dinsdag 8 november 2011

Check?

Hoi allen,

Even een herinnering dat wij onze http://safarisopmaat.blogspot.com/ vaker bijwerken dan DeBushrangers, dus vergeet niet je ook daarop te abonneren.

Hi all,

A quick reminder that we post more regularly on http://safaristlucia.blogspot.com/ than on DeBushrangers, so don't forget to subscribe to that page.

dinsdag 23 augustus 2011

Our new home...

Veel mensen hebben de laatste tijd gevraagd naar wat foto's van ons nieuwe stekkie in St. Lucia. We zijn inderdaad recent verhuist naar een nieuw appartementje in hetzelfde complex, wat groter, ruimer en lichter dan het vorige. Bij deze dus een fotoshoot van onze nieuwe plek (klik op de fotos voor een vergroting):

Zoals vanouds, de oprijlaan naar de parkeerplaats van het complex

Onze nieuwe bovenwoning in het licht van de middagzon. Trapje op en dan...

Als je dan de voordeur binnenkomt zie je de woonkamer met keuken erachter

Vanuit een iets andere hoek

Van de voordeur kun je dan doorlopen naar achteren naar de badkamer en slaapkamers

Met ligbad (douche wordt er nog ingebouwd van de week)

En een geweldig afgewerkte designer gootsteen (geld was op zodat de roestvrijstalen slangehalsafvoer een rubber pijp werd...)

Maar verder met alles erop en eraan

Naast de badkamer ligt dan onze slaapkamer.

Hmmm, misschien moeten we nog iets extra's aan de muur hangen. Ziet er bij nader inzien toch nog een beetje kaal uit...

Maar de airco is in elk geval wel al geinstalleerd

Naast onze slaapkamer is dan de logeerkamer, met anderhalf bed vrij van teringzooi en spullen. Al een hele verbetering ten opzichte van onze vorige logeerkamer waar je nauwelijks een voet binnen kon zetten...

En dan terug naar onze woonkamer. Wat we heel fijn vinden is dat we zo'n hoog plafond hebben, met veel ramen en dus veel licht.

Vanuit de keuken kijken we naar ons kantoor links en de voordeur zien we rechts in de hoek.

En oh ja, ik heb weer een terrarium... Deze keer met rietkikkers.

En het zwembad van het complex kunnen we ook nu natuurlijk gewoon blijven gebruiken.
Tot zover, groetjes uit St. Lucia!

Geert en Freya

zondag 14 augustus 2011

What we do in our 'free time'...

Any business owner knows that free time doesn't exist for them, but yet sometimes we find that helping out with some research project is a good excuse to abandon the marketing, making quotes, doing admin, making bookings, guiding, studying, be on tour, teach etc. So hence the one day Freya joined a friend of ours for an aerial crocodile count in the iSimangaliso Wetland Park, and the other day I joined him in the field to catch a monster croc for his research. See some photos below (click on them for an enlargement):

St. Lucia Estuary

Various antelope and zebra along a water course

Large group of hippos

Hippo running in the shallow water

Lake Bhangazi in foreground, Indian ocean in background

Our coastline

Humpback whales along our coast line
Dragging the Bull of Tewate out of the water

It doesn't like me blindfolding him

Covering the eyes while the back legs are tied

Sliding through the rope for tying the front legs

It tries to escape again, hold on tight! Take those blood samples quickly!

Patching up the croc with some disinfectant after having taken skin and blood samples

Just under 4.2 meters and about 400 kg. a last photo before we released him again

maandag 11 juli 2011

Sardine Run 2011

Each year during May through July, a cold northerly current causes millions of sardines to gather in shoals and move north. Visible by satellite, the shoals measuring more than seven kilometres long, 1.5 kilometres wide and 30 meters deep, run up the East coast of South Africa. While doing so, the silvery, swirling swarm becomes fodder for those higher up the food chain. Pursued relentlessly by thousands upon thousands of dolphins, sharks, seals, penguins, whales and gannets, these creatures' feeding frenzy spawns the greatest faunal event on earth. As many as 23000 bottlenose and common dolphins expertly herd the sardines towards shallow waters where the little fish from massive bait balls measuring up to 20 meters in diameter. Super-pods of dolphins, whales and sharks sweep through these balls, gorging on mouthfuls of fish, while voracious seabirds plummet from the skies above like fighter planes, scooping out their victims with ease. As if that wasn't enough, this years sardines had an additional enemy to deal with: A little boat named The Pearl, with three pirates (Charl, Freya and me) with three fishing rods...

Okay, as you can see, the annual sardine run is quite a spectacle, and Freya was dead keen to go and experience it. However, driving to the sardine run Mecca, Port St. Johns, some 660 km South of St. Lucia is do-able, but paying 30.000 rand each for a week long diving charter isn't... Our good friend Charl came up with a master plan: We would drive down, towing his boat, and go out at sea ourselves! In the meantime we would fish like hell, and the caught fish would be used as bait for Charl's charters for the rest of the year. This way we could make some money to cover a part of the cost of going down to Port St. Johns for a week. Excellent, se here we went (click on the photos for an enlargement):

Got our fishing permits, and off we go!

Port St. Johns lies on the beautiful Wild Coast

The local Xhosa people are cute

and hard working

Every morning we would get up before sunrise, to check the conditions of the sea.

Then we would drive down the river towards the sea.

Launching here is dancing with death, but certainly do-able, according to our experienced skipper Charl

Once out at sea, we got to see humpback whales

and southern right whales

and thousands of gannets plummeting out of the air

and hundreds of dolphins, everywhere you would look!

Freya got to snorkel with them

and took some lovely underwater shots

We found a loggerhead turtle as well

so Freya snorkelled with him too.

I was busy taking photos

of flying gannets


and floating gannets

and floating white-chinned petrels

Then it was time for some action shots: Fighter Plane incoming!

Fighter Jet 3 is late...

And Charl? He was fishing...

In the afternoon we would bask in the sun, eating noodle soup and drinking hot chocolate with Amarula.

At the end of the week we travelled North, to Scottsburgh where the people were netting the sardines from the beach: One big catching frenzy, and people stealing each others fish.

People even casting their net into the bigger net of other people.

And then running for your life with your stolen fish in a plastic bag

The commercial operators were unfazed though, they diligently filled their crates while others stole fish through their nets.

And since our fishing didn't quite deliver a years supply of bait for Charl's fishing charters, we bought 4 crates of sardines right from the beach. Happy days!