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10 Things To Know About South Africa’s Madikwe Game Reserve

10 Things To Know About South Africa’s Madikwe Game Reserve

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Despite being closer to Johannesburg than Kruger National Park, and home to so many lions that some had to be relocated, Madikwe is South Africa’s most underrated wildlife reserve, which is why you should visit. Here are 10 things I learned while on safari in this amazing park.

Becca Blond, @PlanetBlond
Becca Blond, @PlanetBlond

1. Madikwe is part private reserve, part public park.

It was created in 1991 under a dual mandate to protect endangered species being hunted and farmed out of existence and to establish a sustainable tourism industry capable of providing permanent jobs for the impoverished, indigenous population.

Becca Blond, @PlanetBlond
Becca Blond, @PlanetBlond

2. It is a site of revival

When Madikwe was created as a reserve, the animal population had been ravaged by poaching, hunting and farming. Operation Phoenix was organized to relocate and reintroduce to the park more than 10,000 once-native species.

Becca Blond, @PlanetBlond
Becca Blond, @PlanetBlond

3. Entire herds of elephants were relocated there

The massive operation took more than seven years to complete, with animals — including entire herds of elephants — being flown or driven in from various other reserves around Southern Africa. It was very successful, however.

Becca Blond, @PlanetBlond
Becca Blond, @PlanetBlond

4. It has the Big Five

Madikwe is now home to very healthy numbers of all of the Big Five – lions, elephants, rhinos, leopards, and buffalo – plus a growing population of endangered species like wild dogs and more than 350 species of birds.

Becca Blond, @PlanetBlond
Becca Blond, @PlanetBlond

5. It has almost too many lions

Best of all, Madikwe is famous for its large number of lions, so many in fact that the provincial parks department has had to relocate some in the past — at one point there were more than 85 lions in the park, which rangers told me was not sustainable for its size. Relocation out of Madikwe has reduced these numbers to the 60s, which is what the park can sustain before the natural balance of animals is upset.

Becca Blond, @PlanetBlond
Becca Blond, @PlanetBlond

6. It’s South Africa’s fourth-largest reserve

The malaria-free park is the country’s fourth largest reserve, covering 760 square kilometers (293 square miles) of bushveld, savannah grassland and riverine forest on the edge of the Kalahari Desert. Night or day, the safari experience here is exciting.

Becca Blond, @PlanetBlond
Becca Blond, @PlanetBlond

6. The Kalahari desert scenery here is mind blowing

Located in the extreme north of South Africa near the border with Botswana, Madikwe Game Reserve’s red dirt roads meander past thorn bushes juxtaposed against an ephemeral blue sky for visually striking photo opportunities.

Becca Blond, @PlanetBlond
Becca Blond, @PlanetBlond

8. A Madikwe safari experience doesn’t come cheap

Unlike many parks in South Africa, Madkiwe does not allow self-drive safaris, which means you have to pay to stay to play here. There are 10 tourism lodges to choose from, all of which are pretty upscale — a Madikwe safari experience doesn’t come cheap but is well worth it.

Becca Blond, @PlanetBlond
Becca Blond, @PlanetBlond

9. Rangers can take you to the action

One benefit of being in a private reserve where guests aren’t allowed to drive is that Madikwe’s ranger guides can get you closer to the big cat action than you’d get on your own. There are minimal restrictions against driving off road for rangers, meaning if the cats aren’t coming to you, they’ll take you to the cats.

Becca Blond, @PlanetBlond
Becca Blond, @PlanetBlond

10. You get very close to the wildlife

Rangers carry guns here, but only for safety, and because vehicles are usually very open and get very close to the animals. Shooting an animal is not OK unless it attacks a person without provocation. Rangers are also trained in tracking animals — many lodges even include a San tracker with the guide in the safari experience. Trackers will often get out of the vehicle to look for tracks.