Timbavati Game Reserve
Timbavati Game Reserve | |
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Leopard at Tanda Tula camp | |
Location in Mpumalanga province Location of Mpumalanga in South Africa | |
Location | Mpumalanga, South Africa |
Nearest city | Nelspruit |
Coordinates | 24°20′07″S 31°20′38″E / 24.33528°S 31.34389°ECoordinates: 24°20′07″S 31°20′38″E / 24.33528°S 31.34389°E |
Area | 53,392 hectares (533.92 km2)[1][2] |
Established | 1956[3][4] |
http://www.timbavati.co.za |
The Timbavati Game Reserve is located to the north of the Sabi Sands Private Game Reserve on the western edge of Kruger National Park.
The Reserve was established in 1956 by like-minded game farmers with the creation of the Timbavati Association. The association has 50 members and covers 53,392 hectares (533.92 km2).[1][2] Timbavati is part of Associated Private Nature Reserves (APNR) and the fences separating Timbavati from the other member reserves in the APNR and from the Kruger National Park has been removed.[5] Wildlife, including lions, elephant, cheetahs and other species roam freely between the these reserves.
History
Ngala (Ngala, meaning 'lion' in Shangaan) and Motswari game reserves have been amalgamated into Timbavati.
Geography
The Timbavati Game Reserve is located in the Mpumalanga province of South Africa[6] between latitudes 24° 34’ S and 24° 03’ S and longitudes 31° 03’ E and 31° 31’ E. The Timbavati Reserve consists of 50 contiguous tracts of land housing 12 luxury tourist lodges.
The reserve forms part of the Greater Kruger National Park and lies nestled between the Kruger National Park on the east, the Klaserie and Umbabat Game Reserves in the north and the Thornybush Game Reserve in the west. There are no fences between the Timbavati and the Kruger National Park which allows free movement of wildlife between the reserves. The world-famous Kruger National Park is a conservation area of more than 20,000 square kilometres (7,700 sq mi).
The southern border of this great complex of public and privately owned protected land lies close to the Kingdom of Swaziland and abuts the boundaries of Zimbabwe in the north and Mozambique in the east.
The terrain is undulating with altitudes varying between 300 and 500m above sea level. The area is characterised as ‘savanna bushveld’ with 6 different landscape types: acacia woodland, open woodland, mopane woodland, combretum woodland, mixed combretum woodland and mixed veld on Gabbro. Bush elephants, African buffaloes, kudu, Burchell's zebras, blue wildebeests, Cape giraffes, impalas, waterbucks and warthogs abound together with their attendant predators which include Transvaal lions, African leopards, South African cheetahs and spotted hyena. The endangered Cape wild dog is also a regular visitor to the Timbavati Game Reserve. The larger and rarer antelopes such as roan antelope, common eland and tsessebe have been slow to return to this area and their numbers are still critically low.
The climate is typified by a summer wet season (October–March) with the majority of rain falling between December and February. This is also the hottest time of the year, with temperatures in the region of 32 °C. A typical summer day will be hot with storm clouds gathering for a spectacular late afternoon thunderstorm.
During the winter months (April–September) the weather is dry with little chance of rain. As game tends to congregate around dwindling water sources, game viewing is more predictable. Temperatures can range from 28 °C to 10 °C in one day. The mornings and evenings can be very cold and warm clothing is very strongly recommended.
Flora and fauna
The Timbavati is home to:
- Over 40 mammals, including the Big Five: Lion, African elephant, African Buffalo, African leopard and black rhinoceros.
- Over 360 bird species.
- 79 species of reptile.
- 49 species of fish.
- 85 listed species of tree.
White lions
Lions with a recessive gene causing the coats to be snow white (though not albino) reappeared in the Timbavati in 2006 after an absence of many years.[7]
When the white lions of the Timbavati were discovered in the mid-1970s they became the subject of much interest and debate. The story of the “White Lions of the Timbavati” has been told by several people, including Chris McBride and Linda Tucker. Their books include McBride's The White Lions of the Timbavati[8] and Operation White Lion[9] and Tucker's Mystery of the White Lion . McBride was the son of Timbavati member Cyril McBride who at the time owned the farm Vlakgezicht together with his brother Robert.
McBride relied heavily on the expertise and knowledge of two local trackers, Jack Mathebula and Mandaban Hlongo in his efforts to track the white cubs. These men had grown up in the bush and had intimate knowledge of the behaviour of lions.
Some conservationists assumed that white coat prevents lions from hunting successfully, which led to lions being relocated from the wild into zoos and hunting and breeding camps. In partnership with lion ecologist Jason Turner, Tucker has returned white lions to the wild in protected reserves where hunting and removal are prohibited. This project has demonstrated that white lions hunt successfully. While white lions are born naturally in the Timbavati region where individuals carry the recessive gene, systematic hunting, poaching, and removal have caused a dramatic population decline. Today, fewer than twelve remain in the wild, of which seven are protected in Tucker's White Lion Protection Trust reserve. Conversely, hundreds of white lions are kept in zoos and canned hunting camps where they are often inbred to guarantee their white coat.[10]
White Lions are revered as spirits of deceased kings by local tribes, notably the Tsonga people. There have been various “spiritual” powers attributed to the white lions—some people claim that the lions are a different species. Today scientific research is being conducted to further understand the genetic coding of the white lions. All white lions worldwide are ancestrally linked to the White Lions of the Timbavati.
Leucism
The white coats of the “White Lions of the Timbavati” are not the product of albinism, a relatively common condition resulting from a failure to develop pigment, but from another condition called “leucism”, in which the pelt is white but eyes and skin are pigmented. The condition is rare and also termed a “chinchilla mutation.” It is thought to represent an evolutionary stage in the progressive loss of pigmentation.
The white mutation, which affects two of the pigments involved in coat coloration, is expressed only when two conditions pertain: (1) Both parents carry the recessive “white gene”; and (2) the offspring inherit the recessive gene of each parent. If a cub receives a dominant “tawny” gene from either parent, its pelt will be tawny. Thus a litter may contain both tawny and white cubs.
Travel
The Timbavati is approximately 5 or 6 hours by car from Johannesburg. Normal passenger vehicles can reach all lodges within the reserve.
Regularly scheduled, daily flights are available from Johannesburg and Cape Town to local airports.
Accommodation
- Timbavati Safari Lodge
- Bateleur Mobile Camp
- Kambaku Safari lodge
- Kambaku Riversands
- Kings Camp
- Motswari
- Makanyi Lodge
- Ngala
- Simbavati River Lodge
- Shindzela
- Tanda Tula
- Umlani
- Java (Self catering camp)
- Jaydee (Self catering camp)
- Leadwood (Self catering camp)
- Rockfig (Self catering camp)
- Walker's River Camp (Self catering camp)
Malaria
Malaria is present in the area.[11]
See also
References
- 1 2 "Timbavati Private Nature Reserve (TPNR)". Simbavati River Lodge. Retrieved 11 December 2009.
- 1 2 Turner, Jason (November 2005). "The impact of lion predation on the large ungulates of the Associated Private Nature Reserves, South Africa.". Pretoria: University of Pretoria. pp. 49 & 56. Retrieved 10 December 2009.
- ↑ Harrison, Philip (2004). Ecotravel. Volume 2 of South Africa's top sites. New Africa Books. p. 42. ISBN 0-86486-566-X.
- ↑ Oosthuizen, Johan (2009). "The Development of an Integrated wildlife disease surveillance and monitoring system for the disease management in free ranging wildlife in the Greater Kruger National Park" (PDF). Retrieved 10 December 2009.
- ↑ "Save the Elephants Annual Report (2008)" (PDF). Save the Elephants. August 2008. p. 13. Retrieved 10 December 2009.
- ↑ "Location and Map". Timbavati Private Nature Reserve. Retrieved 17 June 2013.
- ↑ Macleod, Fiona (2005-03-18). "White lions return to Timbavati". Mail & Guardian. Retrieved 11 December 2009.
- ↑ McBride, Chris (1977). The white lions of Timbavati. New York: Paddington Press : distributed by Grosset & Dunlop. ISBN 978-0448226774.
- ↑ McBride, Chris (1981). Operation white lion. London: Collins. ISBN 978-0002626118.
- ↑ "Linda Tucker". Forbes Magazine. Retrieved January 19, 2014.
- ↑ "GUIDELINES FOR THE PREVENTION OF MALARIA IN SOUTH AFRICA" (PDF). South African Department of Health. p. 40. Retrieved 11 December 2009.
External links
- Timbavati Private Nature Reserve - Official Site
- Unofficial Timbavati Game Reserve Guide
- Ngala Private Game Reserve - Official Site
- White Lion Protection Trust - Official Site