colonies made up of family clans where non-breeding birds become helpers for their breeding relatives.

Baby Hyena

On the Game Ranger Course you never know what surprises you mind find in the bush!