What luck! friends couldn’t make their timeshare for happy reasons (grandchild due) so we took over! With pleasure. Nibela is in prime Broadbill sand forest territory and I have dipped out on seeing a Broadbill, coming close a number of times, but no sighting. I was keen, so was Jess. Tom considered the fishing options and the food a la carte, but decided in the end that it was just too remote for a city slicker! ‘Enjoy your sticks and trees, Dad!’ he bid us farewell.


Jess liked the place immediately. It had cellphone reception and DSTV. Also there was wifi at the main building. What was not to like?

The food at the lodge was great. The one pork belly dish was the best I’ve had, and all their soups and veges were superbly done. We ate there three nights and I made supper one night.

We searched for the African Broadbill, but no sign was seen or heard, so it remains on the wishlist. This is what its sand forest haunts look like, where it performs its little bird-of-paradise dance to get laid so an egg can get laid:

Lovely local specials we did see were Woodward’s Batis – a pair displaying and calling two metres away in a tree; Rudd’s Apalis; Purple-banded Sunbird; all good sightings and obligingly chirping as we watched. Narina Trogon, calling each day, but not seen; Heard but didn’t see a possible Neergard’s Sunbird. Two lovely bird parties popped up right in front of our chalet: One evening Dark-backed Weaver, Puffback, Golden-tailed Woodpecker, Yellow-bellied Greenbul, Terrestrial Brownbul, Yellow White-Eye and Southern Black Tit; The next morning Dark-backed Weaver, Puffback, Pink-throated Twinspot, duetting Southern Boubous, Square-tailed Drongo, Yellow-breasted Apalis and Collared Sunbird.
Jessie’s Best Sighting:
In the grounds of the lodge Jess spotted something beautiful in a tree! Look! Dad! wifi! You didn’t even have go indoors to have wifi!

A drive out to where the Mkhuze river flows into the lake brought back memories of my last trip there – by boat on a bird count with the game warden nearly forty years ago. Greater Flamingos, one Lesser Flamingo, White Pelicans, a Rosy-throated Longclaw, Common Ringed Plovers, Kittlitz’s Plovers, Stilts, Yellow-billed Ducks, Hottentot Teals and many more.

Pelicans fishing in a ‘laager’ – surrounding the fish then dipping in: Heads up – Bums up.

Lots of creatures:

~~~oo0oo~~~
Pete – I did my military training at Air Force Base Durban (Louis Botha). Once a month for a week we had to go up to the Cactus Missile base – I think opposite Fanies Island. Looking at your map it was on the west coast of St Lucia and the ground to air were fired slightly north of your peninsular. The missiles imbedded deep into lake mud. A couple of times we called up Mirages from Waterkloof and the Cactus were shot up and chased and destroyed by our jets. Mostly we were left to our own devices and explored the area alone. Alive with wild life.
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So you were forced to loaf at the taxpayers’ expense! – Our local guide says they would hear the WUMP of the missiles firing off while he was at school on Nibela peninsula.
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