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Cederberg - Wuppertal to Algeria The Metsi-Metsi Wilderness Trail The Wolhuter Trail - again (by Peter Groves) Self-drive, overland safari to Namibia Botswana - Zimbabwe lodge and canoe safari Recommended hiking sites: Ian Webb's Great Hikes in the Western Cape Book for hikes in the Western Cape
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Napi Wilderness TrailSouthern Kruger Park The "wilderness trail" is a concept unique to Africa in that it has evolved to imply a walk in the company of a game ranger or conservation officer, usually armed, through big game country. Aspects of the ecology of the area, environmental management and ethics are also explained and the emphasis is often on environmental education. FAQ Once again Marion and I were privileged to
participate in a wilderness trail, this time the The undulating woodlands were green and luxuriant after the summer rains, and the grass long, making game sightings difficult. But as any trail junky will tell you, game viewing is not the purpose of the wilderness trail - it's only a bonus. Just prior to the trail we had a stayed at a game lodge in a neighbouring reserve where seeing the Big Five is what is promised, and is consequently, what the guests have come to expect. And although we had wonderful leopard and lion sightings at the game lodge, it was somehow less satisfying than walking in wild bushveld, seeing fresh lion tracks, hearing them in the distance, knowing that they were probably watching us from the cover of long grass. On foot one confronts your own insignificance, your own vulnerability. Besides the many white rhino we saw, we did see one significant antelope: the Liechtenstein's hartebeest. Locally extinct for decades, some were recently re-introduced from Malawi. This one was limping and separated from the herd, his days numbered. Once again I had the opportunity to polish my knowledge of bushveld trees, add the buffalo thorn to the list as well as the Zulu story about it being "the tree of life", learn about sodic sites and how they form, etc., thanks to the knowledge of our trails rangers. Long may Kruger's wilderness trails renew our bonds with Nature.
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