Many reactions to the experience but the first to come to mind is “paparazzi”.
Nonetheless sights like this are common enough. No crowd of Land Rovers around. We are just driving down a bumpy road and come upon this.

Many reactions to the experience but the first to come to mind is “paparazzi”.
Nonetheless sights like this are common enough. No crowd of Land Rovers around. We are just driving down a bumpy road and come upon this.

Righteous!
I prefer the natural look (one untouched by mankind)… even if cropping takes place over imagery disturbed by mankind’s obvious presence.
Don’t get me wrong, man can create some beautiful works – still, “o’natural” is fleeting and… oh, I need to kick off my shoes and go touch some grass now.
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All that way for just a giraffe? Show and Tell…Any beach photos?
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We just left the safari camps and arrived at beach. We are infected with some sort of parasite. Can’t wait to fly 27 hours with my new passenger aboard.
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If this comment is duplicate blame word press.
Glad you are commenting again Mark, there is a drought of comments of late.
What do you mean by paparazzi? Not clear to me.
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We can sit within five feet of a lion as he/she walks from A to B. Terrific photographs, but if I could pan back, and I did so as able, we see five, maybe ten Land Cruisers full of people like us as close and taking the same photo. It reminded me of celebrities leaving a restaurant, greeted by cameras. The photographers are called the Paparazzi.
Interesting, the lions, leopards, cheetahs, are aware of us, smell us, hear us, but do not interpret us as a threat.
if we were to get out of the Land Cruiser, they would kill us. I asked our guide if I were to walk up to an elephant in a field, would that be a dumb thing to do? Emphatic yes.
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