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Globetrotting: South Africa Safari

by Our Editors

We may not always see the big picture, recognize our place on this earth, or the beauty and balance that sustains us, but here in Africa, it’s what I’ve experienced that makes it all so beautiful.

Joseph Pedro

Knock, knock. “Are you up?” a staff member asks. (You’ll never see this person, he truly has a gift for ghosting). It’s 5:30 A.M., and we’re given ten minutes to get ready for our game drive in the lobby. A pre-breakfast (as we call it) of cereal and coffee waits for us to grab like a kid about to miss the school bus.

This outing is different than the others. Our vehicle is equipped with massive Canon cameras, thanks in part to Canon Professional Photographer Andrew Aveley who fell in love with Madikwe and leads special photographic tours throughout the year. We have so much fun playing around with these cameras that are more expensive than some cars. It makes the safari feel like a game to see who will get the best shot, or who will capture the only image of a certain creature (I am the only one who manages to get a photo of the jackal, Jacki’s spirit animal), It also seems to be a stroke of luck that we manage to see all of the Big 5 (African buffalo, lion, white rhino, the African Savannah elephant, and the elusive leopard, who we see high atop a cliff).

White Rhinos in South Africa

White Rhinos in South Africa

After a leisurely brunch, we have the afternoon to ourselves. Not one to remain idle for too long, I walk to the Terrapin Photographic Hide. Crawling like a jackal through the dark underwater tunnel, I ultimately arrive in a room with viewing panels. I’m in the middle of the water, right outside the lodge’s electric fence. A flange of baboons is along the shoreline. I spend over an hour watching their shenanigans. It’s like a bizarre pool party. Mom and dad are in the back making sweet monkey love, and the kids dunk each other in the water and run around screaming— ah, Madikwe swim club! Soon, a crash of white rhino shows the baboons who is boss and run over for a quick drink before carrying on with their day. Before it gets dark, I plop in my own watering hole, a small round pool surrounded by loungers. No one is there, and it’s well hidden. The sounds of monkeys, birds, and unidentifiable creatures (although any dangerous animal is stuck behind the electric fence), it creates a vulnerable feeling, especially when a certain writer lets his imagination loose.

 

As our safari experience draws to an end, we celebrate our last night together with an amazing dinner under the moonlight in the bush. The entire staff of the lodge is busy preparing our meal: the flame roars with iron skillets and pots busy bubbling. Our drinks are already made, and we sit around the fire continuing to reflect on our time. A long table is set with nothing but small candles, the light of the fire, and the night sky providing us with an enchanting atmosphere. We chat about our adventures, eating boerewors (sausage), sheeps’ head stew, and chicken, all mushed together with some flavorful pap (like polenta).

It’s just the animals and us. Like a moony teenager, drunk on the atmosphere, hospitality, adventure, and wine, I look out at the reserve. The darkness covers the land like a shroud, but out there, life is teeming. Out there, lion clubs are sleeping after their meal with their families, moths kamikaze into wine glasses, the go-away bird is finally quiet in its nest, bush babies are just opening their big eyes, giraffes are still standing tall protecting those who are trying to sleep, and we’re here, part of this ecosystem. We may not always see the big picture, recognize our place on this earth, or the beauty and balance that sustains us, but here in Africa, it’s what I’ve experienced that makes it all so beautiful.

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