MKUZE GAME RESERVE - WILDLIFE
Mkhuze is a place of great beauty and high contrasts and is renowned as a mecca for bird
watchers with a bird list well in excess of four hundred. Predominantly flat and dry, with sandy
ridges which are ancient dunes, it harbours an astonishing diversity of natural habitats.
These range from the eastern slopes of the Lebombo mountains which lie along its western
boundry, to broad stretches of gently rolling acacia savannah, swamps and a variety of woodlands
and riverine forest.
The low lying hollows adjacent to the red sand dunes contain attractive groves of scented
thorn which grow in clay soils. There is a substantial and rare sand forest found in the heart of
the reserve, a habitat noted for its dark-leafed, wide spreading sherbert tree, and the red heart
tree, which create a lovely sight in autumn with their pink winged seeds.
This diversity of habitats means a wide variety of animal species including black and white
rhinoceros, elephant, giraffe, nyala, blue wildebeest, warthog, eland, hippo, impala, kudu and
other smaller antelope. Rare species occurring in the reserve are cheetah, hyaena, suni and
leopard. Three game viewing hides have been constructed next to the Kubube, Kamasinga, Kwamalibala
pans.
Visitors park their cars and enter the hides on foot. Depending on the surface water in the
reserve, but normally during the drier winter months,large concentrations of game may be seen at
the waterholes. Visitors are therefore offered excellent views of most of the reserve’s larger
mammals. These hides offer unique opportunities to photographers and many famous wildlife pictures
have been taken there.
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