South Africa
Marloth Park

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    • Day 7–11

      Locationwechsel - Auf zu den Tieren

      February 6 in South Africa ⋅ ☀️ 29 °C

      Heute ging es früh los Richtung Flughafen.
      Nach gut 2 Stunden Flug nach Johannesburg und weiteren 5 Stunden Busfahrt haben wir nun unsere Lodge kurz vor Sonnenuntergang erreicht - Mit direktem Blick in den Kruger Nationalpark.
      Auf der Busfahrt haben auch schon die ersten Pumbas und Zebras unseren Weg gekreuzt.🦓🐗
      Morgen startet dann um 4.30 Uhr unsere erste Safari. Also gleich schnell ab ins Bett...
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    • Day 3

      Marloth Park

      October 28, 2019 in South Africa ⋅ ☁️ 28 °C

      ...sind im Foxy Crocodile Bush Retreat bei Gail und Mark angekommen. Die Lodge ist 30 Meter vom Zaun (gegen das Eindringen von Mensch und Tier) gelegen und unsere Chalet mit Blick auf den Crocodile River.
      Nach dem Gewitter sind die Temperaturen auf 28 Grad gefallen und Mark holt uns nach dem Auspacken, zu einer kleinen Tour am Zaun entlang ab. Herrliche Aussicht und erste Tiere und das Valley.
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    • Day 23

      Our Last Lazy Day in Marloth Park

      March 24 in South Africa ⋅ ☁️ 23 °C

      I was awake at 4am tossing and turning in bed. At 5:30am I was just laying there wanting to get up but not wanting to wake Ellie. At 6am I looked over and Ellie was laying there with her eyes open. “Did you sleep much? “ she said “ Not really” I replied getting up and putting my slobby clothes on.
      Ellie got up, disarmed the alarm and opened the front and back doors and we had 7 zebra. I through out the half bucket I had and then made coffees and we drank them watching the zebra and warthog eat the hay and nuggets. It was raining first thing and we had 2 severe weather warnings on our apps. One for severe thunderstorms between 10am and midnight and the other for prolonged heavy rain until midday tomorrow.
      At 7pm the rain stopped and although it was cloudy it was still in the high 20’s with broken sunshine for the rest of the day.
      At 10am we popped out to the shop for the last time to get a small pint of milk and then headed back to make scrambled egg Jaffels and have a cup of tea.
      I randomly kept throwing the odd cup of pellets out for the animals and they came and went.
      At midday we sat down inside and watched the TV for a bit while it clouded over and the temperature really dropped but it didn’t rain and by 2pm the sun tried to come back out. It was at this point in the day we decided to start tidying up and packing our things up.
      We had washed our bedding from kitted Campers and when Ellie opened the front door she was greeted by the mongoose Family. At the same time I came out of the bedroom to see 10 mongoose laying down at the back door waiting for us. We didn’t have any eggs left and I apologised to them and then I remembered I did have some biltong left in the fridge and some drywors leftover from our time in the Kruger. Biltong is like Jerky but made completely differently, it’s not dryed like Jerky it’s cured.
      I opened the front door and started breaking up the drywors first and they loved it. I couldn’t break it up fast enough and I had quite abit there. Most of them got some but the ones that didn’t, didn’t have to wait long because next I had the Biltong and that was already in small pieces so I just put my hand in grabbed a handful and threw it out. They loved that aswell and got through it far quicker than I expected.
      We shut ourselves back in, and as I went back in the bedroom I could see the mongoose in a big huddle sleeping on the ground outside our window. They were well happy.
      After packing what we could and sorting the camper we went for our last meal out. Back to the Giraffe pub and grill where we first ate and I had my last Eisbein of the year until our next journey back. We ate early at 4pm and were back by 5:30pm just as the black clouds rolled in and a rainbow appeared, still there was very little rain.
      Back at the house one lonely Warthog came up and wagged its tail just standing there looking at me. It reminded me of Ella our dog, just staring, giving me the “quick feed me while nobody is looking” eyes and I obliged with 2 big scoops of pellets. She was a very happy warthog with that and truffled around the ground in the hay eating the pellets and grunting with delight until she was joined by 3 others.
      At 6:30pm in the last of the light Ellie put our last banana out for the bushbabies. We’ve been so lucky and feel so privileged to have seen so many bushbabies on this trip and I even had one want to cuddle me.
      We’ve learnt a lot about Marloth Park which is what we wanted and we now know we don’t want to come back in any holiday season. The people are still lovely and this place definitely has a uniqueness you won’t find anywherelse and that’s why we love it.
      At 8pm while watching TV the Bushbaby came out. We paused the TV watching him knowing it would be our last sighting of a live bushbaby for a very long time. It was sad, but we had done our bit for the wildlife in Marloth Park. Tomorrow we would be leaving and it would be someonelses turn to feed the animals and enjoy the place.
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    • Day 5

      10 Std. DRIVE im Krüger.

      October 30, 2019 in South Africa ⋅ ⛅ 22 °C

      ... endlich mal wieder einen 10 Std. Tag hinter dem Lenkrad - hatten wir das letzte Mal bei BSC. Das Tacho zeigt allerdings nur eine Strecke von 150km an - was für ein Schnitt.
      Mittlerweile betätige ich auch kaum noch den Scheibenwischer , wenn ich blinken will !!!
      Hier die best pictures of today:
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    • Day 22

      Feeding the Animals

      March 23 in South Africa ⋅ ☁️ 24 °C

      We were up at 6am. We haven’t slept a decent nights sleep since we arrived here and last night was no exception. There is a big pillow and a small pillow each on our beds. The big pillow is to big and the small pillow is just slightly to small so either way my neck ends up really hurting and I spend most of the night with a headache that goes as soon as I get up. The bed is also really hard and even Ellie says the same and she likes a hard bed so I feel like I’ve slept on the floor and hurt all over when I do get up. On top of that the duvet is really heavy and too small for the bed so to start with I lay next to the duvet to get to sleep. As the room gets colder because of the air con we both get under the duvet but then spend the rest of the night tossing and turning because we’re too hot under it and too cold without it. Add to that the dryness of the air con our room is abit of a nightmare to sleep in.
      After I’d done my morning workout we had Jaffels for breakfast using some of the eggs we’d saved from the mongoose. Then at 10am we headed back to Daisys Den to get 10kg of pellets and order a bail of hay.
      We got back home at 11am and it was broken cloud today and as soon as the sun came out we just started to burn. Then we’d get a reprieve as it ducked back behind some cloud.
      At 11:30am the hay turned up and I spent 30 minutes breaking it up and spreading it out with some pellets mixed in. An impala stood on the sidelines watching me and grunting the whole time and as soon as I’d finished and retreated to the patio he just stood at the edge of the hay hardly believing he had all of it to himself. Just as he started tucking in to it another 4 turned up and then our 3 resident warthog came back and started snuffling around in the hay and breaking it up looking for the pellets.
      I was now soaked through with sweat and got straight in the pool which was really refreshing and that’s where I stayed for the next 30 minutes watching the animals.
      For the rest of the day we didn’t do much except watch the different animals coming and going. Except for the warthog who ate and ate until they went into a food coma and fell asleep in the hay.
      At 4:30pm we headed out to The Amazing Kruger View for dinner. This was our first time here and it was heaving. We hadn’t booked a table and the waitress said they were all reserved but she found us a small table and seated us.
      The restaurant itself is based in the campsite at the far end of Marloth Park and sits right on the river overlooking the Kruger. It’s west facing so we had the sun setting over the Kruger as we ordered and ate our dinner, and we watched as Hippos swam by with their babies. It was quite an amazing place.
      We left the restaurant at 6pm and headed straight back home and Ellie immediately put some chopped banana in the bowl for the bushbaby and then we went inside and waited for him to turn up. We had the TV on and we could still hear the family at the back of us talking and the kids shouting and whooping. Eventually they shut up at 8:30pm and then the bushbaby came out. He doesn’t like the noise either.
      We watched him for an hour jumping in to the bowl and then bouncing off from tree to tree with banana in his paws and at 9:30pm we called it a day and went to bed.
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    • Day 21

      Hiking Marloth

      March 22 in South Africa ⋅ ☁️ 28 °C

      We were up at 6am to be greeted by Zebra in the garden. Our food pellets are now running low even though we brought 40kg and then an extra 10kg when we arrived back in Marloth. The herd animals can really get through it.
      For breakfast Ellie attempted our first Jaffels with our new Jaffel Iron we brought from the outdoor warehouse. A jaffel is like a really deep filled toastie so it’s an excellent way of using up leftover food for lunches or breakfasts, so today we had scrambled egg and cheese and tomato Jaffels and they were really tasty. The jaffel iron will definitely be travelling with us in the future along with the pie iron.
      At 9am we decided to drive to one of the bird hides before it got too hot and go for a hike. It was already getting warm and unbelievably muggy.
      We spotted an armoured plated skink as soon as we stepped onto the trail and then herds and herds of Impala. The females were the Kruger side of the fence and most of the males were our side staring at them. We could see where the females had dug their way under the fence to get through creating big holes where other animals, including predators could now get in to Marloth. The male’s couldn’t follow them under because of their horns.
      After 3km and 45 minutes we turned around, it was getting really hot now and we’d done a litre of water between us already. Luckily we had another small bottle in the camper.
      When we got back to “little simba” it felt like the surface of the sun inside and I started the engine and whacked the air con right up while we drank the remainder of our drinks. We were dripping in places we didn’t even know we had.
      It’s now the Easter holidays in South Africa and Marloth Park is filling up with holiday makers, coming back to their holiday homes or renting places. All of the roads have turned into game drive tracks with kids hanging out of sunroofs and standing in the back of pickup trucks looking for animals. It’s now a very different very busy place than the one we arrived at.
      We arrived back at the house at midday and 2 days ago the house at the end of our garden which is actually being built had a family turn up. It was already quite a noisy building site but the family that has arrived has absolutely no concept of volume and even though they are 100 meters away from us we can hear every word they are saying. The kids are up at 7am screaming and shouting all day and the parents aren’t much better.
      We can’t understand why you would want to come to a place that’s quiet and full of animals and then scare everything away.
      At 2pm we’d had enough of listening to the neighbours and decided to head to the spar and get some shopping for dinner. On the way out we noticed their neighbours packing lunch stuff into their car and heading out to find somewhere quiet aswell.
      The Spar was a different experience now all the tourists are here and we now know it’s far too small to cope with the influx of tourists. It was really busy and chaotic and we couldn’t wait to get out.
      South African supermarkets don’t have liquor licenses, for alcohol of any kind you have to go to the liquor store which is usually next door, and it’s the same with the Spar and the other convenience store located here. I wanted some beers and popped in, grabbed a six pack and joined the queue of South Africans buying copious amounts of alcohol. We know the South Africans like a drink but the amounts they were buying were crazy. There was an articulated lorry in the car park that was 40ft long and loaded front to bag with floor to ceiling with alcohol. It was all being delivered here. When I just had my lonely six pack the guy at the till kept asking if that’s all I had. I had to say yes, I’m not South African.
      Back at the house the kids at the back were now in the bush veld at the bottom of the garden. They just seem to shout at each other even when they standing next to each other. More families have moved in to other property nearby and even though they aren’t close and we can’t see them, we can hear them all. The place now sounds like a playground.
      I put the TV on and found a music channel to drown out the noise of everyone else. All the animals seemed to have been scared off so we decided to head indoors away from the noise and watch something on TV until dinner time.
      Just as we sat down I noticed movement out the corner of my eye going past the front door. The mongoose had returned.
      Ellie ran for the eggs and I opened the back door.
      There they were sitting on the back steps and Ellie rolled the eggs for them. Some we hard boiled some were still raw.
      They loved the eggs and it was so funny watching them stand on their back legs and crack the eggs open on the floor to get into them. We ended up giving them 20 eggs and they were all gone within 10 minutes. Once the eggs had gone they started snuffing around at the concrete path at the back of the house and digging at the side of it. Then one of them pulled out a big scorpion and ate it. We didn’t even know it was there. That’s why it’s good to have mongoose at the house.
      Once they had eaten they all cuddled up under a tree a went to sleep. They are just like ferrets.
      At 5pm after watching some TV we headed back outside and there were Kudu waiting for us with babies. I managed to hand feed them the last of our food and felt very guilty when we ran out. They’re very good at the puppy dog eyes.
      We had dinner whilst the warthogs stood all around us making us feel guilty and then as it got dark I set the camera up ready for a bit of bushbaby bothering. Then Ellie put the food out and we headed back indoors for the night to watch TV while we waited for the bushbabies.
      They turned up late tonight at 9pm and I was ready to give up when 2 turned up and I managed to video them. Then with load shedding in place for the next 2.5 hours we headed to bed to cook overnight.
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    • Day 20

      Our first rest day

      March 21 in South Africa ⋅ ☁️ 24 °C

      We were awake at 5:30am and up at 6am. I peaked out the back curtains to see a bunch of Warthog laying down waiting for us to get up. I made coffee whilst Ellie undone the patio doors and then we through out a bucket of food. From nowhere a flurry of animals turned up that we didn’t even know were there. Impala, Kudu, more warthog. We felt abit sorry for the warthog that had been waiting for us all night.
      At 8am the animals started to leave but then a family of Mongoose came by. They all sat eagerly at the bottom of the patio to see if we would feed them. Unfortunately we had run out of eggs so Ellie gave them a cut up plum. They didn’t seem overly impressed with fruit so I promised them eggs for later and then they ran off.
      At 9am we went to Daisys Den, the game food store to get some more animal feed. This time we only brought 10kg of pellets but we ordered some hay to be delivered later. Then we went back to the house to wait for the hay. Just as we pulled into the drive I said “we forgot to get the eggs”. Ellie said “ don’t worry about it the mongoose probably won’t come back” so we went inside and I opened the patio doors, sat down with a cup of tea and then the mongoose came around the side of the house and up onto the patio and sat on the steps just staring at us.
      Bollocks……… I knew I should have gone back for eggs.
      I told the mongoose I’d forgotten but it was Ellie’s fault because I said we’d go back and she said no. They gave her a very guilty look and then went and sat by the camper.
      I made Ellie finish her tea and then we locked up, set the alarms, weaved our way through the family of mongoose to the camper and set off back to the shops. We brought a huge tray of 36 eggs and Ellie hard boiled 18 of them and then we waited and waited but the mongoose didn’t return.
      The hay delivery turned up and Ellie and I carried it to the back and broke it up and within minutes we had a herd of impala and warthog snuffling around trying to get the pellets we had buried in the hay.
      For the rest of the day we just chilled out. Ellie wasn’t feeling great probably because of the lack of sleep so she went for a lay down and once all the animals had finished messing about in the hay I went inside and watched the tablet for a bit.
      At 5pm we headed out for dinner, back to the giraffe pub & grill and I found an Eisbein on the menu. This is the first one I’d had since we got here. Eisbein is pork on the bone, slow cooked until it’s falling off and the wrapped in breadcrumbs and deep fried. It’s a German dish and is served with sauerkraut and is probably the best crackling you can get. I really enjoyed it.
      We got back to the house at 6:30pm and Ellie put bananas out for the bushbabies. Then we put the TV on and turned all the lights off so we could see outside. I’d already decided I was having a night off from being a bushbaby botherer.
      At 7pm movement caught our eye outside and we watched the bowl on the fence while a bushbaby jumped from the tree onto the bowl and grabbed a piece of banana. As he jumped off another smaller one jumped from a different branch into the bowl. Wow, we had 2 bushbabies.
      We sat inside watching as at first they took it in turns to jump in the bowl then they got in together. They looked like they were having a bath.
      By 8pm Ellie was done for the day and as load shedding was happening between 9pm and 11pm we decided to go to bed and put the air con on to start to cool the room down. I sat up until 9:30pm watching the tablet whilst Ellie went straight to sleep.
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    • Day 7

      Zebra zum Frühstück 🦓 / Stop-over in 🇸🇿

      November 24, 2023 in South Africa ⋅ ☀️ 33 °C

      Heute gab es Zebra 🦓 zum Frühstück 😄Stimmt nicht ganz, aber zumindest waren die gestreiften Pferdchen zum Greifen nah dabei. Ein echtes Highlight 😍

      Danach ging die Reise weiter ins Swasiland 🇸🇿 oder Eswatini, wie es heute heißt. Eswatini war bis zum Jahr 2018 als Swasiland bekannt, wurde aber auf Geheiß von König Mswati III. (der übrigens 14 Ehefrauen hat) in Eswatini umbenannt. Wir sind hier also in einem Königreich 👑 zu Gast, das absolut monarchisch geführt wird. Nach Gambia ist Eswatini der zweitkleinste Flächenstaat in Afrika.

      Unsere Logde ist ein echtes Schmuckstück mit Pool und Tropenwald. So kann man den routenbedingten Zwischenstopp gut aushalten 🥰

      Nach einem gemütlichen Nachmittag am Pool, haben wir heute wieder sehr lecker zu Abend gegessen. Mark hatte ein T-Bone Steak 🥩 („das Beste, das er je gegessen hat“) und ich habe ein traditionelles Swasigericht gegessen „Iyasha Inyama“ was so viel heißt wie das „Fleisch auf dem Feuer“. Hier werden marinierte Rinderfiletstreifen flambiert und es gibt verschiedene Dips und eine Art Kroketten dazu. Sehr köstlich 🤤
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    • Day 16

      Das große Finale im Kruger beginnt!

      August 23, 2023 in South Africa ⋅ ⛅ 36 °C

      Eine Übernachtung hier im Dunkeld Estate in Dullstroom war zu kurz.
      Wir hätten gerne das Anwesen und das Örtchen noch besser kennengelernt.

      Unsere Reise muss aber weitergehen. Es geht endlich zum Kruger Nationalpark. 😍😍 Besser gesagt: In dem Marloth Park, denn dort ist unsere Unterkunft, die Kruger Eden Lodge.

      Schon während der Fahrt hat sich die Landschaft wieder etwas verändert. Je weiter weg wir von den Kohleabbaugebieten kommen, desto schöner wird die Landschaft wieder und es sieht immer mehr wie im König der Löwen aus. 😜☺️

      Unsere Lodge liegt im Marloth Park. Das ist eine private Region direkt angrenzenden an den Kruger, in der viele Ferienhäuser und Lodges liegen. Der Marloth Park und der Kruger sind lediglich durch den Crocodile River und einen kleinen Zaun getrennt.
      Die Kruger Eden Lodge, in der wir schlafen ist der Hammer! Wir haben uns das Highlight wirklich bis zum Schluss aufgehoben. Ab heute gilt das Motto: Safari pur! 😍

      Schon während unserer Ankunft hier haben uns gleich Warzenscheine im Garten begrüßt. Alle anderen Tiere haben auch Zugang zur Lodge. Hier gibt es keinen Zaun. Zurzeit treiben sich wohl auch Löwen und ein Leopard im Marloth Park herum. 🙃
      Hier ist es auch richtig schön warm. Das Frieren hat für mich ein für alle mal ein Ende. 😄

      Als wir nur mal kurz zum "Supermarkt" und zur Tankstelle hier im Park gefahren sind, haben wir schon viele Tiere gesehen - endlich sogar Giraffen, einfach so auf der Straße!!! 😍

      Für den Nachmittag/Abend haben wir eine sog. "Local Sundowner Twilight Safari" gebucht. Der Ranger ist mit uns durch den Marloth Park gefahren und hauptsächlich haben wir die ganzen Unterkünfte hier gesehen, aber auch Impalas, Kudus, Mangoose, Warzenschweine und wieder die Giraffen. 😁
      Mit Sicht auf den Crocodile River haben wir eine kleinen Snack und Getränke genießen können. Ganz, ganz in der Ferne im Kruger Park auf der anderen Flussseite haben wir auch Löwen sehen können.
      Bei der Heimfahrt zur Lodge haben sich die Giraffen auch wieder schön präsentiert und sind wie Models auf der Straße vor uns spaziert. 🤗

      Für den Abend hatten wir ein Braii bestellt. Wir saßen im Boma und der Chef hat uns ein tolles Abendessen gegrillt.

      Unsere Ankunft heute war nur ein kleiner Appetizer für die kommenden Tage! Wir freuen uns beide so sehr und sind einfach nur gespannt. 🥰
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    • Day 18

      Our First Day Back

      March 19 in South Africa ⋅ ☁️ 26 °C

      We woke up at 6am. Neither of us had slept very well considering we were in a comfy bed in beautiful surroundings.
      I’d found the duvet to short to come up to my ears which I like covered and also not wide enough that if there were 2 of us in the bed it wouldn’t fall over us and touch the mattress. I also didn’t realise there was a sheet under the duvet until 4am.
      We got up and filled a food bucket full of animal feed and opened the back door. There was just one Kudu waiting for us but within minutes of putting the food down the herd turned up. We had 8 Kudu, 3-4 impala, 10 warthog and with the warthog came the Crested Guinea Fowl. In the back stood the bushbuck and little Diekers. They like the sweet potatoes really but the feed shop is currently out of them.
      Even though we hadn’t had much sleep Ellie fancied a walk and as we were peaking really early today at 8:10am we went for a 6km hike following the fence line of the Kruger and the crocodile river. We found a flat tailed skink down there and lots of Waterbok up against the fence.
      When we got back to the house at 9:30am it was really heating up outside and I decided to use the cuddle puddle in the garden for the first time and it was freezing cold. It was the coldest water I’d felt since we got here and it was so refreshing.
      We didn’t do much with the rest of the morning except watch the animals coming and going in the garden. We both found it very zen like. Then at 2pm I decided we couldn’t sit here all day so we took a drive into Komatipoort to do a little shopping. Getting to the town is easy but once you’re there it’s a hub of activity and even though it is a small place it feels like a city centre, which is daunting as tomorrow we have actually decided to drive to the closest city of Neilspruit, now renamed Mbombela for some reason.
      Back at the house it was now 4:30pm. We had a visit in the garden of a Kudu and her tiny calf that didn’t have a tail yet just some cotton wool placed there instead. Once the mother kudu had eaten some hay and some pellets she just kept washing the baby, that was defiantly worth seeing.
      For dinner I did the Braai as Ellie cocked it up last night and we had burgers and Braai rolls with beetroot, potato salad and coleslaw. It felt like a real Braai we had cooked ourselves, then I set my camera up and Ellie filled the bushbaby food bowl with banana and I waited for the bushbaby to come. Now I knew what to expect I got some great photos and even some video even though I had a Kudu watching me all night with its head through the bars looking for food. At 9pm I called it a night because no matter where I stood the kudu stood in front of me so I gave up trying to get any more pictures of the bushbaby and went to bed.
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    Marloth Park

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