I awake with a start to the sound of feet padding softly outside my tent.
It is so cold that I can see my breath; I start to freeze both literally and figuratively. Still pitch black outside, I can see nothing through the flaps of canvas above my head. We’d been warned that lions frequently passed through camp on their way to drink from the marsh during the dry season. My tent is equipped with air horn for just such an occasion.
Just as a panic starts to warm my chilled limbs, I hear the soft, familiar call of my guide, Mox.
5 AM. Time to start the day.
I crawl out of my bed, already fully clothed. It is winter in Botswana. Too cold in the mornings to undress. Three days in; my clothes are stiff against my goose bumps.
I wrap myself in even more layers, grab my fuzzy hot water bottle and shuffle to breakfast for hot oatmeal and red bush tea. Our last day at the camp in Chobe, we are determined to find the leopard we’ve been tracking for days. I shovel down my breakfast and hop in the open-air truck for yet another freezing drive through the bush.
The wind whips my face and I am suddenly wide awake. I wrap a scarf around my head, so only my eyes are exposed, scouring the area for the elusive cat. The bush is eerily still, and I brace myself for another morning of defeat.
Out of nowhere, the birds and monkeys start going crazy in the trees. Warning of danger. Mox slams on the gas, driving over bushes and small trees towards the noise. We spot a family of baboons fleeing. I notice something coming towards us in the clearing.
A pack of hyenas surrounds us. My breath catches in my throat. I’ve been warned that hyenas are not only the most dangerous animals in the bush, but also the most ruthless. Three of the dogs are fighting over the remains of a small baboon, while the rest circle us, still hungry.
As my fear builds, I notice something darting out of the trees a few hundred yards away.
She appears with the other half of the poor baboon. Mox chases the leopard down, fleeing from the hyenas and following her to the base of a tree.
She waits there, breakfasting on the prey she stole from the hyenas. Ready to climb the tree if they decide to come for revenge.
Never have I been so terrified, thrilled, horrified and amazed in such a short period of time. This was the circle of life, in real life. The female leopard had challenged a group of hungry hyenas on her own, stealing the majority of their prize. She did what she had to to survive the winter.
These pictures are amazing! I can’t believe how close you got to the animals. Was your safari a multi-day trip?
Thanks! It was pretty incredible to be that close, and also very unsettling at times haha
I started at a camp in Zambia for a few days and then spent about two weeks on safari between a few different regions in Botswana.
Wow, what an amazing experience. Your pictures are so nice, and I can’t believe how close you must have been to all the animals!
Thank you! It really was incredible. Sometimes we would go days just hangin’ out with monkeys and elephants without any real activity, then out of no where something like this would happen and get my heart racing!
Wow, you’ve really been to some fascinating places. One of my biggest regrets in life is that I didn’t travel more when I was younger, before I embarked upon my time-consuming career. 😦