Our African Adventure

February - March 2022
Follow us as we embark on our most exciting adventure yet, driving and free camping through the African deserts and game reserves Read more
  • 27footprints
  • 3countries
  • 26days
  • 252photos
  • 10videos
  • 15.2kmiles
  • 11.2kmiles
  • Day 25

    The final 300km

    March 19, 2022 in South Africa ⋅ ⛅ 22 °C

    With all the noise going on last night there wasn’t much sleeping going on. People were up talking and drinking until well after midnight and by 3:30am people were back up either getting ready for the gates to open at 6am or packing up to leave.
    At 5:30am we were all up so we decided to have a coffee and at 6:15am we were in the car ready for our final game drive. Caren the car was making some lovely rattles this morning and we checked in at the gatehouse and at 6:30am we entered the park. We were leopard hunting.
    Almost straight away we saw 2 Rhinos laying down, then we saw wilderbeast and warthog. At 7:30am we stopped at the coffee shop that had no coffee ready and there were 3 Koodoo, then we got back on the drive. We saw lots of elephants, a few Zebra and lots of impala’s but sadly no leopards, and then just as we turned onto the track to head for the gate we saw around 30 Zebra, 12 giraffe, a herd of wilderbeast, impala’s and warthog. It was like all the animals had gathered together to say goodbye and finally as we got to the main gate to leave 5 zebras walked us down the road and then stood to the left of the car looking at us as we drove out the gate.
    It was now 10am, we popped back to the restaurant for what we thought would be a quick breakfast but we finally got out of there at 11am and we had to pack our stuff into our rucksacks ready for flying and clear the camp.
    At 12pm we were done, I’d found a book at elephant sands about an adventurer and climber and gave it to Becky to read and she had finished it and Becky, Pieter and Hilda wrote messages on the blank pages and gave it back to me which was lovely, then it was time to hit the road. Our last 300km drive, with our drive shaft rattling about and Caren the car donking and squeaking, Pieter had one of his friends on standby incase we didn’t make it all the way.
    There wasn’t much chat most of the way to Johannesburg we were all disappointed and sad to be leaving each other.
    At 3pm we pulled up at Pieters house to drop the trailer off with his martino. He showed us his new safari land cruiser he was doing up and we could see he waa excited about it.
    Then he took us to the airport and after getting a fine Von the way in for I don’t know what he parked the car up and we all went to a restaurant for drinks. We bought Pieter one last beer, he gave us his video footage from his dash cam and then he pushed our bags all the way to check in.
    It was time to say goodbye, Becky was first as they wouldn’t let her through security we will miss her little quirks of stretching all the time and munching away in the back of the car like a little mouse, then it was Pieter, we shook hands and hugged we will miss his infectious laugh his so upbeat attitude all of the time and we will definitely miss the fillet steak. Lastly we said good bye to Hilda, who we both really admire with her just get on and do attitude. I really hope we see them all again one day.
    And then we were alone again standing in the security line waiting to get to in to the plane and return to some kind of normal. It had been a great trip and definitely a real adventure which is what we were hoping for, we would have some real laughs to share and stories to tell later on.
    Our flight was 20 mins late leaving and once up in the air we waved goodbye to South Africa and I imaged Pieter watching us from his garden with a beer in one hand and a joint in the other laughing and waving back.
    We touched down back in the UK after an 11 hour flight at 6:30am to be greeted by Ellies dad at terminal 3, our African adventure had come to an end.
    Buyadonkey for an amazing adventure Pieter.
    (Thank you very much for an amazing adventure Pieter).
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  • Day 24

    Khama Rhino Sanctuary to Pilansberg.

    March 18, 2022 in Botswana ⋅ ☁️ 16 °C

    Everyone was up by 6am, we’d all had a mostly good nights sleep although it had been a chilly 19°c but everything was still slightly damp from yesterday’s rain and first port of call was a hot shower. It was the best shower we had, had in 3 weeks. Piping hot water, excellent pressure I think I would have spent the day in there had the shower head been slightly higher than my head.
    Back at camp, Pieter was up wrapped in his duvet to avoid the very cold wind and reigniting the fire getting ready to do us a cooked breakfast. And while I put the kettle on for coffees Pieter cooked us sausage and eggs with rolls.
    At 8:45am we piled back into the car, passed through the reception of the Khama Rhino Sanctuary having seen nothing except birds and a wilderbeast and headed back to Serowe to collect our covid tests for 9:30. Luckily we all tested negative and it was back in the car for a 700km drive to Pilanesberg.
    For the first couple of hours most of us slept, there was nothing much to see except a straight road with grass and hedges for miles and miles. Eventually, at 3pm we came into the capital city of Gabarone and exited Botswana then passing troops of monkeys we re-entered South Africa. We will be sad to leave Botswana passing wild animals on the roads as nothing is fenced off and the local people are so friendly.
    100km into South Africa, at 4pm we stopped in a small town for snacks and beer and I bought 1kg of Biltong and had it shrink wrapped to get back to the UK. Biltong is like beef jerky only seasoned and much nicer.
    By 5:30pm, we had 100km left and I think delirium had set in as we passed through a small town and at every speed hump everyone went “Weeee” and did a Mexican wave..
    Then finally at 6.30pm after 700km with Caren the car rattling away we arrived at Pilansberg for our final camp. Unfortunately for us the place was heaving and we found the last camping spot right next to the toilets, went straight over to the restaurant and had dinner and some drinks and then returned to camp to pitch our tents in the dark. We had no fire, but Pieter had brought a bottle of Amarella and between the 5 of us we drank the whole bottle washed down with some beers, reminiscing over the past 3 weeks and at 11pm we all turned in to our tents. The camp was noisy with people talking and going back and forward to the toilets so I knew we were in for a rough night but this was our final night of suffering and we would be up super early for our last game drive and to hunt for the illusive leopard.
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  • Day 23

    The Road From Hell

    March 17, 2022 in Botswana ⋅ 🌧 21 °C

    It rained and rained, the wind got up and all night the tents were flapping around letting water in and I just gave up trying to sleep at 3am and sat in the tent on my wet pillow with the soggy tent side smacking me in the head every time the wind gusted. It was a horrendous night, but the saving grace was, that everyone else had, had a bad night to.
    At 5:30am with daylight now forming through the dreary grey skies I was up in shorts and a T-shirt in the rain trying to make coffee and looking for a dry place to drink it but there wasn’t one. Fortunately, by 7am with everyone soaked through except for Becky who seems to live with her raincoat the rain slowed to a drizzle. All Ellie and I wanted to do was pack up and go and get to our next campsite early so we could set up and dry things out but Pieter had other ideas, because due to the all the rain we had, had getting off the Island was going to be a problem because now the sand and salt we drove over to get here was super soft. So soft we couldn’t even walk on it without sinking, and Pieter wanted to wait a few hours for it to dry out but obviously it was never going to dry out with it still drizzling but then he decided to fix the puncture con the trailer we had, had for the last four days.
    By 9am I said let’s make a plan to get off of this hell hole, so we looked at the map. With Pieter and I discussing it the plan was to head south back across the 100 meters of pan we had crossed to get here and then head west to Francistown to get our covid tests done to cross the border tomorrow back into South Africa.
    An hour later we set off. Pieter set the Sat Nav for Francistown and then we proceeded to drive on various tracks trying to get off the island, I kept saying what was wrong with going back across the small strip of pan we had crossed and Pieter said this was the way but I knew it wasn’t because when we arrived the island was con our right, and now we were leaving and the island was on our right again.
    There was no convincing him to turn back and before we knew it the four wheel drive was engaged as we left solid ground and hit the salt flats. This was the point of no return. We would have to keep going flat out for as long as the salt flat lasted and that was way over the horizon.
    Almost straight away the car started to lose traction sliding sideways with the trailer on the back and Becky was now screaming in the back, Pieter changed gear, engaged the differential and ploughed on deeper and deeper into the wet soggy mud with the car snaking all the way and there were so many beeps and lights flashing the car thought it was Christmas. Becky threw herself over the back car seat to sit between me and ellie who held her hand to comfort her but she was having no comfort and was completely hysterical, asking us to stop or slow down because we were going to crash. Into what? I don’t know because there’s here. Deep water approached and Pieter ploughed on, you could feel the car getting bogged down as the water covered the windscreen and the roof. The trailer was completely submerged. The snorkel earn’t it’s money today and still we pushed on. Kilometre after kilometre with no end in sight and the car slid and snaked all the way and Becky cried all the way.
    In the end it was 14km of wet and sloppy clay and salt with us disappearing under water multiple times and although the rest of us thought it was fun, although slightly worried we might get stuck. Becky was shaking because she was terrified and it took her hours to calm down
    We finally got to more solid ground at 12pm and then Caren the car started making noises and stopped turning left. I jumped out and walked backwards in front of the car to identify problem and as I did there was a loud bang as the left front CV joint completely sheared away from the gearbox.
    Pieter looked at it and said we’d be fine but now we were down to 2 wheel drive and we were definitely going to have to drive a lot slower if we wanted the front wheel to stay on.
    Another hour later we hit the tarmac roads and Caren the car was limping along at a maximum of 80kph and we had 250 kilometres to go, once again we were in for a long day in the car. I gave Pieter the directions to Francistown but that went completely out the window once again as he said he would rather head to Serowe to get the covid tests as it would be easier. We stopped on route in a little town but Pieter suggested we should push on to the next town as we can eat there. Little did we know, the next town was Serowe which was 150km away and at 5pm we arrived. I was now starving as I hadn’t eaten all day but luckily so was Pieter and after waiting for 45 minutes for a covid test we finally sat down in the hungry lion for a chicken burger and chips and then Pieter said he was going to cook dinner at the campsite.
    At 6:30pm we arrived at the Khama Rhino Sanctuary, it was dusk we were all tired and the day stopped being fun hours ago. We were all dreading our rucksacks being drenched but the trailer was remarkably dry and so were the tents which was something were all grateful for. We had no electric but when I searched for the toilets I found hot showers and two plug outlets and took over the power banks to charge things up. This camp wasn’t to bad after all.
    At 8pm we were sitting around the fire having drinks and the reason for our trip became apparent when Hilda and Pieter were friendly arguing about getting to the island and driving completely across the pans without getting stuck and Pieter thought it was Wednesday not Thursday.
    We had lost 2 days driving to the middle of nowhere to see nothing. Broken the car, missed the bird sanctuary and tomorrow we would still have to drive for 7 hours at a pace we’re not sure the car will cope with to get across the border and back to Pilanesberg national park for hour final nights sleep and it was all completely unnecessary. The last 2 days had left a bad vibe in the car but myself, Ellie and Becky were trying hard not to let it spoil the last couple of days.
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  • Day 22

    The Road To Hell - Kutu Island

    March 16, 2022 in Botswana ⋅ 🌧 19 °C

    By 8am we were all packed and ready to go. Nothing was caught on the camera traps except ellie’s butt when she went to the toilet, and except for what we passed on the way up hunters road we didn’t see anything, I was gutted as this was the perfect spot.
    The plan for today was to head to Nata, do our final shopping trip and then head to Nata Bird Sanctuary campsite, and see the birds on the salt flats.
    We reached Nata about midday which was pretty good going and we filled up with fuel, did the shopping and we were supposed to eat at a little restaurant but it was closed and that’s when the day went pear shaped.
    There was no back up plan for eating and we started driving again, leaving Nata and heading north before finally turning onto a dirt road and heading out towards the salt pans. I was desperate to see water on the pans because it creates a mirror but we were all also hungry and now didn’t have a clue where we were going.
    Another hour went past, and then the trees and bushes got slightly more scarce and Pieter said that it looks like the salt pans are covered in grass. I’m not sure how that happened because nothing grows in salt but we still didn’t say anything. Another hour went past and then it became apparent that Pieter and Hilda were actually looking for the roof of there Land Rover they had to leave behind when they got stuck out on the salt pans 4 years ago. Another 30 mins went by and then they saw the roof about 2 kilometres off to the distance with binoculars on our left and they seemed amused it was still there. Still we carried on driving, at a steady speed of 15kph.We were going nowhere fast but we in the back still didn’t know where we were going anyway. In the end, Ellie piped up and asked and Pieter said we were going to try and get to Kutu island. This was new news to us in the rear seats, so what’s going to be there?
    An amazing view, a campsite, and a spectacular view of the salt flats which are apparently covered in grass.
    Still we kept on driving. Passing small settlements, tiny farmsteads and another hour in we stopped at a farm to check that we could carry on and to our amazement we could carry on but we also picked up 2 passengers from the farm. One in the front seat and one on the roof, so Hilda squeezed in the back with me and Ellie and off we went with our new passenger giving us directions. We drove on the track, then off the track through long grass and scrubland and onto another track, then left that track cut through some more scrubland and found another track and then we dropped our 2 passengers off with the directions of “when you get to the boabab tree, just go straight “.
    Still we kept driving. 90km into the dirt tracks, through gates, passed more tiny houses and finally after 8 hours we arrived at Kutu island.
    The campsite is completely abandoned, looking around the disheveled guest lodge it looks like nobody has been here since 2017 but Pieter was super pleased we have the place to ourselves and the campsites are still in place albeit they are on a rocky outcropping, and finally we were at the salt flats which don’t have grass in them because nothing grows in salt but there isn’t any water so no reflections.
    It was now 5pm in the afternoon, it had been a very long day of driving for not a lot of gain. We did some exploring and the vastness of the area is impressive but there is nothing here to see, infact from horizon to horizon there is absolutely nothing. I was really disappointed, and a little annoyed that we hadn’t stopped back in Nata.
    We lit a fire, the wind started picking up and as we had dinner a storm system developed all around us encircling the rocky outcropping we were camped on and at 9pm just as we went to bed, the wind and the rain started, if there is a hell it can’t be far off this baron landscape.
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  • Day 21

    The Wildest Night On Hunters Road

    March 15, 2022 in Botswana ⋅ 🌧 26 °C

    At 5:30am after a very hot and sticky night, we gave up trying to sleep. I made the coffee and gradually everyone came to the table to get breakfast.
    By 8am all the tents and camping gear had been packed away and just before we left the Bushbuck, Snookiepoo, came to say goodbye with her baby and we all got a cuddle.
    In the car we done a final shop at the Spar to get extra water and meat for dinner and then we hit the road, it’s not far to our next destination but we’re not sure if we can even get there.
    Hunters Road is one of our final completely wild camping spots. This place is so remote it’s not labelled on any maps and takes you deep into the Botswana wilderness thousands of kilometres away from civilisation.
    90 minutes of driving bought us to a very overgrown and muddy dirt track, we turned off the tarmac, engaged four wheel drive and pushed on. The grass must have been six foot high in places and there was no way of telling if we were on a track or not, then as we came to the Zambian border a huge tree had come down and the road got wet and muddy. This was the point of no return and rather than risk getting stranded out here for days we turned around and headed back for the road.
    All was not lost however as Pieter said he knew of a sand road that cuts into this road and after another 20 mins of driving we found it.
    Again we engaged four wheel drive and 10 mins into the track the girls decided to get in the roof and we pushed on. Kilometre after kilometre we went, driving further and further away from humans. We drove passed warthog, impala and steenbucks and saw elephants ahead of but still we pushed on.
    It took us nearly 2 hours to do the 36 kilometres to get there, but finally we found a camping spot next to a huge watering hole in the most remote part of Botswana there is.
    We pitched up, found firewood on the ground that the elephants had broken off, made a fire to keep away the buffalo and predators and set our camera traps around the watering hole. Then as the fire got bigger and the sun started to set, Pieter started cooking steamed vegetables and fillet steak on the open fire. It was an amazing meal.
    By 8pm we were all tired from watching the Botswanian television, also known as the fire and we turned into our tents for the night.
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  • Day 20

    A Day Of Relaxation

    March 14, 2022 in Botswana ⋅ ⛅ 27 °C

    There was no need for an early start this morning but I was still up before everyone else making a pot of coffee. Today should have been our visit to Victoria falls but the covid tests were $75 each then there was the border crossing money plus the $30 to get in to the falls so we all decided that was to pricey and now we had a spare day.
    We chilled for a few hours in the morning, went to the reception and caught up on our emails and social media and then at 11am we went back to camp for a breakfast of steak, sausage, beans and eggs all cooked on an open fire.
    After breakfast we headed out if the lodge and down the main road to visit some of the small market stalls. There were lots with hand carved wood objects and after much deliberation and haggling Ellie and I bought a carved figure of a man holding a shoe in one hand and a bottle of wine in the other, he really looks like he’s down on his luck but he has a beautiful face. I dread to think how we’re going to get him home, he weighs a tonne.
    At 2pm Pieter, myself and Hilda went on a game drive again while Ellie and Becky went on a boat safari.
    Today we clipped the go pro on the front of the bonnet which was a bonus because we first got charged by a buffalo and then we got charged by an elephant and we also got 2 trumpets from them.
    We stayed in the park until sunset and left around 6:45pm it had been an eventful afternoon, hundreds of elephants and impala’s, nothing new today but I definitely wouldn’t take this view for granted.
    From the game drive we headed straight for camp, it was now dark and Ellie and Becky were already there waiting for us so we decided to skip the cooking and head back to the Indian restaurant we ate at last night. Once again it was a great meal all the better for being washed down with ice cold beer. We headed back to camp. It was a warm sticky evening with 85% humidity, I had a cold shower but that didn’t really help. We were all going to struggle to sleep tonight.
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  • Day 19

    Chobe National Park Game Drive

    March 13, 2022 in Botswana ⋅ ⛅ 20 °C

    This morning we were all up before sunrise. It was one of our final game drive days so today we were all hoping to see one of the big cats up close.
    We dropped our washing off off at the reception of the lodge at 7am, then headed about 1km down the road to Chobe National Park and after checking all our details with the security lodge we hit the dirt tracks and started exploring.
    Within 500 meters we came across a group of atleast 100 impala’s, we had to drive so slowly because they were on the dirt road and just gently moved to the side as we edged our way through, then we came across warthog with babies and then fish eagles just resting on branches.
    We came to a junction and took the right hand turning which took us along the edges of the River Chobe, almost straight away we saw hippos. Hundreds of them and these ones were very active and we all got great photos. We passed through groups of thousand’s of impala, and then we came to elephants. There were also hundreds of all sizes and ages including 2 really small babies.
    We stopped for a late breakfast, and made some rolls and rice crackers and the monkeys came to us straight away and Pieter spent most of the time chasing them with a rubber snake which was hilarious. The monkeys ended up looking very sad.
    Then it was back to the dirt roads and we found a black backed Jackel eating a fresh kill of warthog, infact only the head was left so we knew the jackel hadn’t killed it and he looked very nervous and kept looking up ready to run, the only thing that could have killed that warthog was lions. The hunt began.
    After an hour of driving around in the blazing hot sun with all the windows open, we were all cooking up and were about to give up when we came across another car and they told us if some lions down on the river road where we had been this morning.
    Back we went, passing giraffes, huge elephants, hippos and thousands more impalas. We drove and drove and finally we found a huge male lion resting under a tree. At first he was just sitting there, panting hard and looking hot. We edged closer and closer and when we were within 15 feet of him, the lion relaxed and fell asleep with us right next to him. We could actually hear him breathing and see the grass blades moving as he breathed out, every now and then his tail would swish. We sat with him for an hour completely alone.
    Finally we had done it, we had found a big cat. And he was a really big cat, our trip was complete but not over because of course when we get home and people ask where did you go? And we say Africa, they will ask “Did you see any lions?”.
    It was now 3pm in the afternoon and we were miles into the national park and it was time to head back. Once again we drove through thousands of impala’s, passed the hippos, saw a few dozen giraffes and passed some angry elephants and even found a heard of Sable, which are super rare and just after 6pm we finally drove out of the gates.
    It had been an amazing day for animal sightings.
    We collected our washing from reception and couldn’t believe the price. Mine,Ellies and Becky’s washing came to £7.50. Finally we had clean clothes and after watching the sunset with a beer in hand we all showered and put in clean clothes and headed out to an Indian restaurant Pieter had recommended and we had an amazing meal and a few more drinks reminiscing about the animals we had seen today.
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  • Day 18

    Chobe

    March 12, 2022 in Botswana ⋅ ☀️ 25 °C

    This morning we watched a blazing orange sunrise again whilst the impala’s ducked and dived under the safari tents eating the grass and keeping a lookout for predators. We skipped breakfast, had a quick coffee and by 8am we had all our camping gear stowed away and we were in the road.
    It was just a short 280km drive today and there are only 2 roads. Besides there official A numbers, the first road is called the elephants highway and the second road is call the wildlife corridor, and we found out why.
    Driving down the Elephants highway we saw numerous elephants at the side and crossing the road, then we saw a black mamba snake and a tortoise on then road.
    Just as we joined the road called the wildlife corridor, Pieter with his unbelievable eyesight spotted a chameleon in the road so we stopped to rescue it from being run over. Ellie named it Pascal, and Pieter said it would be better off coming with us as it’s a protected area and he joined our road trip for the next leg of our journey.
    We stopped at the Spar supermarket just before reaching our destination and got food for the night and lunch, luckily Pascal stayed in the car as we found a wild warthog drinking water from a dog bowl in the main square and Pieter said that this time last year a pack of Lions caught an impala outside the Spar and the police had to cordon off the town while they ate it.
    From there it was a short 10 minute drive to our final destination, Chobe Safari lodge.
    After checking in at reception, we found a camping spot deep in the woods about 50 yards away from the crocodile infested river.As we set up camp a young bushbuck and her baby came over and it happened to be one that Pieter had rescued from a snare a couple of years ago. She didn’t recognise him at first but once he sparked up a joint the smell of cannabis seemed to do the trick and she came right up to us and Ellie even got a kiss.
    Then we listed all our clothes and put them in bin bags ready to hand them in to the laundry girls tomorrow, everyone is down to there last pieces of clothing, and I think underwear has already been used atleast twice. So we spent the rest of the day in our swimwear around the pool with some drinks before coming back to camp and watching an amazing sunset over the river. Then it was dinner time and Pieter cooked us all rump steaks, which isn’t as good as the fillet but it was still amazing and I got most of it with the cheesy mushrooms. Then after a couple of beers it was time to try and sleep with all the animals cawing, and screeching around us.
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  • Day 17

    One Last day at Elephant Sands

    March 11, 2022 in Botswana ⋅ ⛅ 18 °C

    Waking up at 5am the sky was a blazing orange and as we unzipped our tent to watch the sunrise, we realised everyone else was up at there tent doors aswell. It was a spectacular display of nature first thing in the morning and once the sun had risen above the safari cabins we all headed down to the restaurant for our buffet breakfast. Most of us chose the full English, Atleast England is good for something.
    For the rest of the day we just chilled out. There were charging stations by the bar and free WiFi so at some point during the rest of the morning we all sat there and caught up with our social media and emails.
    After a tuna salad which Hilda made for lunch we soaked in the pool, Ellie went to catch up on some sleep and the rest of us had gin and tonics and some beers whilst watching the elephants come to the watering hole. At one point we had 14 animals all making a semi circle around the outside of the watering hole, and then the lodge owners came to the bar area with 3 baby mongoose they had rescued and we all got to play with them and give them a cuddle. They are remarkably like ferrets.
    At 5pm Pieter went off to make the camp fire and start dinner and an hour later the rest of us joined him, all the vegetables were prepped and in a crockpot and he put the vegetable curry in the fire and 2 hours later it was ready.
    While we ate our curry and rice 2 big male elephants were fighting with each other not 50 meters in front of us, it was amazing and possibly a once in a lifetime experience.
    After dinner we all went back to the restaurant and sat around the open fire pit with elephants right in front of us and I positioned everyone around the fire and set my camera up and got an awesome shot of the campfire with everyone looking across the waterhole and a huge elephant staring back at us in the dark.
    Then it was back to camp and into our tents for bed, whilst yet more elephants passed by the fronts of our tents.
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  • Day 16

    Planet Baobab to Elephant Sands

    March 10, 2022 in Botswana ⋅ ☀️ 30 °C

    After a rainy day yesterday, we managed to sleep dry under the bbq shelters of our campsite. We were all up early, had hot showers and when we came out of the bathrooms the sun was shining and our bags and clothes took no time to dry hanging outside. Luckily we were in no hurry to leave as we only had a short 200km drive to our next camp.
    We left around 10am, stopped en route at the choppies supermarket where I spoke to the military guys about where we had been in our Toyota Fortuner and they were impressed about how far and where we had been and still not needed the winch.
    Then it was back in the road in the 30°c heat to our resting place for the next couple of days.Elephant Sands.
    This camp was going to be one of the highlights of the trip and as soon as we got there we could see why. Elephants were everywhere drinking from a huge watering hole and we pitched our tents right in front and had a panoramic ringside view. It is an amazing place and the only thing separating us from the elephants is a line of small stones.
    Once pitched we all threw on our swimming gear and went over to the pool, bar and restaurant area, grabbed a cool beer and went for a swim with the elephants right in front of us, it’s an unbelievable feeling being so close.
    The funny thing is elephants make absolutely no noise. They can walk past you silently, like they are on tip toe’s and until they are on top of you you’d never know they were there.
    After a long cooling swim we went back to camp, had a few more drinks and Pieter made us his fillet steak with mashed potatoes and truffles for dinner and it was amazing. Just after dinner we saw impala racing across the campsite the other side of the watering hole and just as they went out of sight some campers at the other end of the field started shouting “Wilddogs,Wilddogs!!”and there they were, a whole pack of 10-15 Wilddogs chasing down the impala looking for a meal, but then they saw us. And for all us onlookers the Wilddogs stopped 50 meters away and stared at us and everyone with a camera, including me got the best photos of Wilddogs. We couldn’t believe how lucky we were.
    The rest of the evening we sat around the fire watching huge elephants walk in and out of camp and as it got darker the huge looming shadows of elephants stopped right in front of us, lifting there trunks to sniff and check us out, at one point there were 2 that looked like they might charge at us but then a big older male came over and stood in front of them protecting us and telling the younger males that we were no threat. It was the most amazing evening, and as we all climbed in our tents we could hear elephants walking past until the early hours of the morning.
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