Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)
Special place within a special place
Travel2015
RAIN drops still garland the acacia trees and in the two-track bush road, puddles make us wonder how long the scudding clouds will stay away. As we sit on the game drive Land Cruiser, our ponchos are only just drying from a mini-shower not long before.
We’re a little bit chilly, damp in places... but in the African bush, rain is a cause for celebration. It means renewal, it means new life, it means promise and optimism.
Those philosophical sentiments are beyond the ken of the fat African wild dog puppies frolicking outside their den in a corner of Madikwe Game Reserve. All they know is that life is good. They have friends to play with. They have old bones to gnaw on and, just beyond their sight, they know one of the pack adults is keeping a wary eye on them.
Like all youngsters, they are unco-ordinated and it is amusing to watch them overbalance – often – as they play. It is interesting to think that in a few short months, they will become part of the bush’s most effective killing machine... a pack of wild dogs.
Chris Altenkirk, experienced ranger and general manager of the lodge, tells us that a wild dog pack will be successful in killing prey in four hunts out of five. This is compared to the two or three successes out of five which hunting lions manage to achieve.
This is because the dogs work as a team – and they share the spoils accordingly when they’re done.
As Chris tells us about the dogs, we sense a commotion and two adults join the third grown-up who has been watching the brood.
There’s a strange, keening, whining, almost laughing sound from one of the adults. All play is instantly stopped among the pups and they mob the adults.
Chris says the noise is the Alpha female (wild dogs are a matriarchal group) ordering the other adults to regurgiate meat they have eaten for the hungry youngsters. We watch as this most familial group of wild animals has breakfast, with the kids eating first.
It’s the closest I have been to wild dogs and the experience was well worth the early-ish start Chris suggested. We had got up at 4.30am and were on the road just after 5am heading for the wild dog den. Normally, early morning drives in summer at Rhulani involve a 5am wakeup call, followed by tea, coffee and home- baked rusks and muffins before the vehicles head out at 5.30.
Early starts in the bush are also worth the effort and we arrived late at the wild dog den because we stopped off en route to take in a group of jackal puppies who had just emerged from their den while their parents were off hunting.
The jackals were curious and pretty cute. I did wonder, though, whether their curiosity and the lack of watchful adults in the vicinity might well end in tragedy.
Mind you the other side of the so-called tragedy coin is survival and we see that clearly on another drive, when Chris hears on the radio that another vehicle has seen some female lions near a main road. We find them easily and note their distended bellies – a sure sign they have just eaten.
The females wander slowly into the bush towards a low-hanging tree – and we see what is happening. The group had killed a wildebeest and the lifeless animal is being guarded jealously by a gorged male lion. He has had so much to eat he looks as though he will fall asleep at any minute.
He makes his displeasure plain when the females come too close.
Chris notes that the wildebeest carcass has been dragged under the tree to discourage vultures and other scavengers like hyena.
Madikwe has both spotted and brown hyena and, on an evening drive, we were lucky to see a brown hyena briefly before it skulked away into the bush.
Rhulani is a five-star establishment which offers an exclusive experience – having only seven chalets and one family unit.
Each chalet offers privacy, luxury and understated African bush elegance. The bathroom has inside and outside showers and a large bath, there is air conditioning and wifi internet access. There is a tea and coffee station, and a mini-bar. Outside, there is a private deck and a plunge pool.
Apart from the accommodation, the service is what you would expect from a five-star place... efficient but unobtrusive. I do wonder whether I may be getting the red carpet treatment because I am a journalist, but a quick look on TripAdvisor and other sites confirms top notch service is the benchmark at Rhulani.
Not for nothing, then, was Rhulani a winner in both the Boutique Hotel Awards 2014 and the World Luxury Hotel Awards 2014.
Cuisine, too, lives up to the high standard. My pepper steak on the first night was one of my top three so far (I use a pepper steak as my way of gauging the quality of food at hotels and restaurants so I have had many of them over the years.)
The lodge is the perfect base for an authentic bush experience and Rhulani’s people, like Chris, go out of their way to try to make the most of the time for their guests.
We had a number of unforgettable encounters – with the wild dogs, the lions, a stroppy lone elephant and a bachelor group of cheetah which we encountered on two successive evening drives.
It was a little disappointing for Chris, though, that he didn’t manage to get us a sighting of an elusive leopard who has recently established himself a territory not far from Rhulani.
Leopard are seldom seen in Madikwe, but Chris and the other rangers know the cat’s favourite trees and his haunts. For us, he remains shy.
Although we did not get to see the newcomer, we were well-served by Chris who shared his vast knowledge of the bush with us.
But is it a privilege to have seen the wild dogs, which are among the most threatened animals in Africa ( Madikwe’s packs are thriving, though) – and to have seen them at close range?
Madikwe is still one of our favourite reserves in southern Africa... a truly special place. And Rhulani is a special place within a special place.
● Seery was a guest of Rhulani Safari Lodge. See www.rhulani.com