During a trip in the Ngorongoro crater I saw a pride of lions attacking a hippo that had strayed a little too far from the water. Although out of the actual water, it was still in deep sticky mud, which was why the lions struggled despite there numbers (about 10 of them). We watched for about 15 mins as the hippo slowly but surely beat off numerous attacks and made its way back to the safety of the water.
Last summer I saw a brown snake in the front garden, not rare but deadly, and the unusual part was that it was just in the middle of eating a small frog that it had caught.
Not sure how rare they are but also last summer I saw an echidna bimbling along in our back garden. Not a care in the world even though it was aware of our presence.
We are lucky in that we live on the edge of town, at the end of a no through road, and not far from a nature reserve, so we get a lot of wild creatures roaming onto our property. I woke up in my hammock just a few weeks ago and was face-to-face with a large male roo. Well, not quite, it was about 10 ft away, but that's as close as I want to get to a wild roo. Certainly got my pulse going.
Last summer I saw a brown snake in the front garden, not rare but deadly, and the unusual part was that it was just in the middle of eating a small frog that it had caught.
Not sure how rare they are but also last summer I saw an echidna bimbling along in our back garden. Not a care in the world even though it was aware of our presence.
We are lucky in that we live on the edge of town, at the end of a no through road, and not far from a nature reserve, so we get a lot of wild creatures roaming onto our property. I woke up in my hammock just a few weeks ago and was face-to-face with a large male roo. Well, not quite, it was about 10 ft away, but that's as close as I want to get to a wild roo. Certainly got my pulse going.