Breaking the Plane

Breaking the Plane

blck crake smallThe tar roads in Kruger National Park allow for just about any kind of vehicle to game drive, something we haven’t seen before. The park maintains the many dirt tracks, something else we haven’t seen in many parks. The camping experience is quite different, people come into the park with their travel trailers towing a small car which they use to explore the roads, somewhat like in the US. This took some getting used to. Special campsites in the Kruger are highly coveted and reservations are booked a year in advance. We haven’t gotten used to that yet.scarface 1 small

Rules abound for visitors. Don’t get out of your car except in a designated site. Preferably fenced. No jogging – they had to make a rule for that?? Only block the lane where the animal is, leave the other lane open – now there’s a rule made to be broken in those “Yellowstone pearl spotted owlette smallmoments”, as we call them. No speeding, but even at 20k an hour, far under the speed limit, if you hit a lizard or a tortoise it is curtains for the creature. When I see a pile of bones by the roadside I used to think a lion killed something there, but now I realize it is more likely a vehicle. Some scavenger made a meal of the unlucky creature I hope.

One directive is consistently broken by everyone at sightings. Do not put any part of your body out of the vehicle at a sighting. Not your arm or your head and certainly not your torso. This is known as “breaking the plane.” As a rule animals see vehicles as something solid. Studies have been done using dummies to demsaddlebilled stork smallonstrate what happens when a limb sticks out of the flat plane of a car. Lions attack and they are quick about it. Leopards claw what is sticking out of a window. But humans aren’t dummies, right? That’s questionable.

We witnessed an episode of breaking the plane on our way to the Orpen Gate. We’d stopped to admire a very pregnant lioness. She was relaxed, laying on somlioness smalle sand near the road. Other vehicles were observing. Then suddenly her body tensed. Her head went up and her vision narrowed and her jaw elongated. She was staring at the road – what could she be so fixated on? Along came a SansPark pick-up truck with four guys stacheetah smallnding up in the bed, their heads well over the cab. That lioness stared and stared as they drove past, eyeing them like they were meat at the butchery. The four guys broke the plane. Likely a good thing she was so heavy, there could have been chaos (plus some crazy YouTube videos). And then on we went, inside the Beagle where it is safe. At least from lion.

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10 Comments
  • Colleen Daly says:

    Thank you for an early morning giggle: “Leopards . . . what a thrill to spot one”!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    ****LUV**** the little owl bird on the brown paper.

    oxxoxo,
    ced

  • Bob says:

    “Keep your damn hands in the car” Dad … if I remember correctly … still a valid idea to this day.
    Now I like the elephants, the lions, all the birds and such but I really like the leopard … other than the domestic cat they are the most wide spread around the world cat … they go by different names but basically the same cat. Have you seen any black ones?
    I also wonder why you have not mentioned any upland game birds, my friend Patrice has lived in several African nations and he said in some places quail, francolin, even pheasant, snipe, woodcock even are thick as flies … too ordinary for you to mention or you just don’t see them where you are?

    Anyway I am up to date

    • Ann says:

      Yes, and “roll up the damn windows” – Dad’s favorite. Anyway, I’m glad you like the leopards, I have some more photos I’ll post of them. What a thrill to spot one – no pun intended.
      As for game birds, we’ve only met one bird hunter and he uses dogs (English Setters) to bring the birds up for his trained falcons. Spur fowl, guinea fowl – not many woodcock. I’ll post some fowl photos too, they are everywhere.
      Keep those windows up!

      • Bob says:

        Interesting … my English Setters have put a number of birds up for falcons, hawks etc … none were trained they were just taking advantage of the situation, they are very clever.

  • A lion charges at 80kms per hour, that’s 22 meters per second, how quickly can you get back in that car!!!
    So looking forward to meeting up again soon.

  • Catherine says:

    That stork ! Wow ! I was able to enlarge him easily. I could have watched that bird for a long time. Almost seems unreal. And these big cats. Marlene’s right….. bowing you are behind the lens really changes the vibe. Just wonderful.

    I really think your drawing skills have taken a leap forward. This little sketch is darling. What fun. Its always joyful to see that with practice you really can teach yourself something you’ve never done before. These drawings are so precious.

    Safe travels 💕✨🙋‍♀️

    • Ann says:

      Thanks Cat! I ran out of white paper and started drawing on brown bags I collected – what a hoot. That’s a Pearl-Spotted Pygmy owlet, darling bird.

  • marlene says:

    I am thinking of the lion photo as the “long lens effect”. When I first opened the blog page I almost stepped back. Damn. (or as you say, words to the affect) She radiates power. And she looks hungry. Not a “let me scratch your ears kitty” pose. More like a “lets get a couple of miles away so I can breath again” pose. No need to enlarge that image. Love that long lens. You know, books cross the desk every day with animal pictures but knowing it is you behind the camera gives me a different feeling. Great stuff. Wish I could have enlarged that popsicle billed stork, such colors! Do I need to add “keep the windows closed?” I think Robert and I have mentioned it already.

    • Ann says:

      Yes sometimes I hardly need to zoom for a shot. Unless it is a bird. I’m bummed you can’t enlarge the Saddlebill stork – I’d get on Word Press about it but who has time 😀😀