A male lion walks toward the rising sun in the Olare Motorogi Conservancy in Kenya. These lands are just outside the northern border of the Maasai Mara National Reserve.
A lion cub practices its fighting skills with an impatient adult. Cubs need to learn to survive and fighting is part of that. Most cubs don’t make it to adulthood.
A few months ago I posted a photo of this lioness carrying her cub. This is a different photo and I cropped it to better show their faces, especially the little cub’s tongue hanging out of its mouth. The photo was taken in the Ol Kinyei Conservancy, Kenya.
This golden light is why we nature photographers try to be out there before the sun rises. When I was at Gamewatchers’ Porini Lion Camp (Porini means “in the wild” in Swahili) in Kenya in early June we were awakened by the Swahili greeting “jambo” (“hello”) at 5:30 a.m. We were then given a tray with a pitcher of coffee or tea and 5 or 6 cookies which would get us going. We’d leave camp at 6:15 a.m. sharp and be looking for wildlife as we drove away. At around 8:00 a.m. we’d stop for a nice hot bush breakfast. This male lion was photographed at 7:05 a.m.
A lioness carries her cub to a new den in the Ol Kinyei Conservancy, Kenya. Mother lions normally keep their new cubs away from the pride for the first six to eight weeks of life and move them fairly frequently during that period to minimize the ability of other wildlife to smell where they are.
To finish the story I started a week or so ago, after those great four days with Gamewatchers Safaris in the Ol Kinyei Conservancy just north of the Maasai Mara Reserve, I spent the next four days at Gamewatchers’ Porini Lion Camp in the Olare Motorogi Conservancy. As the name implies, there are a lot of lions in the conservancy where Gamewatchers’ Porini Lion Camp is located. They were easy to find and photograph. I also saw and photographed leopards on two of the four days and saw and photographed cheetahs every day. Like during my previous four days in the Ol Kinyei Conservancy, I had an excellent guide in Nelson Keiwua. With us every day was Nelson’s spotter, John Tompoi. I think I’m pretty good at spotting wildlife, but Nelson and John are in another league.
It was hard deciding on a photo here, but I finally decided on this cheetah mom who had three cubs. I spent a fair amount of time photographing her and, especially, her three rambunctious cubs. I already want to go back.