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Monday, February 28, 2011

GrassTrack Safaris Presentation, Fort Collins, CO

GrassTrack Safaris will be hosting a free presentation about our African travels on Thursday March 10, 2011 at Jax Outdoor Gear, CO from 6-8pm.  Please join us to learn more about our safaris, African wildlife, and to hear about our past adventures traveling in Africa.

Jax Outdoor Gear is located at 1200 N College Avenue, Fort Collins, CO.  Take College Avenue north of the Poudre River for approximately 6 blocks and Jax is on the right..

For more info, drop me an email: John@grasstracksafaris.com

Hope to see you there!

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Moremi Game Reserve and Our First Night in the Bush


Moremi Game Reserve and the Mopane Tongue
After finishing lunch and getting back onto the road we headed toward what would be our camping destination for the next two nights, Xakanaxa (pronounced zakanaka). Xakanaxa is situated in the lush northern region of the Moremi Game Reserve, a unique area made up of permanent delta waterways, vast floodplains, a lagoon and dry woodlands. The reserve consists of a network of waterways surrounding two large land masses: Chiefs Island in the centre of the Delta and forested Mopane Tongue in the east. The area's diverse ecosystems, riverine woodland, floodplains, wetlands with reed beds, mopane woodland, and dry savanna woodland, broken only by the occasional jeep track, are all packed with game. We would be spending the next two days on the Mopane Tongue of which Xakanaxa is at the eastern tip. The Tongue gets its name from the Mopane Tree, which has very distinctive and beautiful butterfly like leaves.

Mopane Tree
Mopane leaf



Getting upclose and personal with the elephants
On our drive to Xakanaxa we came across a large herd of elephant and for the first time on our trip had the opportunity to get close to these magnificent beasts. We watched mesmerized as these two tonned behemoths ambled through the grassland. Cows ripping huge junks of native grasses from the earth with their trunks to feed on, while calves suckled at their breasts.  Cameras, binoculars, video cams went into action as all 12 of us safari participants lost ourselves in what was a galvanizing moment.

 
Mother and child


A male lion takes a break from hunting beneath a Mopane Tree
As we continued on towards our first bush camp at Xakanxa we came across another safari group in a broken down Land Rover. Evidently they had gotten two flat tires and with no spares remaining their African driver had left on foot, walking to a ranger station for help. A somewhat interesting decision on the drivers part given the abundant wild animals of the surroundings. Moments after leaving the stranded vehicle we noted the driver walking along the road we traveled on about a mile across the savanna in front of us. I thought, good, at least we can give him a lift, but as we approached within a football fields length we took a fork to our left and immediately came across two huge male lions snoozing under the shade of a large mopane tree. All within a shouting ditance of the walking driver. Our guide Prince commented that the driver on foot had no idea the lions were here and lions, whether sated or not, will never pass on an easy kill. After leaving the lions we returned to the fork and continued on our course to collect the walking driver. Although the conversation was in Swetsa, once we reached the driver I got the impression our guide Prince, who had a wealth of experience in the bush, was giving the driver a lecture on bush safety. All in all it was a very interesting experience.

One of our campsites
Evening cocktails at camp

With the excitement of the day behind us, and after a long and dusty drive, we finally reached our Xakanaxa campsite. Unclear on what to expect, we all stood around until Prince and Tosu opened the trailer with all of our gear and started unloading it. Immediately we all stepped up to help and the entire load of backpacks, camping gear, sleeping pads, tables and chairs, and other equipment was quickly unloaded. Next Prince assigned all of us our own individually numbered tents and also sleeping bags for those of us without them. Within certain guidelines of distance from camp center, as explained by Prince, we were all allowed to pick our own tent sites and pitch our tents. Some of us with less tenting experience were a bit baffled by how to erect the tents, but with help from each other, Prince, and Tosu in short order all the tents were erected. The dome tents proved roomy and large enough to stand in. While this was going on Prince and Tosu erected our ablutions (outdoor latrine and showers), started a fire, and all of us helped set up the camp tables and chairs. Once all of this was completed Tosu, with the help of a few of us safari participants, began to prepare dinner. Without actually asking, Tosu was happy to accept the help of a rotating crew of two or three people with preparing lunch and dinner, which simply consisted of acting as a prep chef. Once prep work was completed Tosu finished the cooking on his own. With dinner in preparation us safari participants retreated to the tables for cocktails, beer, and good conversation recounting the exciting events of the day. This was the itinerary we were to follow for the next six evenings and over its course we all became closely acquainted with each other and formed, what for some of us would be life long, friendships.

After dinner at the campfire

Return next week when we will blog about the wild dogs of Moremi and S, our destination after leaving the Moremi Game Reserve.

Saturday, February 19, 2011

GrassTrack Safaris Presentation, Lebanon, NH

Botswana Campsite, Chobe National Park
GrassTrack Safaris will be hosting a free presentation about our African travels on Thursday March 3, 2011 at the Fireside Inn in Lebanon, NH from 7-9pm.  Please join us to learn more about our safaris, African wildlife, and to hear about our past adventures traveling in Africa.

The Fireside Inn is located on 25 Airport Road, Lebanon, NH.  Take exit 20 off I-89 and follow the signs (it's behind LaValley Building Suppy). 

For more info, drop me an email: dan@grasstracksafaris.com

Hope to see you there!



Thursday, February 10, 2011

Buffalo Safari - Day 1

In the last blog you read short descriptions of each of the seven safaris that GrassTrack offers. We encourage you to visit our website for full details on each of our safaris and updates on new safaris as they are added.

One of our offerings is the Buffalo Safari and in this and the next several blogs we will discuss GrassTrack’s recent adventures while out on the Buffalo Safari in Botswana. This adventure safari is perfect for those with limited time, but still wishing to visit the best wilderness areas in Botswana. Starting in Maun, Botswana and ending in Livingstone, Zambia, this seven day safari is long on adventure yet affordable for those traveling on a budget. The Buffalo Safari passes through the Moremi Game Reserve and Chobe National Park, two areas that offer some of the best wildlife viewing in Africa. Moremi was established in 1962 and at the time it was the only reserve in Africa created by local people. All reserves prior to 1962 were established by colonial governments. Moremi supports an astonishing amount and variety of wildlife including over 400 species of birds.

The comfortable and roomy safari vehicle
The first morning of our journey was spent collecting the 12 members partaking in the safari and purchasing water for the trip, a task trip participants are responsible for and accomplished under the tutelage of our African guide Prince. This was an important task, as we would be spending the next seven days in the semi-arid grasslands and bush of northern Botswana where afternoon temperatures can top 100° F and drinking water is difficult to come by. Having completed our morning tasks we left Maun by 9 am heading north on a two lane blacktop road towards the entrance to Moremi Game Reserve, and ultimately on to our destination, Xakanaxa, and our first night of bush camping.

Along with Prince and his assistant Tosu, there would be 14 of us traveling in the safari vehicle for the next seven days as we made our way through Moremi and Chobe. The custom Land Rover used on the trip was up to the task. With four rows of extra wide bench seats, room for three in the cab, windowless open sides, a retractable canvas roof, and our gear and food stowed in a pull along enclosed trailer riding behind the vehicle our transport proved roomy, comfortable, and offered 360° views for all.

There wasn't a bad seat in the vehicle for viewing the wildlife we encountered upon entering Moremi Game Reserve
Moremi's South Gate

The trip to Moremi from Maun is a three hour drive, as we traveled along the road, blacktop gave way to gravel and the morning chill gave way to a warm breeze blowing in from the open sides of the Land Rover. About one hour into the drive we pulled off the road to enjoy a stretch break and some fresh fruit, a mid-morning break we enjoyed every one of the next seven days while on safari. Over the course of the week these fruit breaks included apples, oranges, and pears among other fruits. A few hours latter we arrived at the South Gate of Moremi Game Reserve. Once inside the reserve boundaries we began to see game animals along the sides of the road, Impala and Kudu, among others. Outside of Africa's reserves and national parks there are few animals as local people engage in subsistence hunting to meet there food needs.

A Kudo stands alert
Members of our safari group scan the horizon for animals
About an hour inside of South Gate we drove off the main gravel road onto a dirt two track, eventually making our way to a large waterhole with a herd of elephant and troop of baboons on the distant shore. This is where we were to have our first safari lunch and a perfect spot it was, affording magnificent bird watching. We pulled up under the shade of a large tree and Tosu opened one side of the trailer holding our gear to reveal a pantry of food including meat, bread, which Tosu had baked fresh days before, cheese, salads, and other stables. As Tosu, with help from a few members of our safari group, began to prepare our lunch, the rest of us reached for our binoculars and began to scan the horizon for the abundant eagles, hawks, waterfowl, elephants, and baboons that had come to the waterhole to hunt, feed, and drink. Eventually, we turned our attention to the food and dug in to a tasty lunch of tuna sandwiches, salad, and fruit. Riding in a vehicle for hours isn't physically demanding, but traveling can be exhausting and our appetites were ravenous. Having completed lunch we mounted the Land Rover and began our drive to our first bush campsite at Xakanaxa. Return next week when we will detail our final approach to Xakanaxa and describe what our first bush camping experience was actually like.
A Reed Cormorant fans its wings at our lunch spot waterhole