It reminds me of a story
I once read. It was mid-morning at a picnic site with a handful of families
around preparing breakfast when suddenly, a woman screams: ‘Leopard! Leopard!’.
Lo and behold, a leopard had wandered onto the site, drawn by the aroma of the
sizzling bacon piled up high on a skottel (BBQ grill). As you might imagine,
everyone cautiously retreated away from the leopard, who besides a cursory
glance, padded towards the skottel. Jumping up and resting his front paws on
the skottel, the leopard tucked into the bacon. The game ranger tried to scare
it off, but the leopard wouldn’t hear of it. Taking his sweet time, the leopard
took a half hour to polish off the bacon and when done, just hopped down and
slipped back into the bush. It’s fair to say that it covered one of the Big 5
sightings for the day.
As I returned to the
main road, I came across a family of impala. The ram and two calves were
patiently waiting on the side of the road for the ewe to prance across it and
join them. These graceful animals are amazing jumpers, leaping as far as 33ft
(10m) and as high as 10ft (3m), and they are incredibly fast with a top speed
of up to 55mph (90km/h). Although they could never outrun cheetahs, one of
their predators, the impalas are adept at swiftly changing direction, running
in a zig-zag fashion; add to that their jumping capabilities and they have a
good chance of escaping.
Barely half a mile
further, I came across a whole herd of impalas, grazing on the shoulder of the
road. Impalas are one of 21 antelope species found in Kruger Park. They are
easily distinguished by the black streaks on their tail and down their hind
legs. With 130,000 adult impalas in the park and being prolific breeders, they
are the ‘least concern’ on the conservation status.
Let me leave you with
another Kruger story. One day, a cluster of parked cars were on the lookout for
five cheetahs that were seen in the area when all of a sudden, an anxious herd
of impalas broke through the brush, leaping across the road, seeming to be
fleeing for their lives. Just as the last impala fled into the bush, a cheetah
burst out of the brush, hot on its tail. The impala must’ve taken a sudden turn
whilst in the thicket because both of them reappeared speeding towards the
parked cars. The impala was so desperate to escape that it leapt straight
through the open window of a tourist’s 4WD, whilst its pursuer skidded and slid
under the car. Luckily, the shocked passenger had the presence of mind to
swiftly open the door and let the impala scramble across his lap straight out
of the car and disappear back into the bush. As the excitement died down and
the vehicles dispersed, the road returned to normal with no evidence of the
action that transpired.
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