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 The James Clarke Column

WALKING WITH RHINOS

James Clarke describes a new way of experiencing the Kruger Park…

Until recently, it was unthinkable for tourists to walk in "big five" country: the general opinion within the National Parks Board was that the big five (lion, leopard, black rhino, elephant and buffalo) would nail them. Today, one has to book a year ahead for the privilege of walking Kruger Park's "wilderness trails" - and even then your name goes into a hat. The draw was, in effect, South Africa's first lottery - and if your name was not drawn you had to wait another year.

Now, according to the November edition of the medical profession's leisure magazine, "diversions", a consortium of lodge/safari operators (with a heavy commitment to local black empowerment) has made a successful bid for one of Kruger Park's seven concession areas. This is the one and only "pristine and primitive wilderness area" that has been opened to the public - and even then only a few people at a time.

The consortium has latched on to the public's desire to walk in the wilds and has built three camps, a few kilometres apart. One is a luxury thatched camp (five star stuff) on stilts for 16 people; another is a semi-luxury safari-tent camp for eight; and the third is the most exciting - a "sleep out" facility comprising three shelters on platforms in massive riverine trees.

Few tourists realise that visitors to Kruger Park have access to less than 10 percent of the park's 2 million ha. (The park is about the size of Israel or Wales). The 12 000 ha concession area is inside the Central Region of Kruger (20 km northeast of Skukuza Camp as the hornbill flies) in an area the public has never before entered.

Rhino Walking Safaris - known as "Rhino's" because the area probably has more rhino (both species) per square kilometre than any area in Africa - recently opened its first completed camp. Known as Plains Camp, it comprises four luxury tents with built-in flush lavatories and showers as well as a central bar/lounge and a dining room. It is on the edge of a great plain picked over by lions and veined with game trails. At night, one often hears lions and hyenas.

The concession shares a 15km boundary with Mala Mala but the difference between Rhino's and the private game reserves just outside the Park is that Rhino's huge area is not criss-crossed by roads. The entire 12 000 ha has but one 3km access road leading to the near-complete Rhino Post Camp. There is no fence separating the concession from the rest of Africa.

Rhino's allows no off road driving (the reserves to the west allow vehicles to crash through the bush to see the Big five and one such reserve has 24 safari vehicles). Its major attraction is a 'foot safari' (maximum number 8) where one knows that once clear of the camps, one is not going to see a vehicle or other human being in what is virgin territory. Each group is accompanied by two armed rangers- both highly trained dead shots with a comprehensive knowledge of the bush.

I walked with such a group -there were six of us aged from 28 to well over 60. The pace was leisurely and we learned how to read the 'daily news' at sandy spots where only an hour or two before a lion had a superimposed its spoor upon a zebra's. We became adept at distinguishing between duiker and steenbok spoor, between giraffe and kudu droppings, as well as judging an elephant's height from the print of its back foot - twice the circumference equals the height at the shoulder.

We came across a black-maned lion and followed it for a while and came close to zebra and impala. Everywhere there were signs of white rhino and, less frequently, the smaller black rhino. We finally rounded the corner of what was probably a centuries-old game path and there in front of us was what we least expect to see - a surrealistic scene comprising a long table complete with elegant starched linen and laden under a delicious safari brunch transported by the chef and her staff along a hidden track

For clients who prefer not to walk, Rhino's has an 8-seater open safari vehicle that takes them into the Kruger Park - with a knowledgeable guide. But after sunset, when the Kruger Park's tourists have to be back inside their rest camps, Rhino's can take clients on night drives along certain of Kruger's roads.

Rhino Post, the main camp, is due to open in October 17. It comprises eight win-bedded thatched chalets with electricity and luxurious bathrooms. Each chalet has its own elevated deck looking out across the Mutlumuvi River where a resident leopard appears unfazed by building activities. All the buildings are on stilts - even the walkways are elevated so that vegetation is not unduly affected. An ancient elephant path past the swimming pool l has not been touched.

When it comes to the ecology, all the private concessions are controlled by the Kruger Park's wildlife management team. If any culling becomes necessary, Kruger Park rangers take over. The Park also oversees all aspects of development and monitors Rhino's Walking Safari's operations as well.

Many conservators believe that walking safaris are a solution to the problem of allowing more people to enjoy South Africa's national parks with minimum impact. As I have often been told, 'after all, a national park's prime purpose is conservation'.

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION: Rhino Walking Safaris - telephone 011 467 1886. Fax: 011 467 4758. E-mail: info@zulunet.co.za Website: www.zulunet.co.za Postal address: P.O. Box 69859, Bryanston 2021.

 
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