Mark Ceres
Senior Digital Ranger
First visited Londolozi in June 2011. My profile picture up close with the Nkuwa female.
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First visited Londolozi in June 2011. My profile picture up close with the Nkuwa female.
Initially skittish she spent a lot of time in the Sand River, now relaxed she makes up the majority of leopard viewing west of camp.
She is occasionally seen around the far north west corner of Londolozi, and is generally quite relaxed around vehicles.
Incredibly, the 5:5 male was adopted as a cub by his grandmother, the 3:4 female, and raised by her to adulthood.
A dominant male leopard over the majority of the north. He originally took over the 4:4 Male's territory when he died.
He is a large, tall, and long male that has an incredible coat and a tuft of hair on his neck
Initially seen as a young male in 2016, this leopard only properly established territory on Londolozi in mid-2019
One of two sisters born to the Nhlanguleni Female, both of whom made it to independence, the first intact litter to do so in 7 years.
A small female often found in NW Marthly. Similar spot pattern to her mother the Ingrid Dam Female.
A pretty young playful female found along the river to the east of camp
A single cub of the Ximungwe Female's second litter. Initially rather skittish but is very relaxed now. Birth mark in his left eye.
Born into a litter of two, male cub did not survive. She is seen more and more in central Marthly and rapidly approaching full independence.