Growing up, my family spent most of our holidays on safari and in Southern Africa’s various national parks. It was during those early years that my passion for the bush first took root. At various stages in my life, I considered working in the bush in one way or another, and as I grew older, that pull only intensified. I was told, as most of us are, that I first needed a proper qualification before following my passion. So I schooled in the KwaZulu-Natal midlands, attended Stellenbosch University, and completed my accounting articles in Cape Town, qualifying as a Chartered Accountant. It was a path I committed to fully, but the bush never really let go. Eventually, I decided it was time to stop thinking about it and actually do it. I handed in my notice, left the corporate office behind, and found my way to Londolozi, and I have not looked back since.

People ask me often what the attraction is. The honest answer is that it isn’t one thing; it is the overall feeling of being out here. I was always very aware that the world I lived in, in the city, was a world entirely created by humans. I wanted to learn about the rest of it. The world out here has existed for millions of years before us and belongs to every other living species on the planet. Being a part of it, even in a small way, matters to me. On top of that, you are never as present as when you are in the bush, whether sitting at a sighting or watching a fire at night. There is an aliveness to it that is difficult to explain and impossible to replicate.
I want to share two moments that have stood out so far. Not necessarily the most dramatic sightings, but the ones that have meant the most.
The first came during one of the final stages of ranger training, a week of solo walks across the reserve. Over seven days, I covered 182 kilometres on foot through the Londolozi wilderness. It sounds daunting, and it is, but it is a carefully structured exercise. By that point in training, you are well-equipped and knowledgeable enough to be out there alone, armed, in radio contact, and checking in with camp every hour. The goal is not adventure for its own sake. It is about learning the land deeply, becoming attuned to your surroundings, and genuinely understanding what it feels like to be part of the ecosystem rather than just passing through it. By the end of the week, the bush feels different. You move differently in it.
On day three, I came around a corner to find a pack of wild dogs lying under a tree about 30 metres away. I was downwind and positioned behind a tree, and they had no idea I was there. I sat and watched them for a while. At some point, I looked at my watch, 2pm on a Tuesday. I thought about where I would have been sitting at that exact moment in my previous life. For me, it was not the most dramatic wildlife encounter I could have hoped for. But it was the moment I knew, without any doubt, that I was exactly where I was supposed to be.
Then the wind shifted. One of the dogs caught my scent, gave a sharp bark, and the whole pack scattered in every direction. I am honestly not sure who got the bigger fright.
The second moment is more recent, and connects to a story that many of you will already be following closely — the Ximungwe Female and her cubs.
The Ximungwe Female gave birth around the 4th of January this year, and the weeks that followed were a careful, patient exercise in trying to keep tabs on her. She is a leopard we know well, but she chose her den sites in terrain that made them incredibly difficult to find, and she moved the cubs more than once. Sightings were limited and hard-earned. The cubs are now around three months old and are at a fascinating stage, their mother should be beginning to take them to carcasses, introducing them to meat for the first time, which marks a significant shift in their development.

One of the only shots Sean Zeederberg got of the curious and particularly alert cubs of the Ximungwe Female.
On an off day with no guests, tracker Geshom Mathebula and I headed out early one Monday morning. I want to be clear about the dynamic here: Geshom was imparting wisdom, and I was doing the learning. The goal was to find the Ximungwe Female’s latest den site. Not long after sunrise, we found her tracks and, with one or two other team members joining the search, we began closing in. Eventually, after hearing impala alarm calls nearby, we managed to find her, but her cubs were nowhere to be seen.
That process, going from an impression in the ground to finding an animal kilometres away, is one of the things I find most extraordinary about life out here. Watching Geshom and the other trackers read the bush is like watching someone read a newspaper in a language you are only beginning to learn. Every crushed blade of grass, every displaced stone, every disturbance in the soil tells a story. These animals have been moving through this landscape for millions of years, perfectly shaped to occupy their niche within it. The tracks they leave are a record of that, and following them feels like a privilege.
After the guest vehicles had come and gone, Geshom and I stayed out and waited. As midday approached, the Ximungwe Female got up and began to walk. Now in a vehicle, we followed, at a distance, this time knowing that she was very likely to be going back to a place she had possibly left her cubs. Eventually, she lay down under a bush and began making a distinctive soft contact call, a chuffing sound that a leopard uses to summon her cubs. And then, out of nowhere, two small cubs came bounding out towards her. A moment of elation, we had done it and this was the first intimate moment I had seen the Ximungwe Female’s cubs.

There may have been a discreet fist pump or two.
We sat in silence and watched. It was not a picture-perfect sighting by any measure, no golden light, no dramatic action. But the build-up, the process, the privilege of being the ones to find her in that moment, that is what made it something I will be telling people about for a long time.
The Ximungwe Female and her cubs are very much an ongoing story, and one I am hoping to contribute more updates on as these cubs continue to grow.





Hello Brandon, Thank you for sharing your story,
”From The Boardroom To The Bush”. You have follow your heart that’s a good thing, that will create a lot of happiness… Beautiful pictures! I especially liked the photo of the two wild dogs sleeping… You must have felt enormously “a live” standing behind the three and the adrenaline must have been high! But it went well…
Fantastic that you and Geshom saw the leopard cubs…
Congratulations to have become a Ranger it will be interesting to follow your stories!
Thanks for sharing your story how and why you became a guide, Brandon.
I have quite similar feeling as you have, regarding being in the bush. In my case, as a guest who started going on safari 24 years ago. I “caught the bug” and have been going on safari ever since. Of course, it is not the same if you come to a place like Londolozi or any other one in the bush for two or three weeks and then return home to your “normal” life.
But for me it is th same: one feels more alive, more present, connected to nature, the animals, the stars at night, the smells and sound of the bush. It has become a passion and I cannot get enough of it. So, as soon as one safari has ended I am looking forward to the next, to all the animals…
Reading your post describing your love of being in the bush this morning is a great way to start the day! I hope to get out and do some birding today and also enjoy the peace and beauty of an open wildlife area. The wild dog photo taken by Kirst is the best! 🐾🐾📸
Thanks for sharing your story Brandon describing your path to becoming a ranger at Londolozi. It seems education and work experience are the common denominators for the majority of the rangers that apply for one of the coveted training positions. The program is not easy, but if you pass, then you know you have the mental and physical capacity to flourish. Every drive you will learn something new about the bush, your tracker, yourself, and sometimes even from your guests. So, good luck and have fun.
Welcome to the bush… and the blog Brandon!!
Very nice article. Having just left Londolozi .. we know that feeling of excitement… anticipation and elation!! There’s nothing like it. Please continue with the enthusiasm .. we look forward to more of your postings!
Hi Brandon, thanks for your story on leaving corporate life to become a guide at Londolozi. The bush does something indescribable to a person that makes a person just want more and more of it. Viewing the animals, reading the signs of where the leopards are foot prints and all, are such a highlight to your guiding career. Your whole being changes and your soul just wants to be there in the bush quietly viewing the stunning wild life animals and learning everything possible about them and the eco system and the bush. Well done Brandon you will be very happy there among the Londolozi family.
Hi Brandon! You described exactly how I have felt all my lifetime, since I was a little child. Thankfully I had my grandma that brought me in the woods to explore wild life. As a student I always longed to specialise in animal behaviour and environmental biology. Then I finally started to work with researchers about matters that other didn’t care about- being all centred on wolves, bears, jackal, otters, beavers and lynxes, which I dreamt of too, but agreed that smaller or more common animals were equally important and interesting. In Londolozi if I had a chance I’d love to see a leopard, most of allwith cubs, as I followed the story of the mother leopard and Manana since the beginning and then found out the blog… I guess you had such a fright bumping in a pack of wild dogs! They are quick and work in team… once I was close to a huge bear… it seems unreal… I have really liked your description and hope to visit as soon as possible, thank you and bravo !
Your wild dogs moment gave me goosebumps. Imagining where you would be at that moment in your previous life is very insightful.
Brandon, it has been an amazing week with you and Rich, and I love your passion for what you do! Your blog is great and I can tell you genuinely love every part of what you do… I’m jealous! 🙂 We will be back sooner than later and hope to explore the bush and daily adventures with you again. Londolozi has been magical and I am so sad to leave. Cheers, Heather