Showing posts with label RSA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label RSA. Show all posts

Monday, January 27, 2020

A few more photos from our last years trip to South Africa.

Maximum temperature in the Charente today 10C, minimum 6C. Rain measured this morning 6mm and still raining. 40mm of rain so far this month.  24km/h South-Westerly wind up to 59 km/h.

African buffalo or Cape buffalo (Syncerus caffer) with a calf.

A large herd of buffalo heading towards a river.

Greater kudu, male (Tragelaphus strepsiceros).

Nile crocodile (Crocodylus niloticus) lying in wait!!

African Elephant (Loxodonta africana) digging for water in a dry river bed.  They have had some rain since we left but the situation was serious while we were there.

Chacma baboon (Papio ursinus).  Just watching the world go by in relaxation mode...

and taking a walk.

South African giraffe (Giraffa camelopardalis giraffa).

Sable antelope (Hippotragus niger).

Steenbok antelope (Raphicerus campestris) female, the male has horns.

Three generations of elephants playing in a small waterhole.

African wild dogs (Lycaon pictus) or Painted dogs.

Burchell's zebra (Equus quagga burchellii).

The African common toad or guttural toad (Sclerophrys gutturalis). Wow, are they noisy, they were just outside our bedroom window!!



See also my


Saturday, December 14, 2019

A visit to Nieu Bethesda in the Eastern Cape, South Africa

Maximum temperature in the Charente today 13C, minimum 11C. 16 mm of rain measured this morning, to end a very wet, wild and windy week!! Roadside ditches and fields are flooded, and today, 40km/h westerly winds with gusts up to 88 km/h!!

Nieu Bethesda is a small town far off the beaten track, on the edge of the Karoo and today suffering from a five-year drought. Brave were the Afrikaans settlers who came here in the 19th century and very resilient is the small population which still remains in the parched dusty landscape! It appears that I have taken no photos of the town, other than the church (!), but our main interest was the local fossils and the paintings.


The Dutch Reformed Church which was completed in 1905


We stayed at Ganora Guest Farm run by Hester and JP and this photo was taken during the interesting evening talk by JP about fossils, most of which had been found on the farm during his ownership.


A fossilised fish.


A bit of fossilised spinal column. 


Various fossilised bits and shells.  He has a whole room dedicated to his fossil collection!


Poster depicting the development of local prehistoric species over millennia.


We then went to see the museum in the town - see info from the above, below...



Another one that hopefully you can read about below, a Dicynodon...




Other fossils found in the rock strata, now being slowly uncovered and revealed by weathering of the surface.


After viewing the museum, we were taken by the museum guide out to the dry river bed. The plaster model on the right is based on the configuration of the actual fossil on the left, still embedded in the rock of the shale river bed.   There were several more, but different examples to be seen, many too large to be excavated easily.  Fascinating!


We also were shown these bushman paintings, a visit which entailed a 10-minute walk across a field! They had been made on a wall under an overhanging rock outcrop, the small site overlooking a deep rocky river valley.  Some paintings go back as far as 5000 years, though these are probably much more recent.







Finally, the Ganora farm  was a working farm, and of course, while we were there it was spring in South Africa, so the lambs were in abundance!

I saw this beetle on my walk around the farm.
Thank you Joan for the ID it is a Ten Spotted Ground beetle (Thermophilum decemguttatum) family Carabidae.



See also my updated Bird blog at


Thursday, November 28, 2019

Part 2 of our trip to South Africa

Maximum temperature in the Charente today 13C, minimum 9C.  25 mm of rain measured this morning.  27km/h South-westerly winds with gusts up to 57 km/h!! Very breezy! 

We arrived at Port Elizabeth in the Eastern Cape in the late afternoon of Monday 14 November after a 2-hour flight. The winds were so strong that the pilot battled to get the plane down, but the landing itself was smooth! We were met by Christelle and Patrick, who drove us home to their place in Kenton, which took about 1 1/2 hours. They had gone to a lot of trouble to make us so welcome and the rondavel with en suite was fabulous!

 On arrival, Nigel was feeling unwell and sadly spent the next two days in bed with bad flu-like symptoms. 

Nevertheless, I was up and about and spent some time with Christelle's family who were there for a couple of days from Zimbabwe.  We took a trip down to the beach and borrowing a pair of rock sandals, I joined them on a walk before the tide came in.  The tide almost beat us to it, and one corner was a little too deep for me and Christelle's nephew gallantly gave me a piggyback around the corner to the rocks on the other side!!  I wish I could show you the video, but with our slow WiFi, it is impossible to load it, so here are a couple of stills taken from it!!!!

It was deeper than this in places...

Rounding the corner...

and Christelle helping me back on to terra firma.   I was very grateful for the lift though we all had a laugh.

Beautiful beach.

This is called Carriage Rock.

The following day the family all left and C and P took me out for a drive to see some of the nearby places.  They are so lucky; close to them is San Estate, and although privately owned and one can only drive around the edge, we saw plenty of wildlife.

Impala (Aepyceros melampus).

Zebra (there several species and sub species (Equus quagga) being the most common and Hartebeest, (Alcelaphus buselaphus) on the right.

Zebra.

Nyala males, (Tragelaphus angasii)...

Nyala youngster...

As above.

South African giraffe (Giraffa camelopardalis). The giraffe is the tallest land animal in the world. Males can reach a height of 5 m, and females 4.5 m.


See also my Bird blog I have many photos of birds and I will put most of them on this blog.

Monday, November 25, 2019

Part one of our trip to South Africa.

Maximum temperature today 12C, minimum 8C.  Very wet!  We were told it had hardly stopped raining while we were away!  The rain gauge was overflowing at 72 mm, so our annual measurements are therefore unreliable and we will never know how much we really had!  It continues to rain, and since being home we have had another 30mm. Today there are cold 19km/h northerly winds with gusts up to 40 km/h. Not weather to be out in, if you don't need to!

We have been back home for the last 10 days, but neither of us feels perfectly well and do forgive me if blogs are slow for a while, as I'm short of the energy needed to go through the many hundreds of photos that I took! HOWEVER, this malaise takes nothing away and did not detract at all from the fabulous welcomes, entertainment and trips organised by our generous hosts, Steve and Cathy, Patrick and Christelle and Gordon and Julie! We really enjoyed seeing them again and joining in with the arrangements. It was to be a truly memorable and varied holiday!

We arrived in Johannesburg on Friday 11 October. Our health problems emerged a few days later in the most unusually cold weather in RSA, which was generally the pattern for all but a couple of days in the Kruger Park, when the temperature rose to 46C; talk about extremes!  Airconditioning is always a concern for us both, and the long flights can be draining on the system.  Three flights going there and three coming home, plus a 9-hour wait in Gatwick to board the final leg between Gatwick and Bordeaux. This was perhaps a "too ambitious" schedule and age is not on our side!

  I didn't take a lot of photos in Johannesburg, as my telephoto lens was playing up! Thanks to an internet search and to Cathy for ferrying us, we managed to get an identical second-hand replacement in a nearby mall. It later proved not to be in perfect shape, but I think I have some reasonable photos to show you over the next few weeks!

Flying from Bordeaux to Gatwick on 10 October.  We then had to bus to Heathrow with all our suitcases!! No luggage transfers by the airline!

Arrival in Johannesburg on 11 October - wonderful Jacaranda trees!

In our friends' garden; some strelitzia flowers.

A distant shot of what I know as a Grey lourie - it seems now that the common name is simply the Go-Away bird due to its call. (Corythaixoides concolor).

Laughing dove (Spilopelia senegalensis).

 Common bulbul or Black-eyed bulbul (Pycnonotus barbatus).

Hadeda ibis (Bostrychia hagedash), They are very noisy and had a liking for the friends' cottage where we were sleeping.  Not only with their call, but they seemed to enjoy jumping up and down on the tin roof (not this one!) as well!!

Our friends, Cathy and Steve's cat Leo.  He is a Main Coon, apparently the largest of the domestic cat breeds.  At just 5 months, he already weighs in at 9 kg!  So beautiful and with a fabulous temperament.

We took a trip to Steve's workshop to see what he was working on.  This is his race car, a Porsche 910, and.....

and he painstakingly restores other sports cars.  This looks like an interesting project with plenty of work to do!

Finally, more jacaranda trees! We caught them almost in full flower and before the heavy summer showers could drive the petals to the ground!

On Monday 14th, we flew to Port Elizabeth in the Eastern Cape, where Nigel was the first one to feel unwell and he spent the first two days there in bed!

I will be copying this post to My Life in the Charente 2 as well as some folk still follow that !


Sell also my Bird blog at
https://myafricanbirds.blogspot.com/


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