Below is the Game report from Governors Camp in the Masai Mara, outlining the weather conditions they have experiences and the animals and flora that has been seen. This excellent camp is the base for the BBC when they film the “Big Cat Diaries”, and listed in the report are several of the cats featured on the programme.
This includes Shakira and her 3 cubs (now 10 months old). For more info, read on:
The rainy season is upon us and April brought warm mornings and humid afternoons with short rainstorms in the late afternoon and evenings. There is nothing quite like sleeping in a tent with the pitter-patter of rain falling on your roof! Morning temperatures of 18°C have given way to warm mid-day temperatures of 32°C encouraging new growth and new life in the Mara ecosystem. The Musiara Marsh has filled with water and the surrounding plains are showing good signs of growth. We have had 2 film crews in camp this month recording the action and the drama of the Mara as it unfolds. The nightly rain showers and morning mists have caused wild mushrooms to sprout on elephant dung and given us some beautiful sunrises.
The Marsh is now home to lots of catfish and they in turn have been drawing fish eagles in, who perch in the trees surrounding the Marsh and dive into the waters to catch their prey. The rain has also meant that there is abundant insect life around especially grasshoppers and this is keeping the birds well fed. Common Kestrels fly in large flocks over the plains hunting grasshoppers and mice. European White Storks and Cattle Egrets comb the fringes of the Marsh feeding on grasshoppers and frogs and Ground Hornbills are out on the plains feasting on frogs and grass snakes.
The new growth on the grasslands is drawing the families of elephant out from the forests. Large herds of elephant with up to 30 members of related family units with very young calves are feeding on the tender young shoots on the plains. There are a few males in Musth and two females were seen mated.
The resident giraffe are ever present within the Musiara area. Large numbers of them with many young calves in crèches are between the fringes of the forest and the camps. Within the woodland verges and the marsh there are Defassa Waterbuck with their young calves and breeding herds of Impala. On the edges of the forest, furtive bushbuck move between the shadows and groups of Olive Baboons comb the grasslands around the marsh looking for food.
Family groups of hyena have been denning up on the ridges and there are lots of hyena cubs around at the moment. One den is home to 14 cubs from three different age groups.
On the feline front the Bila Shaka / Marsh Pride have been seen daily in the areas surrounding the marsh. For a few days in the month two of the females and three 4 month old cubs separated themselves from the rest of the pride and took up residence in grasslands near the entrance to Little Governors’. But the pride as a whole has been feeding well especially on zebra. This pride now numbers 14 individuals and towards the end of the month they were all re-united together with the two dominant pride males.
On the morning of the 17th of April a few members of the Paradise/Ridge pride crossed the Mara River at a point in the river where the water levels are lower and there are many rocks. These lion use this section of the River to regularly cross back and forth, particularly when the water levels have dropped.
The coalition of 6 male lions with “Notch” (the uncle to the 5 other young males) are resident on the high plains. They have been feeding off Buffalo and Hippo and together they make a formidable unit.
The presence of a lot of hyena and baboons around the marsh has meant that the leopards have retreated back into the forest this month. However the resident female leopard whose territory covers the marsh and adjacent forest has been making her presence felt and we have had some lovely sightings of her and her son Kijana.
Shakira the female cheetah and her three ten month old female cubs have been faring well. She has been hunting on the short grass plains and river beds and the whole family has been feeding off Thompson and Grants Gazelles.
The three male cheetah brothers have been hunting impala, topi and wildebeest calves on the ridges and high plains and another single female cheetah has been hunting out on the plains.
Back in camp dragonflies flit across the surface of the Little Governors’ marsh.
We hope to share the magic of our corner of the Mara with you sometime soon.