Day 4 - November 29, 2015 - Part I
Our Sunday plans were grand. In the morning we wanted to do a loop consisting of part of the Rooiplaat Loop, the Link Road and part of the Ubejane Loop. We had a reservation for the buffet lunch at the rest-camp restaurant and for a night drive.
So it was out of the chalet at 5:58 and a pair of Cape Wagtails was sitting on the wall above the recycling station near reception. We were out of the rest-camp gate and turned right at marker 15. During our ascent through the boulder section, we saw a Mountain Zebra and three female Kudu. After reaching the false plateau, we saw a Long-billed Lark singing from a shrub, another one from a small acacia, and five adult and one young Mountain Zebra. A Barn Swallow and a Familiar Chat flew over the road, while a Common Fiscal was perched roadside. Between the second lookout point and marker 9, our totals were increased by three Mountain Zebra, seven Red Hartebeest with two young, two Red-winged Starlings, two Common Fiscals, and a pair of Bokmakieries.
Once we turned right at marker 9, we saw an African Pipit, a Cape Longclaw perched and calling, five Springboks, seven Blesboks with three young on one side of the road and three more with one young on the other side, while there were eight more further on, together with one Black Wildebeest and two Mountain Zebras. Two Crowned Lapwings flew low past us, while three more were walking through the grass alongside the road. A pair of Spike-heeled Larks was spotted on the ground, while a Large-billed Lark was feeding and another one was perched and singing. Cloud Cisticolas were singing as well. Before the beginning of the actual Rooiplaat Loop, we saw a pair of Rufous-eared Warblers.
At marker 8 we veered off right and heard yet another airborne Cloud Cisticola – not all was lost, however, as we did actually manage to see it shortly afterwards when it landed on a shrub. A Cape Longclaw was calling from a bush, while three Mountain Zebras flanked the road in the company of a Rufous-eared Warbler. There were three Black Wildebeest in the distance on our left, while eight Blesboks and one young were grazing to our left. Further on, there were 19 Black Wildebeest and two Blesboks on our right. At least 10 White-rumped Swifts were flying above us when we spotted eight Mountain Zebra on our right.
An adult Southern Pale Chanting Goshawk was perched in a tree on our left, while a White-necked Raven flew by from our right. While we stopped for Adam to photograph two Black Wildebeest before the Link Road turn, we heard Blue Cranes calling but didn’t see them. A Mountain Zebra pair were having a dust bath in the distance to our right, sending the dust flying quite high up. Other animals on that side of the road included nine Springboks, 3 Blesboks, 22 Black Wildebeest, and one more Mountain Zebra. Close to the road, we saw a Sickle-winged Chat, heard another Cloud Cisticola, and spotted two pairs of African Pipits. There were also four Mountain Zebras, 14 Black Wildebeest and another group of 11 of them.
Black Wildebeest
As we turned right at marker 7 onto the Link Road, we saw 19 Blesboks, 11 Springboks and a lone Black Wildebeest to our left. Near the small, almost dry dam, five Blesboks and one young, 10 Black Wildebeest and seven Springboks had congregated, while a Rock Kestrel was sitting on a post. Driving on, there was a male Ostrich and a Barn Swallow, and we could hear another Cloud Cisticola. We stopped at the wind pump to share a PB&J sandwich and were rewarded with the sight of 11 Black Wildebeest and 11 Blesboks with one young.
We started moving again and saw two Blesboks with one young, heard a Cloud Cisticola, spotted a male Ostrich and nine Mountain Zebras on our right, and saw a perched Common Fiscal and a walking African Pipit. There were 10 more Mountain Zebras on our right and we heard an Eastern Clapper Lark and a Neddicky and saw a female Ostrich.
We then descended on a short paved section of road and crossed a drift before we were back on gravel and in an area with acacias. Just before another drift we saw two Chestnut-vented Tit-Babblers singing in acacias on either side of the road and three Mountain Zebras on the left. There was a little bit of mud and some water in a dam with a new pull-off adjacent to it from which we observed a Common Fiscal in a tree, three Three-banded Plovers (two adults and a juvenile), two Cape Wagtails, a Vervet Monkey coming for a drink, a Familiar Chat flicking its wings, four weaver nests and one Southern Masked Weaver hard at work on one of them, three Red-faced Mousebirds, and a pair of Greater Striped Swallows scooping and gathering mud.
We left the dam area, saw an African Hoopoe in an acacia tree, drove through another drift, saw a Red Hartebeest, passed another wind pump, and a Chestnut-vented Tit-Babbler saw us off from the area of acacias. We were now in the open at Graham’s Corner where we encountered a total of 24 Mountain Zebras in four separate groups. A pair of Ant-eating Chats was perched in an ‘olive’ and in an acacia. There were seven more Mountain Zebras in the distance.
Closer to us, just at the edge of the road, we discovered a family of Spike-heeled Larks with four young and saw four more Mountain Zebras. We drove through a drift in an acacia thicket and then were out in the open again. A Red-eyed Bulbul was calling while an Eastern Clapper lark was displaying and perched on a shrub for us, with another one doing the same thing on the other side of the road. A Rufous-eared Warbler was singing from a shrub and a Rock Kestrel was hovering to our left and then flew further and landed in a nearby tree.
We began the first steep descent into the valley on a paved section of the road and saw another Rock Kestrel. At the bottom, we saw one perched, singing Bokmakierie and a Red-winged Starling flew by. We were back on the gravel road and saw a Red-eyed Bulbul in an acacia tree. The second steep descent came up in an area of many flowering acacias and we saw another Bokmakierie. Back on the regular gravel road, we saw an Acacia Pied Barbet, a Common Fiscal, a Red Hartebeest, eight Gemsboks in the shade, and a singing Bokmakierie. An area full of termite mounds yielded us a Karoo Scrub Robin.
At marker 3 we turned right onto the Ubejane Loop and enjoyed a view of six Chacma Baboons and at least 15 Scaly-feathered Finches. A Common Fiscal and another Chacma Baboon were spotted near an earthen dam, while a Bokmakierie and three Common Fiscals were encountered at another drift. A pair of Pied Crows flew by, while two Laughing Doves were seen at the ‘Scimitarbill’ spot.
We entered the Southern Ground Squirrel Area and saw three Ant-eating Chats, a pair of Ostriches and one more male, two Ground Squirrels in a mad chase, a few more Ground Squirrels foraging on the ground, a Rufous-eared Warbler, and three Mountain Zebras on the ridge on our right. A pair of Spotted Thick-knees was on our right, one of them sitting and giving us a dirty look and the other standing with its eyes closed. A pair and a few more Cape Sparrows were flushed as we drove on.
Since there was no possibility of disembarking from the car to make a pit stop, I started to feel my bladder filling up (Adam has the advantage of using a lidded cup for relief in the car) and we continued back to the chalet without stopping for birds, but still managed to see a Chestnut-vented Tit-Babbler, another Chacma Baboon and an adult Southern Pale Chanting Goshawk.
We got home, had a coffee, took a shower, and left on foot to the rest-camp restaurant for our buffet lunch. On our way we saw a Chestnut-vented Tit-Babbler and a Chinspot Batis. At the restaurant there was a choice of three main courses – chicken thighs, beef stew or fish – with sides of spiced rice, mashed sweet potatoes, roasted vegetables, fruit salad and Greek salad with feta and black and green olives. While we were lunching and enjoying a break from our pasta-with-tomato-sauce monotony, we saw a Rock Martin and a White-browed Sparrow-Weaver.
After lunch we dropped off our indemnity forms for the night drive and paid for it and walked back home, spotting a Bar-throated Apalis near the turnoff for the swimming pool, four White-browed Sparrow-Weavers (one ringed) in the driveway of one of the chalets, and a Southern Boubou. An agama visited us on the terrace as we were having coffee with rusks at home.
A very hot afternoon was spent in bed (Adam) and catching up on our trip report (me). As soon as the sun disappeared behind the western mountain ridge, it got cooler and the wind picked up.