Monday, 6 October 2014

Lion Road Safety in Pilansberg National Park

It's not often you see a lioness with cubs in the wild, but we did yesterday.  One lioness and two cubs to be precise.  The morning started with a leopard sighting - it was up a tree - every photographer's dream shot.  Unfortunately not only was it in the thickest, bushiest tree, there were 15 vehicles parked along the roadside obstructing what miniscule view there was. We waited for our turn and I got a few leafy snaps. A serious pixel surgery job for later.
Nikki the guide was just backing out to move ahead when a pride of lions crossed behind us.  The female actually stopped in the road, sniffed some poo left there by another animal, then rolled in it - just like a dog.  I was told they do this to camouflage their scent which makes it easier to creep up on their prey.  They disappeared into the bush.
Later that afternoon we got sight of them again.  The pride had killed a waterbuck near the dam in the park and were munching on it when a crocodile intervened - I only heard this second-hand as we were miles away at the time.  We raced over to the spot to see the female walking up to the road with her cubs.  (No sign of the croc).  Clearly she wanted to cross but there were so many cars and so drivers did not recognise what she intended to do. We were right at the front so reversed to make a clearing. She actually mock-charged us a couple of times, then picked one cub up in her mouth and walked 100 metres along the side of the track till there was room to pass unmolested by the tourists.

Just like a dog. A lion will roll in poo to disguise the scent of a predator
Traffic jam in Pilansberg.
The park employs rangers who monitor radio traffic and turn up at a cat sighting to make sure no one does anything stupid. 
Apparently some idiots try to get out of their vehicles to get a 'better' view, kids hang out of windows, and some people stay too long, creating spectator rage...
I loved this shot - the mother is actually growling heavily because she wants to cross - but there are too many cars.
Canon EOS 300mm + 1.4X Extender, f2.8, f4 @ 1/400s, ISO 1600.
Not a yawn - the mother is getting very kranky at not being allowed over the road. 
With two cubs in tow, she is very dangerous.
After five or six minutes, the drivers finally stopped following the lioness allowing her room to cross with her cubs.

Sunday, 5 October 2014

Fish River Canyon


It’s the biggest thing in Namibia and is the largest canyon in the world, second only to the Grand Canyon in the USA. Unlike its American cousin, Fish River Canyon is a long way from anywhere – we drove two and a half hours out of Keetmanshoop to get there, stayed overnight at the wacky Canon Roadhouse – from where it was another 20 mins drive to the canyon edge. But it is definitely worth it – firstly to see the canyon, but also to experience the wacky roadhouse with its unique car 'museum' inside and out
(http://robinnicholsworkshops.blogspot.com/2014/09/roadhouse-roadsters.html)


On the road from the Namibian border to Keetmanshoop
Just before sunset produces some great hints of colour on an otherwise totally shaded canyon
An hour before sunset produces flat looking views - this is looking towards the official viewpoint seen to the left of centre
You can hike into the canyon but from the top, this looks like a very hard prospect. The canyon is 160kms long and 550metres deep!
Complete panorama of the canyon an hour after dawn - this is a tough place to shoot. At any other time of the day the light is too intense and shadowless producing a very bleached out result.

Saturday, 4 October 2014

Biltong, dried meat for every occasion

You can buy it anywhere in Southern Africa. Biltong, an air-dried and spiced meat is ubiquitous in the region and replaces snacks like chips and beer nuts at parties, bar-b-qs (braais) and while driving.  It even appears on a menu at the Hilton menu in Windhoek - a plate of biltong and drywors (a sort of salami style sausage that is also dried to the consistency of boot leather).

Biltong comes in a range of meats including: beef, kudu, ostrich, impala, springbok and even shark.  You can also find biltong flavoured with different spices - chilli is my favourite as it can mask the often strongish meaty flavour.  The main ingredients include:  black pepper, coriander, salt, sugar, vinegar and barbecue spice.  Modern-day ingredients include: balsamic or malt vinegar, dry ground chili peppers, nutmeg, garlic, bicarbonate of soda, Worcestershire sauce, onion powder, and saltpetre as a preservative.


Leopards at Okonjima Reserve



Okonjima in Namibia is the place to go if you want to see leopard and cheetah in their natural environment.  There you can see the Africat organisation in action, caring for rehabituated cats in its 200 square kilometre reserve. 
Radio collars are fitted to the cats and also to some of the other animals in the reserve (hyena and wild dogs) so they can find them if they need medical attention and of course for visitors to have achance of seeing the animals up close.  I have done several leopard drives on my two visits - you usually find at least one of the cats in the park - but you don't necessarily see them!  Leopard like to hide in the day, choosing the densest thickets well away from the 4WD tracks that criss-cross the park. If this happens the best you can hope to get is a disappearing cat as it heads off at speed in another direction. This trip we were lucky. The first cat that registered on the guide's VHF tracker sloped off when we go near leaving six photographers with not enough time to turn their cameras on.  Conversely we spotted the second cat walking towards us along a grassed river bed - or at least we saw its tail.  I clicked away and came up  with this hilarious shot - all tail but still no cat.  He slumped into the undergrowth and after some very clever manoeuvring through the bush, we got a clear view.  In typical fashion the cat took no notice of us, preferring to close its eyes and nap in the heat of the later afternoon. Occasionally we got shots when a sudden rustle or animal call made the cat lift its head to check. 


The last leopard sighting was as the light was almost gone - even 12,800 ISO was not fast enough to get a sharp shot so we all sat back and enjoyed the moment.
If you take the educational tour you get to meet either/or Lewa.  I photographed Wahu last year - this year it was Lewa that was called on.  The organisation have a number of rescue cats that have lived with humans - usually as 'pets'. This means that they can never really survive in the wild. At Africat they live in a huge enclosure - 5 or 7 hectares and only come close to the hide when it is feeding time. It's a great opportunity to get uninterrupted shots of these magnificent creatures in the (semi-) wild without their radio collars.

Lewa snacking on a donkey chop.

Friday, 3 October 2014

Cheetahs at Okonjima

Okonjima, part of the Africat organisation in Namibia is one of my favourite African destinations - partly because it's a great place to visit in terms of food and accommodation but it is also a terrific opportunity for any photographer to get eye-popping shots of leopard and cheetah in their natural habitat.

The Africat organisation began by looking after 'rescued' cheetahs (and leopard) from outlying farms in the northern part of the country (because there are so many farms here, all predators run the risk of being shot on site by nervous farmers.  It now has so many on its property, it no longer rescues animals, preferring to educate the locals into not shooting the predators, and by building kraals for the famers to house their livestock overnight - away from the potential killers.  So, by protecting the already rescued cheetahs and educating the wider public, Africat is going a long way in helping stop the loss of this amazing creature.

Early start on a game drive looking for cheetahs wearing a radio collar
One of the many distractions while out looking for cheetah in the early morning. 
Two kudu in the park.
Male cheetah with radio collar
Male cheetah in the 200 square kilometre Okonjima estate
Walking up to within 15 feet of a fully grown cheetah is quite something. 
They mostly take no notice of humans simply because they have never been threatened by them. 
This male was far more interested in an animal at the end of the clearing than in us.

Thursday, 2 October 2014

Wildlife shooting in Walvis Bay, Namibia

Visitors to the town of Swakopmund in Namibia might be well aware of the amazing array of wildlife in and around its massive lagoon.   Most do a tour of the harbour.  Some go as far as Sandwich Harbour, another massive lagoon 25kms to the south of Swakop.  This place is popular because it's where the massive dunes of the Namib Naukluft National Park spill into the ocean.

View of the dunes meeting the South Atlantic. Sandwich Harbour used to be a whaling station - now it's a national park

We did both: a boat trip into the lagoon and a 4WD drive into the dunes.  For a photographer this is a great opportunity because there’s so much to shoot - landscapes, wildlife - even the commercial salt pans are impressive viewed from atop one of the nearby dunes. 

All shots were taken using a Canon EOS 5D MkIII and EF300mm f2.8 lens with a 1.4X or 2X Extender - I prefer the 1.4 as this makes almost no difference to the final quality (I find images shot with the 2X Extender are often soft unless shot at smaller apertures).

Lucky shot. Six pelicans came gliding and soaring along the dunes at the end of the day. 
We saw them coming but were not really fast enough to set up and wait for them.
This was a lucky shot, taken from the Land Rover's side window as they glided past.
From the top of one of the higher dunes we say this ostrich determinedly plodding north towards the edge of the sand.
It made a great off-centre shot to emphasise the size of the bird against the massive backdrop of the dunes.
I could say this was shot after days trekking into the deep interior of the Namib Naukluft park
- but it's actually a snap taken out of the car window as we drove to Walvis Bay
Walvis Bay is famous for the mass of Lesser and Greater flamingos that populate the shallows along the town waterfront.
This is a lesser flamingo walking over the mud flats, Walvis Bay
Walvis Bay: Avocet trawling for food in the shallows
Walvis bay: Little Egret
Walvis Bay lagoon: Great White Pelican

Walvis Bay lagoon: flying kelp gull
Walvis Bay lagoon: Heaviside dolphin jumping out of the swell
Walvis Bay lagoon: Heaviside dolphin jumping out of the swell
Walvis Bay lagoon: Heaviside dolphin riding the bow wave of a tourist boat
Walvis Bay lagoon: Fur seals frolicking just off the coast
Great white pelican in Walvis Bay harbour
Bull seal protecting his harem of females. Walvis bay lagoon.
Close up, Great White Pelican
Commercial salt pans to the south of Walvis Bay.
Namibia 'mines' in excess of one million tonnes of industrial grade salt from the sea each year.

Tuesday, 30 September 2014

Exploring the diamond towns of Kolmanskop and Elizabeth Bay

Namibia is famous for the production of diamonds along its extensive coastline.  Silt (and diamonds) have been washed down the Orange river from Witwatersrand into the ocean at the mouth of the Orange river  for millions of years.  The Benguela current which flows northwards,  takes the silt up the coast, depositing diamonds all along the Namib coast.  The sand is blown inland forming the massive dunes that Namibia is so famous for.
The first diamonds were discovered near Luderitz in 1908 and, once mining became a reality, two mining towns sprang up in the desolate sands about ten kilometres east of Luderitz; One at Kolmanskop and a second at Elizabeth Bay, 15 kilometres south down on the coast.  Mining ceased at both sites in the 30s - although since new extraction techniques have been developed, it mining has started again at Elizabeth Bay.
Today Kolmanskop is a ghost town.  Part of the sizeable township has actually been restored - the casino, gymnasium and a few other buildings - but the rest of the community consisting of dozens of houses is slowly being swallowed up by the continuously driving sand.  It's a great place for photographers, especially if you are into HDR shooting - some of the houses are now too dangerous to get into - while others are relatively well preserved because the climate is so dry.

Kolmanskop is easy to get to a few hundred metres off of the main Aus to Luderitz highway.  But because Elizabeth Bay is now back in an active mining area you must hire a guide who has the concession to take visitors to the ghost town - the process of getting through security takes 20 or 30 mins, including a breathalyser test.  The houses in Elizabeth Bay were fashioned out of sand and cement - and not very well - so now the wind is actively sand-blasting the bricks and mortar out of existence.  Many of the buildings have collapsed - although we did get into the casino to shoot a few frames.  Kolmanskop is in better shape and proved to be a lot more colourful.

Part of the original casino at Elizabeth Bay

Part of the original casino at Elizabeth Bay
A timber house overlooking the South Atlantic ocean at Elizabeth Bay
A couple of the renovated buildings at Kolmanskop with abandoned houses off in the distance
A low angles gives you a good idea of the harshness of the environment.
Airborne sand acts like a powerful sand-blaster

Kolmanskop interior detail

Kolmanskop interior detail



One of the larger houses at Kolmanskop - probably a manager's house displaying strong German architectural influences