News South Africa

Elephant born at Sanbona Wildlife Reserve

Mother's Day was celebrated appropriately at Sanbona Wildlife Reserve, just outside Cape Town and part of Shamwari Group, by the birth of a healthy elephant calf, which became the sixth elephant calf born at Sanbona.
Photo by Marco Fitchet
Photo by Marco Fitchet

At this point rangers are keeping their distance to ensure that mother and calf have sufficient time to bond, and, as yet, the sex of the calf is unknown.

The herd is very protective of the youngster and have truly welcomed it into the herd, which roam free on the 54 000 hectares of pristine wilderness.

Elephants have the longest gestation period of all mammals, carrying their young for nearly two years before giving birth. These long developmental periods are common among highly intelligent animals. As elephants are the largest living, and biggest brained, land animal in the world there is a lot of developing for elephants to do in the womb.

Hand-reared caracals

At the sister property in the Eastern Cape, Shamwari Game Reserve, the Shamwari Wildlife Rehabilitation Centre has released three young caracals onto the reserve who have been rehabilitating at the centre for the past seven months. The orphaned caracal kittens were brought to the Shamwari Wildlife Rehabilitation Centre by a farmer who found them abandoned on his land. For the past seven months they have been hand reared by the veterinary nurse, feeding them with a bottle. They have now been successfully weaned and can hunt for themselves.

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