I'm reduced to trying to photograph frogs, and I'm not having much success.
Shelly shows me a beautiful shot of a frog, and I try to emulate it. I can't even get one in focus because I'm too short to see over the dirt barrier, and the frogs are right in front of us.
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| My best shot----of many. |
This afternoon we are in a different hide in Mashatu Game Reserve. This is a daytime-only hide, as it doesn't have overnight accommodations.
Known generally as the Elephant Hide, its real name is the Matebole Hide. Rumor has it that this hide is called Elephant Hide because elephants like to come to drink and frolic in the water.
There are no elephants here today. There may have been before we arrived, and they might come after we leave, but right now this place is sans-elephants.
That's why I'm trying to photograph frogs.
However, to give Mashatu its due, the hides at Mashatu Game Reserve have a well-deserved reputation for producing phenomenal sightings (not just frogs and doves), and that is why Marshel Adventure Tours was excited to book us here. We just were unlucky that our trip followed two months of rain that left water in numerous places for the animals.
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| We are staying at Mashatu Lodge, and the hide is east of us. |
And, once again, we are waiting for anything thirsty to show up at the waterhole in front of us.
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| The ever-vigilant Randy. |
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| Marg and Aubrey, the host, walk along and give camera advice while we wait. |
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| You can tell nothing is happening outside the hide when photographers leave their cameras to get coffee and snacks from the table. |
Far in the distance, we see three warthogs s-l-o-o-o-o-w-l-y approaching. We keep our eyes on them, hoping they will come to the water. They're taking their own sweet time about it.
When the warthogs are near, we are ready.
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| Warthogs weigh from 110 to 330 lbs, with a shoulder height of 25 to 33 inches. |
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| See the calluses on the warthog's front ankles? They are born with them. Warthogs, with their long legs and short necks, often kneel to graze on grass. I often wonder if the calluses are an evolutionary adaptation. |
When the three warthogs are out of sight, Marg tells one of her favorite stories.
She was once at a sighting of a lioness sneaking up on an unsuspecting warthog.
There were also many, many photographers there in other vehicles, many of whom Marg knew and who knew Marg. They watched with bated breath, hoping for some action shots of the lion chasing the wild pig.
Suddenly, a woman in Marg's group who was on her first trip to Africa, yelled, "Run Pumba! Run!" And the warthog did, much to Marg's embarrassment. The angry photographers gave the woman the stink eye as Marg pretended she wasn't with the woman.
Pumba, by the way, is the name of the warthog in The Lion King play and movie.
We wait some more.
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| I just like the falling drops of water, and they are more interesting than frogs. |
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| Late afternoon sun accentuates the colors of the laughing dove. |
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| Laughing dove. Such pretty birds. |
Time to leave the hide and head back to camp.



















































