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Shap shap!

07 Oct 2019
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Nature reserve stops cub petting

THE Rhino and Lion

Nature Reserve in the

Cradle of Humankind,

will no longer be offering cub

petting to the public.

Under the new ownership

of the Bothongo Group, the

reserve has initiated a threeyear plan to upgrade all its

public facilities, habitats and

wildlife enclosures, which will

be remodelled around the

welfare and wellbeing of its

animals, the group said in a

statement.

“The reserve team will

dedicate themselves to a

new internal mantra of being

a ‘nurture reserve’, which will

include striving to maintain

a healthy, genetically diverse

and contented animal

collection, working with local

and international institutions

and bodies; not selling

or exchanging any of its

animals, especially its lions,

unless it is to a reputable

accredited facility and/or

licensed wildlife institution;

breeding animals only if

this serves a conservation

purpose.

MonkeylandKZN opens in Ballito

A NEW attraction,

MonkeylandKZN, has opened

near Ballito on KwaZulu Natal’s

Dolphin Coast.

Tours give visitors the

opportunity to see various

primate species, including

Capuchin monkeys, Ringtail

and Black-and-White Ruffed

lemurs, Buff-cheeked gibbons,

Squirrel monkeys and Black

Howler monkeys.

MonkeylandKZN is part

of the South Africa Animal

Sanctuary Alliance. It is open

daily from 08h00 and the

last tour departs at 16h00.

Visitors are advised to wear

comfortable closed shoes

for guided walks through the

forest, and to apply mosquito

repellent.

There is a gift shop

at the reception area, a

pizza restaurant, outdoor

children's play area and an

environmental cinema.

Sterkfontein Caves road to be upgraded

THE Gauteng Department

of Roads and Transport will

rehabilitate sections of Road

D1701 (Sterkfontein Caves

Road), which has developed

sinkholes.

“Following inspections by

departmental engineers, a

decision was taken to resume

rehabilitation works as the

road has been identified as

being unsafe,” the provincial

department said.

The road is in the precinct

of the Cradle of Humankind

World Heritage Site in

Krugersdorp.

“The rehabilitation process

is expected to be completed

around mid-October. Complete

road closure can be expected

from the intersection with

R540 (Kromdraai Road) as

well as at the intersection

with P74/1 (R563 – Hekpoort

Road),” the department said.

Motorists have been

advised that only residents

will be allowed access during

the period of rehabilitation.

Shamwari to offer guided bush walks 

IN 2020, guests at

Shamwari Private Game

Reserve near Port

Elizabeth, South Africa,

will be able to undertake

guided bush walks with

San hunter-gatherers as

their guides.

Dates for the specialised

Explorer trails are: January

28 to 29, January 31 to

February 1, April 14 to 15,

and April 17 to 18.

Pairs of Ju/’hoansi

trackers from Nyae Nyae in

north-east Namibia will join

Shamwari guides for the

bush walks. According to a

statement from Shamwari,

the Ju/’hoansi are the

last of the San people in

Southern Africa who still

command the full suite of

hunter-gatherer skills.

“They track and hunt

with bow and poisoned

arrow, and the fittest

among them engage in

persistence hunting –

pursuing an animal until

it drops from exhaustion.

They have extraordinary

ability, passed from

generation to generation

for tens of thousands of

years, to track wildlife

across almost any terrain,

interpreting the animal

behaviour as they go,” the

statement says.

In January 2020, two

Master Trackers: /

ui-Kxunta and /ui-G/aqo

will join Shamwari’s own

rangers on the first trail,

limited to a maximum

of six guests on each

excursion.

Other trackers, such as

Dam Debe, who played

a cameo part in the film

The Gods Must be Crazy,

will be on later trails.

Along with tracking,

demonstrations of firelighting skills and bowand-arrow performances

will also be shown. The

guests themselves will

also be allowed to attempt

tracking, archery, and rock

art interpretations.

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