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Discover the changes benefiting South Africa’s animals, people and visitors

September 27, 2020 14:49
sunset impala rudi
4 min read

Saseka wants attention. In fact, she demands it. Exhausted after mating, Malewane is resting his head on a ground-level branch broken from a torchwood tree as Saseka makes another approach, her tail high in the air, sashaying back and forth in front of him, like a Strictly Come Dancing hopeful ahead of a surly judge.

Malewane, named after the seasonal river that runs through the property, and Saseka, meaning “beautiful” in the Shangaan language, are among the spectacular leopards of the Thornybush Private Game Reserve, a 15,000-hectare reserve in South Africa’s Greater Kruger region, north of Johannesburg.

And the chance to see these beautiful big cats is one highlight of a visit to the area, whose animals have been benefiting from some of the changes of the last few years.

More and more private land owners around Kruger National Park have agreed to remove their internal fences to allow for the natural migration of animals: Thornybush is among them, so the wildlife has swathes of land from east to west, their preferred migratory route, as well as north to south across the protected reserve of Kruger National Park.

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