We invite you to sign up for a Londolozi Live account and join our growing digital family united by our respect for nature and love of the wild. Membership is free and grants access to the Londolozi community, numerous innovative services and benefits across our digital ecosystem:
Tired of new passwords? Link your social media account of choice for instant, secure access to Londolozi Live.
Tell the community something about yourself and tweak your Londolozi profile. More of a secretive animal? Keep your profile private.
Earn badges for your profile as you interact with Londolozi and the community as you comment, share and explore our online ecosystem. All your activity with Londolozi is now connected.
Earn prowess and rank up as you interact with Londolozi Live and earn a spot on the monthly points leaderboard.
Chat with other Londolozi Live Explorers and with your favourite Contributors from the Londolozi team about their photos and stories from the wild.
Add your favorite photographs from around Londolozi Live to your very own Favorites gallery, using the ♡ button, for others to enjoy.
Buy your favorite photos in full resolution, easily and securely, for download at any time from your Profile Page.
Tell us which of the Leopards of Londolozi you've encountered during your visit! Their cards will move to your profile page collection.
We’ll never post to Facebook, Twitter or Google+ without your permission. Read more in our Privacy Policy and Terms of Services.
The Mashaba female is currently Londolozi’s best-known leopard. Her relaxed nature means she is comfortable around the vehicles.
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.
Born to the Nyelethi female in 2009, this male was one of three cubs that all survived to independence.
A dominant male leopard over the majority of the north. He originally took over the 4:4 Male's territory when he died.
The Hosana Male arrived in mid-2018 and is now dominant over Othawa, rarely seen on Londolozi's western boundary.
Born in 2016, this male spent his early years in the south-east of Londolozi, but began moving further afield in late 2019.
Initially seen as a young male in 2016, this leopard only properly established territory on Londolozi in mid-2019
The only surviving cub of the Nanga female, currently territorial north of Marthly.
A daughter of the Nhlanguleni female, born into a litter of two, both of which survived to independence.
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 small leopard that was forced into early independence and struggled to establish territory. Moved around eating anything it could.