Much Addo About…

…Elephants.

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That’s what Addo National Park is all about.
Its made up of over 180,000 hectares across five different biomes: Forest, Albany Thicket, Fynbos, Nama Karoo and Indian Ocean Coastal Belt (including some huge dunes).

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The high scrub / Thicket makes spotting game tricky in some places,

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but over 4-5 days we saw Red Hartebeest (those are the dunes, not snow in the background)….

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…many Warthogs (most of whom had young with them)…

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…Zebra (also with foals)…

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…an occasional Buffalo…

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…Blue Cranes, waterbirds & Terrapins…

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…and even a mouse…

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Mind you, he was keeping his head down, due to the variety of raptors that are around.

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We even saw lion (here they have the same dark manes as those in The Kalahari)

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This one proved to be another ‘Marilyn’ and spent most of her time in the appropriate position…

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But, despite the huge size of the park, one thing you are pretty much guaranteed to see are elephants.
We were fortune to see them all shapes and sizes…

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We were also doubly fortune one day to come across 70-80 of them at the same time at a waterhole.
Drinking…

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…grazing…

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…applying sunscreen…

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…nursing…

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…messing about in the water…

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…jousting…

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…mating…

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…swimming…

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…and generally larking about (much to the disgust of the warthogs who they chased off every time they tried to come down for a drink).

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For the four and a half hours that we sat there engrossed though, it was the youngsters that were the star of the show.

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There’s little more cute than watching them trot as they try to keep up with mum…

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…or watching the older kids laze about trying to look cool.

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Oddly though, if you to ask a zoologist what’s so special about Addo Park, they’d probably tell you it’s the very rare Flightless Dung Beetle.

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They’d probably tell you that the elephants are there just to provide the raw materials required to keep the beetle from becoming extinct. From watching them for many hours I can assure you they certainly produce enough to sustain the local beetle population.


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