Day 6 – Goodbye!
Lacey : January 14, 2012 13:54 : Bushwire, Extreme Nature Tour, Fredrik and Mikael, New friendsThe sad day has come, it is time to say goodbye to Fredrik and Mikael.
After inspecting the Puff Adder caught last night. We tubed one so we could feel its scales (nothing feels quite like a Puff Adder – the closest is the File snake) it was time to load all the bags in the car and wave them goodbye as they journey north up to Swaziland and Mozambique.
See you soon guys!
Day 5 – final road cruise
Lacey : January 14, 2012 01:45 : Activities, Extreme Nature Tour, Fredrik and Mikael, Road cruiseThe roads we were on last night produced such unique species that we decided to go back again!
This time we found – although again DOR;
East African shovel snout
Tiger snake
House snake
Stilleto snake
Mfezi / spitting cobra
Snouted Cobra
Mole snake

But we did find a live Puff Adder, and she is a nice big female, very beautiful dusky brown with yellow/orange.
Day 4 (part 2) – Extremely long day for an extreme nature tour
Lacey : January 12, 2012 23:49 : Birding, Bushwire, Extreme Nature Tour, Fredrik and Mikael, Road cruiseOff we go to find some flat lizards! We found some, but boy the rocks were hot hot hot!!
We also found a Black Kite after talking about them in the car on the way.

After hearing us in the car two black kites thought they would give us the privilege of watching them swoop in the geothermals
What else to do but road cruise back to Hluhluwe?!
We saw different species, even ones that we had only heard of – unfortunately however due to the high level of traffic on the roads a lot of these were DOR (dead on road) :(
DOR:
3 x snouted cobra
marble tree snake
molesnake
eastern purple glossed snake
Vine snake
Live:
cape wolf snake
transvaal quill snouted
house snake
Day 4 – Extremely long day for an extreme nature tour
Lacey : January 12, 2012 16:19 : Bushwire, Extreme Nature Tour, Fredrik and MikaelWhat a hectic day!
The morning brought us the following;
Birds:
African Spoonbill
Crowned eagle
Bush shrike
Black backed puff
Violet back starling
Long crowned eagle
Lesser striped swallow
Red backed shrike
Broad-billed Roller
European bird eater
Fish eagle
Sunbird
Yellow Billed Kite
Black kite
Kingfisher
Goliath heron
Stork
Pelican
Ibis / Hadeda
Mammals:
Giraffe
Warthog (and baby)
Nyala
Impala
Hippo
Reptile:
Crocodiles
Striped skink
Tropical gecko
Molesnake – pancake phase
Other:
Giant land snail
Countless butterflies and moths
Wasp (as found by Fredriks hand)
Then it was off to our afternoon stop to look for flat lizards, with a road cruise home!
Day 3 – Another Call out and Evening Road Cruise
Lacey : January 11, 2012 10:02 : Extreme Nature Tour, Fredrik and Mikael, Road cruise, Snake Call outFredrik and Mikael had set the morning aside for a game drive and some serious birdwatching. Leaving Umkhumbi Lodge in the wee hours of the morning they set out for the reserve.
Lots of birds meant they rapidly worked their way down the bird list and even saw lots of other animals including the Wild Dogs who were playing in front of the vehicle at the side of the road – many people can go through their lives never seeing these animals in the wild, and certainly never that close.
While they were gone, we had two more snake call outs – both for the “Snake of the Week” the Snouted Cobra. It is the curse of Fredrik, as soon as he is around, there are no snake sightings. So the boys didn’t miss out on all the Forest Cobra fun we had a handling demonstration from Anton. It was only when he was in the sunshine that we realised quite how beautiful this particular snouted cobra was.
Road cruise after dinner, Beef Lasagne – one of Meva’s specialities – with a side order of a beautiful sunset.
This evening has been dubbed the Night of the Chameleons. We saw no snakes, very few frogs but hundreds of baby flap-neck chameleons. Where ever we looked, there swaying in the grasses was a very small and sleepy chameleon.
So we thought, where are the parents of this multitude of babies (flap necked chameleons can lay 25-60 eggs so we were looking at the least two females)? Ignoring the baby chameleons (mostly anyway, the lure for more photos is always strong) we searched for the adult chameleons. Then on two nearby roads, we found them, sleeping in the branches hiding behind clumps of leaves.
But still no snakes, maybe on tomorrows drive!
Day 2 – Extreme Nature Tour Afternoon
Lacey : January 10, 2012 16:43 : Extreme Nature Tour, Fredrik and Mikael, Road cruiseTime to go hunting for scorpions! And snakes obviously! Anything classed as a reptile or creepy-crawly is our prize this afternoon.
No rock left unturned, no logs unmoved, no tree left still rooted… okay, maybe I am exaggerating on the tree bit – we are environmentalists after all!
Our afternoon started off promising, at a nearby property we could see building rubble and farm debris that looked very “snakeable”.
Day 2 Extreme Nature Tour – A quick photoshoot
Lacey : January 10, 2012 15:22 : Activities, Extreme Nature Tour, Fredrik and MikaelAfter breakfast it was time for a quick photo shoot with Antons little snake collection. The big problem though is deciding which ones to choose!
As it was just a quick shoot we decided on a Puff Adder from the Eastern Cape, an East African Gaboon Adder and the Black File snake.
Then it was off to find a crocodile with a fish hook stuck in his mouth!
UPDATE: The Crocodile is missing in action! Someone tried to catch him two days ago and lost, and it would appear that he isn’t keen on this happening again and has moved. We have our spies in the area keeping their eyes open for the Crocodile so as soon as he is spotted we’ll be straight after him.
Day 1 – Extreme Nature Tour and a snake call out
Lacey : January 10, 2012 08:27 : Bushwire, Extreme Nature Tour, Fredrik and Mikael, Snake Call outWhat a fantastic start to our birding and reptile tour, no sooner had our guests arrived and put their bags in their rooms than we get a snake call out! Next door to us was a problem snake that needed to be removed, namely a Forest Cobra – fantastic we thought, another one for our telemetry project. But alas it is too small so we have to keep looking. On the veranda, squeezed under a chair in the smallest space you could possibly think of was the Forest Cobra.
He obviously wanted to avoid us pesky humans but did not want to stray too far from the nice juicy toad sitting on the table next to the chair.
Armed with snake sticks and our trusty bin Anton soon had the Forest Cobra in his clutches and safely in the bin.












