Sunday, April 28, 2019

Exploring South Africa 2014

It was eighteen years ago that I first ventured to Africa. I went on several safaris and fell in love with seeing the wild animals in their own environment. When you’re in Africa, it is the people who are in the cages of their vehicles, and the animals are running wild. 
As I write this it is March 11, and I am on my way home from another incredible trip to Africa.
A great place to start is in Cape Town, one of the three capital cities of South Africa. (For you trivia buffs, the capitals are Cape Town, Bloemfontein, and Pretoria.) 
Cape Town is near the tip of Africa. A quick trip to the top of Table Mountain will 
give you a wonderful lookout over the city. 


The view from Table Mountain a flat mountain that overlooks Cape
 Town.  In the far distance Robben Island is visible.
Just a few miles from Cape Town is Robben Island, where Nelson Mandela spent
 27 years in prison before being released in the early 1990s. In 1994, he became 
the President of South Africa. Under his great leadership he led this struggling 
country to a democratic government. With the death of Mandela this year, the
 world lost a great leader. 


Boulders Beach in Cape Town affords plenty of opportunities to interact with and 
photograph penguins in the wild.
After spending a day visiting the highlights of Cape Town we flew to Johannesburg, 
which is the largest city in South Africa. Johannesburg claims to be the lightning s
capital of the world, but we only saw blue skies while we were there. 


Southern ground hornbill
It was then a day’s journey to Kruger Park to go on three days of safaris. On our way
 we visited a beautiful waterfall and enjoyed some of the beautiful flowers that
 bloom in the wild. 


Lisbon Falls, the highest waterfall in Mpumalanga, South Africa.


These lilies grow wild in Africa.
One of the sights we saw on safari was a lioness that had been severely wounded in 
an encounter with a warthog. A warthog’s tusks can maim or even kill a predator
 that we would consider much more dangerous. These wounds may yet prove fatal
 to this lioness. Worse, she has three cubs who are not yet self-sufficient and who 
will die if she does. 


                                                                Here I am, taking a picture of a lioness.


A severely wounded lioness.


Two of three lion cubs who are in jeopardy if their mother dies of 
warthog tusk wounds.


This beauty afforded us plenty of opportunity for photographs.
Our encounter with a large elephant was an interesting one. The elephant got on the
 road and would not leave the road and would not let us pass. We finally backed
 up for more than an hour. It was an adventure I will never forget. 


This peaceful giraffe was so unafraid of us that he seemed to 
pose forour cameras as he peeked at us over the tops of the trees.


The sun sets on one of the most incredible experiences of my life. I can’t wait to go again
 and see what new adventures await me.





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