Involved Leopards

Nkoveni 2:2 Female

Nkoveni 2:2 Female

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Shingi 3:3 Male

Shingi 3:3 Male

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About the Author

Kelsey Clark

Guest contributor

Kelsey has many fond memories of family bush and camping trips across South Africa when she was growing up and for her, this sparked a growing love for the wilderness and opportunities to seek new adventures. Although she studied BComm Financial Management and ...

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10 Comments

on Two Trees, Two Leopards, Two Kills

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Excellent article Kelsey, thank you!

Great article on these two leopards. It’ s so interesting to watch how a young leopard becomes slowly independent.

Hi Kelsey, so very interesting the jackalberry tree and the lewdwood tree intertwined! This is a fantastic natural sculpture and example of symbiotic relationship. Needless to say, the Nkoveni duo is absolutely spectacular. They take the spot! How nice to see them together. I still wonder how his lovely sister would looand behave….

Thanks for the update. The photos of the tree and the leopards tell the story. We look forward to seeing the young male come to independence and will soon see him have his own name soon!

Great blog, Kelsey…..and every ranger over those 4 days must have had very happy guests!

Dear Kelsey, that must be very intense days-thanks for that story. Love the pic of Nkoveni and her son , laying together. When will he separate from the mom? Hope, he will make it better than Plug rock.

Lovely story, Kelsey. I’d never heard of two different species of trees growing together like this – fascinating! The Nkoveni young male is sure thriving – she’s taught him well.

Hi Kelsey, interesting article about the inoculations of the two trees. Nkoveni female and her young son are two gorgeous leopards. Fantastic to see them together, feeding on the two carcasses in the two trees. Soon the young males will be going on his own gaining his independence, and mom will be alone again.

Thanks, Kelsey. What a treat to be able to see this.

I appreciate your update on the Nkoveni duo, especially given her amazing son will soon head off to make his own way. For all of you who have been a part of Nkoveni’s story for almost 2 years, it will be a bittersweet moment. Through your blogs and stories we have cheered her birth of three cubs, then were saddened when she lost one. But then there were months of pure joy, watching her young, rambunctious male and female cubs move through her territory without a care until that fateful encounter with the Kambula Pride. As one who observed firsthand the young duo and of late, the survivor, now thousands of miles away, I keep my fingers crossed everyday that Nkoveni’s subadult son finds his path and safely begins his independence.

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