R&G|MAGAZINE Edition #14 - September 2015 | Page 10

WILDLIFE The Kafue National Park is home to more species of hoofed-mammals than any national park south of the Congo Basin and is revered as one of the best parks to see the elusive African leopard and cheetah, a rarity for Zambia. The park has large populations of blue and yellow-backed duiker, lechwe, roan, sable and hartebeest to mention a few, but as the animals are spread sparsely across the vast area of the national park, sightings may be spread too far apart for the anxious tourist. The river banks and waters of the Kafue River are infested with hoards of hippos and some of Africa’s largest crocodiles. In the dryer months of the year, one may chance  herds of elephants playing along the banks or even swimming across the river with their cubs trunks holding on to their tails as they traverse the river. The Kafue is a birders heaven with the park boasting over 500 recorded species that nest in the lush vegetation known as the ‘Miombo’ which is typified by a semi-deciduous woodland that spreads across the park. 10