KRS is a fantastic place. It was established in 1989 to reintroduce white rhinos to Botswana. They started with about 4, and now have 36, so the breeding is very successful. They also now have 3 black rhinos, which are much more endangered. They have 4300 hectares of land, and have many other animal species as well. The rhinos have veterinary care and protection, while Mother Nature is left in charge of the rest of the animal species.
Eden wants to point out that our game drive ranger was a woman - the first woman ranger we have had. She is very happy about this. We saw 7 or 8 rhino, one of which we all agreed was as big as an elephant - just this massive creature that ran right in front of our jeep. The rest seemed to be more "normal" rhino size. We saw several other interesting animals: giraffe, zebra, gemsbok (a.k.a. oryx), eland (the biggest antelope in Southern Africa, and something Ted ate for dinner when we were in MalaMala), steenbok, springbok, kudu, wildebeest, duiker. Eden got to see the kudu very close up, as it wandered into a clearing near the restaurant while we were eating breakfast. She walked with one of the employees up close to take some pictures. Below is a sampling of the photos Ted took.
These are 3 juvenile male white rhinos (with a fourth one right behind the one in the middle). This was a group that we were able to get quite close to, and they let us watch them for several minutes before they went on their way.
Black rhinos are much more rare, and they have only 3 in park; we did not find them.
More rhino pictures....
We saw probably a dozen zebra. The birds in the background are either guinea fowl or crested francolins.

A wildebeest. We drove through a whole herd of them. Not a mad stampeding herd like on Lion King though; they were just kinda' standing around watching us.
A sad footnote. A big area of the park was scorched - the ranger said the fire had just occurred within the past week. She said that the fire was started by a lady who was cutting brush at the side of the road - not in the park itself (people here are hired by the government to do this job,
and they do it by hand with this little sithe-like instrument). I am not clear why she started the fire, but it got out of hand and swept through a big chunk of sanctuary land. (The only animals killed were some steenbok.) The woman was arrested, and was facing two years in prison. She committed suicide instead.
A sad footnote. A big area of the park was scorched - the ranger said the fire had just occurred within the past week. She said that the fire was started by a lady who was cutting brush at the side of the road - not in the park itself (people here are hired by the government to do this job,
5 comments:
What a great post to read. It does sound like it was very worth the terrible drive there. The pictures are fabulous.
I love blogs. It's such a great way to keep us all part of your adventures. I was going to give you an update of our lives but it pales in comparison... (^.^)
Love to you all,
Susie
Good for you all! What fantastic memories you will have, not to mention priceless photos. Fort Wayne will be a rather dull place after such an adventure! You will come back right? Fondly, Terry
AWESOME! And, thank you for that giraffe :)
How incredibly cool to see all these beauties in their natural habitats. (I'm a little green with envy.)
The drive sounds (retrospectively) hilarious! And, I love seeing a picture with you, too, friend! You're all looking great.
Big hugs to all of you and an extra special hug to our sweet Hope whose baptism anniversary is coming up next week (9/9)!!! Can you make cupcakes from us???
ly, cm
How did the drive to the game preserve compare to the drive to Matt's for basketball? Am I sensing a theme here?!?!
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