South Africa
Emnambithi/Ladysmith

Discover travel destinations of travelers writing a travel journal on FindPenguins.
Top 10 Travel Destinations Emnambithi/Ladysmith
Show all
Travelers at this place
    • Day 296

      Nambiti Game Reserve - Auf Löwenjagd

      June 24, 2017 in South Africa ⋅ ☀️ 24 °C

      ☀️ 5-18°C
      Warm eingepackt starten wir 6.30 Uhr mit dem ersten Tageslicht unsere morgendliche Safarifahrt. Wir fahren mal wieder durch wunderschönes Savannen- und Buschland. Kein Wunder, dass sich die Tiere hier wohl fühlen!
      Die Ranger verständigen sich untereinander per Funk, wo sich welches Tier aufhält und bald merken wir - heute morgen sind wir auf Löwenjagd 😉. Unsere rasante und holprige Fahrt (kommt uns anfangs schon komisch vor) wird belohnt mit fünf wunderschönen majestätischen Löwen 🦁, die so nah an uns rankommen, das wir sie ohne Probleme hätten anfassen können. Das ist der Hammer!!!! Da geraten die Hippos im aufgehenden Sonnenlicht und die Giraffe, die sich wie ein Model vor uns mitten auf die Straße stellt, glatt ins Hintertreffen.
      Die Krönung des Morgens, schon auf dem Rückweg zur Lodge, ist aber die Jagd eines Geparden auf eine Antilopenherde! Das passiert direkt vor unseren Augen - wir können mit dem Jeep direkt nebenher fahren! Viel zu schnell für ein Video, perfekt für unsere Erinnerung 😃! Übrigens hat der Gepard es nicht geschafft und musste hungrig von dannen ziehen.
      Wir sind uns einig: Dieser außergewöhnliche Morgen war ein Geschenk zum 29. Hochzeitstag ❤️!
      Read more

    • Day 296

      Elefanten zum Abend

      June 24, 2017 in South Africa ⋅ 🌙 18 °C

      Stand der Vormittag im Zeichen der Raubtiere, so steht der Nachmittag im Zeichen von Elefanten!
      Nach Frühstück, Relaxen in der Sonne, Mittagessen und wieder ausruhen nehmen wir die Nachmitagssafari in Angriff. Wir pirschen uns per Landcruiser durch die tolle Landschaft, beobachten Antilopen, Strauß und Co. und machen eine lange und entspannte Sundowner-Pause inmitten afrikanischer Landschaft. Auf den Fotos wirkt es vielleicht kitschig - wir fühlen uns einfach nur fantastisch: Mit einem Glas Wein in der Hand - mitten in Afrika - der Sonne beim Untergehen zuzusehen, ist soooooooo schön!
      Und es wird noch schöner: Wir trennen uns von der Sonne und begegnen einer Herde Elefanten mit vielen Jungtieren in allen Größen. Auch sie sind ganz entspannt, fressen genüsslich, schlendern umher, gucken mal bei uns vorbei und wandern dann im allerletzten Abendlicht in schönster Ruhe zum Wasserloch. Als sie so in einer Reihe am Rand des Wasserlochs entlang marschieren und ihre Silhouette sich im Wasser spiegelt, fehlen uns die Worte! Es sieht aus wie gemalt und ist nicht zu toppen - was kann schöner sein?! https://1drv.ms/v/s!AiUv8teodO-roUWigJykpmds6cM6
      Als wir von der Safari zurück kommen, brennt in unserem Bungalow schon ein wärmendes Kaminfeuerchen. Das ist prima, denn trotz aller Sonne ist Winter und nach Sonnenuntergang wird es sofort richtig kalt.
      Letzte Überraschung des Tages - wir zwei bekommen ein Private Dinner mit Kerzenschein und Kaminfeuer im Gartenhäuschen der Lodge - was für ein Hochzeitstag!👫
      Read more

    • Day 26

      Spioenkop

      January 25, 2016 in South Africa

      (South) Umzinyathi DC, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa
      Monday, January 25, 2016

      I think it is fair to say the circumstances surrounding the Boer War were not our Nations finest hour. When war was finally declared, the might of the British Army were challenged by at most 20,000 Boers; farmers, who I think it is fair to say the British dismissed with a degree of arrogance. What they underestimated was that these men were tough, born to the saddle and hunting marksmen from a young age. This was not to be formal squared, fixed bayonet warfare. The Boers developed the first example of a commando style conflict which the professional British Army was ill equipped to counter.
      The drive to Spioenkop from the lodge takes about 45 mins and a dirt road winds it's way up to the summit. There are Zulu villages all around and it is usual to acknowledge anyone you pass, as they will you. Goats, cattle and people roam freely across the roads, so between avoiding all of them plus the potholes, driving requires more concentration than normal!
      Spioenkop rises dramatically from the surrounding countryside and is flanked by several lower hills that played a significant part in the battle and it's outcome. Iron rich, red sedimentary rock predominates the region with igneous extrusions, often basalt. This rock being much harder to erode, has resulted in hills like Spioenkop, with steep sides and a flat top. The British Empire had already been engaged in colonial South Africa some 20 years earlier against the Zulus and should have known some of the pitfalls that fighting in this country produced. Earlier on during the Anglo Boer War the British were heavily defeated at the battle of Majura trying to hold just such a hill. The lessons that should have been learnt from this encounter were seemingly ignored and General Redvers Buller and his command committed more men to an almost certain death by attempting a repeat performance, as part of the attempt to relieve the siege at nearby Ladysmith. In the early hours of January 24 1900, three Lancashire regiments scaled the mountain, which would have been no small task in the dark. They were burdened by a heavy uniform and greatcoat and had to carry all their supplies. Only one small bottle of water was allowed per man, which in the heat of summer on a South African exposed mountain top proved disastrous. There was a thick mist when the men staggered on to the summit and their commander Major-General Edward Woodgate and his officers attempted to arrange their battle lines with use of a compass, which proved inaccurate, because of the presence of so much iron in the rock. Consequently, when dawn broke and the mist lifted, there must have been a collective gasp, on the realisation that they were ill placed and surrounded by The Boer with their far superior weaponry, positioned on the surrounding lower hills. The battle that raged all day resulted in carnage for the young Lancashire soldiers crouching in their shallow trenches on the hill top. Simon Blackburn our guide, who owns Three Tree Hill, is a brilliant raconteur and held us spellbound as he walked us through the battle lines, pointing out the position of all the participants and my blood ran cold at what those boys had to endure. One can only imagine what the young Lancashire fusiliers (having come from the grey, damp, cramped conditions of Victorian industrial Lancashire) must have thought as they marched through this imposing majestic landscape. To die like animals outgunned and picked off by weapons sold by the British and Germans to the Boer, seems doubly galling. There are massed graves marking the trenches where they fell and individual memorial stones erected later by some families. The simple head stone that reduced me to tears and would any mother I suspect, was placed there by a mother who finally managed to visit the site of her son's death some 8 years later. She had carefully nurtured and brought from their garden a small cypress sapling and planted it in this foreign field that would be forever England, in memory of her beloved son. Against the odds it has thrived and now stands tall and proud, a fitting memorial for those 124 men who perished that day alongside her boy.
      This battle has always been portrayed as a desperate defeat for the British Army, but in truth it was a stalemate . At the end of the day both sides retreated having believed they had lost. It was only the next morning when the Boers suddenly realised that their enemy had withdrawn, that they ascended Spioenkop once more and unexpectedly claimed the victory. It was a fascinating and gruelling visit in some ways and just the beginning of our battlefield exploration.
      Incidentally, many of the young soldiers hailed from Liverpool and its environs. The Kop at Anfield was originally called Spioenkop in memory of their lost sons, before being nicknamed simply The Kop. A steep hillside that takes no prisoners .
      Later in the day we took a game walk in the reserve, with Simon, attempting to see the white Rhino. It is grassland and acacia trees predominantly, which really enhances that Out of Africa feel. This reserve is particularly well known for the Rhino and I had spotted several from our verandah through the binoculars. It was a special thrill, however, to walk to within 500 yds of three of them, including a mother and calf. They are huge and give a whole new meaning to the phrase 'does my bum look big in this!' I will never complain again.
      Read more

    • Day 25

      Three Tree Hill Lodge

      January 24, 2016 in South Africa

      Indlovu DC, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa
      Sunday, January 24, 2016

      Today was another travelling day and we made our way further north, with the Drakensberg Mountains forever looming in the background. The vistas are so vast that I couldn't seriously capture them on my camera, but take my word for it, spectacular. Eventually, yet again we turned off the tar road and drove up and up until it didn't seem there could be anywhere else to go, before our home for the next two nights came into view. This is Three Tree Hill Lodge. Once more we are in a cabin, named Churchills, this time perched high on the hill overlooking Spioenkop itself and the Lodge's private game reserve around it. I probably don't have to tell you the views are again fantastic. In truth I'm running out of superlatives, so excuse me if I have to keep repeating myself. Heavy duty binoculars are provided and we have already espied animals galore. Tomorrow we are going to take a closer look at both the reserve and Spioenkop.
      Dinner is taken at the main lodge with the other guests. The menu looks good, but not quite the epicurean fantasy of yesterday, which is probably just as well!. All is quiet as I tap away to you on the verandah, apart from the breeze and the call of the birds.
      I wonder what delights tomorrow will bring?
      I'll keep you posted, but no internet connection at the moment, so will send this to you when I can.
      Read more

    • Day 4

      Wednesday morning game drive

      December 21, 2022 in South Africa ⋅ ☁️ 15 °C

      Cool. Muddy roads. Lions on a rotting and very stinky maggoty giraffe carcass. Waterbuck. Cheetah on the hunt. Jackal. Two more lions. Baby impala running.

      Drizzle. Heavy drizzle by the end.

    • Day 22

      Naunton Guest House, Ladysmith

      February 6, 2017 in South Africa ⋅ ☀️ 17 °C

      Naunton's was nice. The room was comfortable with a big window on a rather lovely garden.
      The big excitement was this morning with lots of birds in the garden even in the rain. There was a pair of familiar chats desperately trying to feed a red-crested cuckoo chick at least 3 times their size!Read more

    You might also know this place by the following names:

    Emnambithi/Ladysmith

    Join us:

    FindPenguins for iOSFindPenguins for Android