Late one night while heading back to camp after dinner in the bush, we came across a pride of lions on the airstrip. At a first glance, it looked as if something big was lying beside them. Our initial thought was that maybe they had just killed a wildebeest. However, as we got a bit closer, we saw that what was beside them wasn’t a wildebeest at all. It was smaller black and white and still moving around. For a second I couldn’t believe what we were seeing and it was only once we had stopped the vehicle and taken a second to absorb what was going on. The lions were surrounding a Porcupine!
Naturally, all of us got super excited as it isn’t often at all that you get to see a porcupine let-alone lions trying to kill one. Our excitement escalated when what we thought was only one porcupine turned into two, then three and then four! It turned out to be two adults and two baby porcupines, which I believe are called porcupettes. Our initial thought of it just being one, was part of the porcupines’ defence strategy where they all huddle together with their rumps facing outwards, forming one big impenetrable ball of quills.
Porcupines’ quills are modified hairs coated with thick plates of keratin and are embedded in the skin. When threatened porcupines use their quills as a defence mechanism against predators where they contract muscles within the skin to cause the quills to stand up and spread out preventing the danger from getting too close without being stabbed by the hard sharp robust quills. Against popular belief, they are unable to shoot the quills. Instead, they splay them out and back into the threat. The quills are incredibly sharp with barbs facing backwards and easily penetrate the threat and get embedded there as they dislodge from the porcupine’s skin.
The lions were very wary of the porcupines, each trying their luck at swatting the porcupines under their quills, only ending up with a few sharp quills to their paw or face. Eventually, the porcupine family took advantage of a lapse in the lions’ attention, and all made a run for the thicket. With the adults being a bit faster, they managed to make it away from the lions, but the two little ones weren’t so lucky. The lions had managed to separate the two young porcupines from each other and continued to pester them.
As a means to try and intimidate the threats, the porcupettes would shake their tails to rattle hollow quills at the tip which creates an intimidating sound and well as stomping their feet. Something I had only read about and was amazed to see. Knowing that they were both more vulnerable apart, the two youngsters kept trying to get back to each other with the lions constantly pawing at them keeping them apart. The will and determination of the porcupettes knowing that their only chance of making it through this relentless harassment alive was to somehow reunite. Fending off five lions was not going to be an easy task for a young inexperienced porcupette, but eventually, they succeeded and came together just as we had seen when they were with the adults. Nuzzling their heads together forming a barrier of quills around them.
We sat and watched in fascination, routing for the porcupines, when we noticed a 6th older lioness about 30 meters from the commotion, quietly contact calling the rest of the pride, almost as if to encourage the pride to move on as they were not having any luck. One by one the lions slowly moved toward the older lioness, leaving just the one young male still fixated on the spiky pair. Not wanting to fall behind, he soon gave in and joined the rest of the pride and left the two young porcupines to make a break for cover and in turn their survival, much to my and my guests’ relief.
This will definitely go down in my memory as one of the most exhilarating and intense sightings I have ever had, and probably one that I could claim to have been my best sighting yet. This once again highlights the incredibly spontaneous nature of the bush that continues to constantly keep me excited for my next game drive.
After we left Londolozi in 2019, we went to Tswalu Kalahari which includes a reserach center on porcupines–which were everywhere. They are incredibly interesting animals to observe. We can tell you from personal experience that their quills are very sharp. (The landscape is covered with quills.)
What a unique sighting. Thanks for sharing Tayla.
Exhilarating! I didn’t know they are called porcupettes, so nice. I guess lions don’t usually hunt porcupines… unless they are young and unexperienced? Like honey badgers these animals are quite a hard prey! I’m glad for the happy end
Porcupines seem like much too great a risk for being what amounts to a small snack for one lion, let alone five. Glad they escaped!
Wow, incredible! These porcupines are really something…….
They really are.
What a brave little soul. However it appears the lions were more curious than anything. I guess the young ones don’t throw their quills??
Hi Leonie, yes porcupines don’t throw their quills, they back up into the treat with their quills.
What an amazing story and video, Tayla! Those little porcupettes were so brave. Maybe their naïveté helped them keep up the fight as well as instinct to clump together. Fascinating!
Thank you Mary Beth.
What an astonishing sighting for you and your guests, Tayla. If the lions do get any quills stuck in them, how do they get them out with those barbs?
Hi Suzanne. They will pull them out with their teeth and eventually they will come out.
Tayla the porcupines are quite ferocious animals and determined to stand together to get out of trouble. Well it paid off for them and the lions had some pretty sore faces and paws full of quills.
What an amazing sighting. I am relieved that the two little ones made it to safety and the lions left them finally alone.
But how exciting to be able to see these animals at all.
Thanks Christa. I was relieved too when they managed to escape.
What a wonderful adventure to see the porcupines succeed! 2Davids and several Goliaths!! Victoria
Poor babies!!! How stressful 😣 How long did those silly kitties pester them? And where were mom and dad? None of the lions got stuck?
Hi Anita. We were there for at least 30min, not too sure how long it was going on before we got there. I think the adults must have managed to escape into the ticker bush while the lions were distracted by the youngsters.
Tayla, that was amazing to watch and your commentary told the story perfectly. It was fascinating to see those two young porcupettes hold their own against the lions, after the parents scurried off to safety. That surely ranks as an unforgettable sighting and possibly a once in a lifetime experience. Thank you for documenting this sighting!!
Thank you Denise, it really was incredible to witness.
Can they ever use up there quills during a attact
Amazing sighting
What an amazing encounter…..and yes I am very happy that the porcupine family were able to escape successfully from the lions!!