Gonubie, East London

After a couple of days at Addo Elephant National Park, we’re on the move again, heading east towards Durban, where we’re planning on spending a couple of nights.

We went for a drive in the park yesterday afternoon and saw lots of wildlife, including a meercat. We hadn’t seen any meercats before. And just as we’d decided we’d seen enough and were heading back to camp, we found the most beautiful young mother elephant and her calf, eating grass close to the road. We spent ages just watching the 2 of them eat, pulling up a few blades of grass at a time with their trunks. Their trunks are incredible instruments – capable of such fine actions, but also of smelling and detecting things. Their eyesight is very poor.

Close to the park’s office complex is a viewing deck overlooking a waterhole where elephants go to drink. It’s floodlit at night, which doesn’t seem to bother the elephants at all. We walked to it after dinner last night and there was one big fella having a drink.

We drove through Adelaide in Eastern Cape today. As far as we know, apart from our hometown, it’s the only other Adelaide in the world, so we just had to go there. Lots of ‘Welcome to Adelaide’ signs, it has a hospital, a large town square and a museum in an old stately home from the 1860s that looks like it should be on a tobcco plantation in Louisiana, USA. Unfortunately the museum was closed. Not sure what the population is, a couple of thousand perhaps. Like its South Australian namesake, there seemed to be a lot of churches!

We’re staying at a campground just east of East London and we’re the only campers here, although Greg went to try and have a look at the beach (no luck, there’s an electric fence in the way) and one cabin is also occupied. Bit of a shame as the campground has a lovely pool and other facilities, but the road here from the freeway is appalling – major road works on the access road, then a rutted unsealed track that most caravan owners probably wouldn’t like to drive on. Just up the road a bit is a nice sealed section, with brick walls and footpaths on both sides of the road. Strange thing is that behind the brick walls is just an overgrown mess. Like a developer got as far as a decent road and a bit of infrastructure, then ran out of money.

Meercat
Meercat
The fence keeping in all the Elephants built in the 1930s
The fence keeping in all the Elephants built in the 1930s
Flightless dung beetle
Flightless dung beetle
Elephant and baby
Elephant and baby
Elephant walking past the car
Elephant walking past the car
Elephant under floodlights at night outside the main camp
Elephant under floodlights at night outside the main camp
Nearly at Adelaide (South Africa)
Nearly at Adelaide (South Africa)

Adelaide public library (Eastern Cape South Africa)
Adelaide public library (Eastern Cape South Africa)

6 thoughts on “Gonubie, East London

    1. I think that mama and baby pic is my favourite photo of the trip. That might be our ‘trip’ photo – we usually get a canvas print done of one photo from each trip

  1. Just think how much feed that young elephant has to have to reach the size of its mother and today’s paper we have a picture of Glen McGrath the cricketer haven shot an Elephant so much so he can live with that. good pics.

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