Northern Kruger Remoteness
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Fat-girthed baobabs and giant canopied nyala trees. Crocs and hippos. A varied and prolific bird life (think waterbirds and raptors, shimmery-plumaged show-dancers and strutting kommandants). And, if you’re lucky, migrating herds of elephant (depending on the rain and the seasons). But, most of all … Wildness and Solitude, the kind where you’re the only 4×4 on the road.
Fat-girthed baobabs and giant canopied nyala trees. Crocs and hippos. A varied and prolific bird life (think waterbirds and raptors, shimmery-plumaged show-dancers and strutting kommandants). And, if you’re lucky, migrating herds of elephant (depending on the rain and the seasons). But, most of all … Wildness and Solitude, the kind where you’re the only 4×4 on the road. These are the reasons travellers eventually migrate to the extreme north of Kruger National Park.
Personally, we’ve seen the north, between Pafuri and Shimuwini, in two moods … brittle and dry and hard work where finding ellies is concerned; but then, recently, we found it verdant and healthy and teeming with breeding elephant herds. On both occasions, though, we fell in love with this part of the Kruger. For all the above reasons.
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