Morning Dedicated to John Calipari, Jim Tressel, Bill Bellichek, and Pete Carroll AKA The Four Cheetahs!
Welcome to the Okonjimo Bush Camp, also home to the Africat Foundation, dedicated to the rehabilitation of orphaned cheetahs.

And, yet another morning where we beat the cock-a-doodle-doo to the punch, as a 5:30am telephone reveille preempted the last traces of deep rem reveries. We met Jacques (guide), Sakias (tracker), and our Essen friends, Carsten and Karsten, for a quick shot of warmth and caffeine before we began our excursion to the Betty Ford Center for Feline Orphans. Yes, even cheetahs go to rehab these days. As it turns out, farmers in Namibia are permitted to kill big cats who threaten their livestock. Consequently, a number of cheetah mothers are slaughtered each year, leaving their cubs unlikely to last very long in the wild. The Africat Foundation, which shares the 22,000 hectares on which our the spectacular Okonjimo Lodge rests, collects these bambi-nos from the farmers, nurses them for a year, then releases groups of them into an expansive and natural “rehab” environment. For two years, these adolescent cheetahs, collared with radio transmitters, hunt, survive, and thrive in the wild, learning valuable life lessons (often the hard way) like, “You are built for speed, not strength, so don’t try to defend your kill against a leopard or hyena,” or “Don’t bite the fence that frees you (electrified border to keep out illegal aliens…remember, we are staying in the BUSH camp).
Armed with blankets to protect us from the bitter morning chill in the cruising Land Rover and an antenna to detect nearby cheetah, we cruised the reserve in search of the cats. Within minutes, I excitedly, proudly, and quite inaccurately shouted “Leopard!!!” Jacques stopped the vehicle and very gracefully explained that I had in fact spotted (ouch!) one of the cheetahs in the nursing section of the Africat property. Shortly thereafter, Jacques picked up the first signal, and indicated that we would be lucky enough to escape a long drive and hike this morning as four cheetah appeared to be nearby. Fifteen minutes later, we stopped the car, and set out on foot, with the antenna, walkie-talkies, and cameras in tow.
With bristles piercing our socks and thorns scratching our legs, we turned a corner as Sakias pointed north, where we spotted (sorry!) the four cheetahs.
We quickly headed eastward through the brush to get out ahead of the kitties and capture their images in the glow of the morning sun. Within minutes, we were face to face with them, a mere 5 meters away. At first, they simply rested, posing in the high grass, rolling over, yawning, and wandering over to greet and tussle with one another. The brother and sister were especially cute as they cuddled calmly in the grass.

Two days since their last big meal, they embarked on a journey to find a kill, with six curious homo sapiens in tow.

For the next hour we all traipsed through the brush behind the cats, trying to avoid Rowan Atkinsonian serpents (i.e., black adders), in search of an unsuspecting oryx (mammal, not vacuum cleaner) or steenbok, with a few short-lived and unproductive chases and multiple photo op stops along the way. Eventually, we admitted that the cheetahs needed to eat, and that perhaps, dragging along four middle aged humans was not ideal for hunting. We waved bye-bye and headed for the Land Rover. Of course, within 3 minutes, we again crossed paths with Krazy Katz as they rested on the road for one last pose before we bid them adieu.
Not-So-Deaf Leopards

A relaxing mid-day at our honeymoon suite overlooking the hills, watching the wartzenshwein (vart-sin-shvine) prowl, the oryx prance, and the violet-eared wax bills

nibble on our bird feed, before tea time and our afternoon game drive. We met Jacques and 5 Italian tourists at the Land Rover for a vehicle-based leopard tracking adventure, once again aided by radio collars and antennas. Passing some stubborn giraffe and skittish hartebeests along the way,

this time the Land Rover took quite a beating, as the elusive leopard led us into the bush, scraping and plowing our way through thorny trees, broken limbs, sand holes, and rocks. Just as the antenna indicated that we had closed within 30 meters, a run-over tree limb decided “enough is enough” and launched a thick twig torpedo, puncturing our left front tire.

While Jacques repaired the flat with Indy 500 speed, the sun began to set and our concerns rose that we would miss our chance to spot (there I go again) the most elusive of big cats. Back in the vehicle within 9 minutes, we renewed our pursuit, catching a distant glimpse of Oshiwa, a 2 year-old virgin in heat. Jacques did a quick U-turn and followed the road around a large loop to cut her off at her next pass. However, when she emerged and saw us, she quickly reentered the bush, forcing us to retrace our most recent footprints in hot pursuit.
The antenna signal sent us back into the bush for one last try at a clear line of sight to Oshiwa. We were scanning the ground to no avail as the sun dropped to 10 degrees above the horizon, when Jacques shared, “Up there in the tree.”
Is it a bird? Is it a plane? NO! It’s OSHIWA, princess of the Okonjima leopards, just lithely hanging out, literally, on a branch, a mere 20 meters away. She dangled, she posed, she growled, she slithered, and ultimately she descended, a more elegant cat lady than Halle Berry.

What a magnificent creature. What a wild and worthy adventure! And, thanks to the flat tire that made our branch viewing possible.