White Lion Lodge at Sanbona Wildlife Reserve, Little Karoo

12 months ago 28

By Roxanne ReidWe timed our visit to White Lion Lodge at Sanbona Wildlife Reserve perfectly. Although some years this Karoo reserve in South Africa has little rain, by the end of September this year it had had lots, spawning...

By Roxanne Reid
We timed our visit to White Lion Lodge at Sanbona Wildlife Reserve perfectly. Although some years this Karoo reserve in South Africa has little rain, by the end of September this year it had had lots, spawning a fiesta of colourful flowers among the green bushes. Small wonder, then, that one of our nature drives from the lodge focused on plants and flowers, while the second showed us some of the reserve’s big game.

?The malaria-free Sanbona Wildlife Reserve unspools over 58 000ha between Montagu and Barrydale along Route 62 in the Little Karoo. It’s a gloriously remote setting but just a 3.5-hour drive from Cape Town. White Lion Lodge lies on the 30 000ha southern concession. At the foot of the Warmwaterberg mountains, the reserve is thick with a diversity of Succulent Karoo plants in the north and Fynbos (including Renosterveld) in the south. Both of these are biodiversity hotspots, which means they’re biologically rich but under threat. 

An explosion of flowers
Lodge owner Gerry Cuje-Jakoby is nuts about plants and very knowledgeable too. Guide Romeo Muller reflects that passion, leading us on a late afternoon flower safari stuffed with fascinating insights. We couldn’t help but be inspired. Yes, there were kudu and gemsbok and mountain zebras and scrub hares, but they were just a bonus.
Visit in August and September to see lots of colourful flowers
Purple and yellow as far as the eye can see
To appreciate the value of plants here, you need to understand that the Succulent Karoo in the northern section has more than 1600 succulent species, which is 16% of the world’s estimated succulents. The biodiversity hotspots include more than 6300 plant species, some 2500 of them endemic, which means they’re found nowhere else in the world. And that’s pretty special. In addition, more than 900 are on the IUCN Red Data List of threatened species. No wonder Romeo got excited explaining some of them to us. 

‘There are some 200-250 different mesembryanthemums,’ he told us. And indeed, purple, pink, yellow, orange and white vygies splashed across the veld. There were also cotton bushes with white flowers and an aroma of rosemary. There was wild thyme, a sweet scent in the air each time the open safari vehicle passed a patch of it. Cotton bush and the well-named anchor bush – which sends out shoots that anchor into the ground to start new plant, thus helping to prevent soil erosion – are two of the bushes Karoo sheep feed on to give Karoo lamb its unique flavour. 
Colourful flowers at White Lion Lodge on the Sanbona Wildlife Reserve
Romeo talks flowers. This one doesn't seem to have an English name, though the Latin is Drosanthemum bicolor and the Afrikaans a descriptive tweekleurporseleinbos
?Some succulents have appealing names like ostrich toes, baby’s bottoms and pig’s ears. Romeo pointed out a thin maroon band along the top of the leaves of the pig’s ears which provides protection against the sun and dehydration. We saw the same trick on a crassula he called the sosatie/kebab bush, with red edges on leaves standing in the sun, but purely green leaves in the shade.

On a similar theme, the San used to rub guarri leaves on their skin to prevent sunburn. ‘Guarri only germinates after it has passed through the digestive system of an elephant or buffalo,’ Romeo explained. ‘Since some of these guarri bushes are more than 300 years old, it tells us those animals occurred here historically.’
Colourful vygies abound at Sanbona Wildlife Reserve on Route 62 in the Little Karoo
You can't miss these bright orange-red vygies
Sanbona gets both winter rain and summer thundershowers, and the northern section gets less than the south. Although there are fascinating plants to see all year round, August and September are the best months to visit White Lion Lodge for an explosion of colour.
Flowers grow among rocks and stones at Sanbona Wildlife Reserve on Route62
Cat’s nails are root parasites that come out after rain and are pollinated by mice
?Interestingly, birds and bees aren’t the only pollinators here. Rodents and flies do some of work, while harvester termites and whistling rats are the undertakers of the veld, helping to clean up the dead plant material. They use it for their nests and also eat it.
Desert rose, one of the malva family, in the Little Karoo South Africa
Locals call this stunner belonging to the malva family the desert rose
Wildlife safari
After breakfast the next morning, the sky was a huge bowl of blue flecked with clouds when we set off for a full-day wildlife safari into the northern concession. Early on, we spotted some clear tracks of brown hyena and leopard, suggesting that night drives from White Lion Lodge might be rewarding if they were to be offered sometime in the future. 
 kudu bulls at Sanbona Wildlife Reserve
These two kudu bulls stood still long enough for a photo while the females ran away
?It’s about a 90min drive through Renosterveld in the south to where a road leads you through cracks in the Cape Fold Mountains. We popped out into the northern concession among some sandstone krantzes, where a baboon family was feeding among the rocks, the little ones playing like jumping beans. A klipspringer stood sentry on a high rock, the rubbery surface of the underside of its tiny hooves making it agile and safe in this tricky environment.

Although eland, rhino and buffalo eluded us on our game drive, we saw kudu, springbok, red hartebeest, and Cape Mountain Zebra, as well as gemsbok, which don’t need water but can get all the moisture they need from succulent plants. These are all animals that once occurred here naturally, until farming squeezed them out. Now they’ve been reintroduced and the veld allowed to return to its natural state. Other small animals that occur here naturally include jackal, caracal, grey reedbuck, steenbok, grysbok and duiker, not to mention aardwolf and aardvark – two more good reasons to have a night drive.
Open safari vehicle at Sanbona Wildlife Reserve
An open safari vehicle takes you to see and learn about flowers and animals
?Sadly, the old male white lion after which White Lion Lodge was named had died the week before our visit, and we heard that the lioness died a few days after we left. That’s a blow for Sanbona, but I believe that new lions will be brought in – probably Kalahari lions.

Our most bounteous sightings were of giraffe, including some moms with little ones – one of them not much more than a few days old. Romeo explained that the giraffe here are adapted to the conditions and slightly smaller than say Kruger giraffes. They have very strong muscles in the chest above the top of the front legs. This enables them to climb mountains and also lean down to feed on plants low on the ground in an area with few tall shrubs and trees.
Giraffe and calf at  Sanbona Wildlife Reserve
Tiny giraffe and its mom; we watched it suckle soon after this photo was taken
?A rare riverine rabbit population was discovered on Sanbona in 2006 – the 13th most endangered mammal in the world. Sanbona is one of two protected areas that provide them with enough space and diversity to feed and breed naturally. Sadly, we weren’t lucky enough to spot one.

The large Bellair dam was full after all the rain, providing space for grey herons, red-knobbed coots, dabchicks, and African shelducks, even a pod of hippo, and a wonderful outlook from the track along its edge.
Hippo at Sanbona Wildlife Reserve
Hippos love to submerge themselves in the Bellair Dam
Before lunch, we spotted a herd of ten elephants, but they were far away. Romeo tried to get closer along a side road, without success. After a picnic lunch in a stone boma, he went looking for the elephants again, finally reaching a spot where they were feeding right next to the road, very calm and chilled, breaking off branches of sweet-thorn to munch. I love elephants and can spend hours watching their behaviour, so this was a treat.
Elephant feeding at Sanbona Wildlife Reserve
The herd of ten elephants we saw was peacefully feeding
?The time we’d spent trying to get closer to the elephants turned out to be time well spent because on our way back to the gap in the mountains that would lead us home, we found a cheetah posing on a hill. This was another outstanding sighting, given that only about 7 000 remain in the world and they’ve vanished from some 90% of their natural habitat across Africa. After a while she started to walk down the hill and we noticed four heads popping up behind the bushes to watch her and eventually follow – her four cubs of a year old.
Cheetah at Sanbona Wildlife Reserve, Little Karoo
Cheetah mom who has managed to raise four cubs to one year old
Birding at Sanbona
Do you love wielding your binos to look for birds? You’ll be pleased to know that both flower drives and game drives are good opportunities to spot some of Sanbona’s approximately 250 species. These include raptors like African fish-eagle, Verreaux’s eagle, jackal buzzard, and pale chanting goshawk, water birds like herons, egrets, coots and ducks, as well as Karoo korhaan, Ludwig’s bustard, blue crane, European bee-eater, cinnamon-breasted warbler, malachite sunbird, and Namaqua sandgrouse with their liquid call. These sandgrouse can travel up to 80km in search of water, collecting droplets in their breast feathers to take back to their nests for the chicks to drink.

?Tranquil luxury and things to do at the lodge
Since White Lion Lodge accommodates a maximum of eight people, it feels more like a large family home than a lodge. It’s built on stilts with thatched roofs and lots of glass for Imax views of the surrounding landscape. 
 the infinity pool
The infinity pool is a great place to cool down in the hot Karoo summers
?The main area has a lounge where you can enjoy drinks around a cosy fireplace before dinner, an open-plan kitchen that serves as a gathering point where it’s nice to chat to the friendly staff, and an elegant dining room with a large yellowwood table where we enjoyed tasty meals and conversation with other guests. If the weather is warm, dinner can be served on the main deck overlooking the infinity pool. We had lunch there the day we arrived, the burbling of the river below adding a touch of tranquillity. 
 the lounge
The lounge with the deck through the glass doors
 dining room
The dining room is a warm setting for conversation and tasty food
?The suites are so gorgeous it’s hard to tear yourself away for nature drives. Double doors slide back along two sides, opening to the large deck for an appealing indoor/outdoor feeling of freedom. The bathroom brings nature inside in the form of tree-branch towel racks, and branch-framed mirrors. Botterbome printed on the curtains and aloes on the scatter cushions add other touches of nature for a classy, natural feel rather than the excessive glitz some lodges go for. 
 bedroom with a view
Wide-screen views from the suite
?There’s a bath and rain dance shower with a wide-screen view of a koppie. When the weather is hot you can use the outdoor shower for a full nature immersion. A special treat is a large dressing room where you can stash your clothes and bags out of the way, and there’s a long desk for charging phones and cameras or using your laptop if you have to. Sunloungers on the deck look out over the riverbed and a bush-covered sandstone koppie with sweet-thorn trees, while aircon, ceiling fan, underfloor heating, gas fireplace, mini-bar fridge, coffee maker, and TV add the final comforting touches. 
 each suite has a private deck with a view
The suite's deck makes a perfect spot for relaxing and drinking in the views
?I could happily have spent more time watching sunrises and sunsets from our private deck, or just contemplating the surrounding landscape with a good book in my lap. It’s a great place for star-gazing too. Here in the clean, dry air of the Karoo with little light pollution, the darkness is spiked with a multitude of stars.

Relax in a wood-fired hot tub in a private spot a bit removed from the main building to ease the tension from your muscles and savour the views of the Little Karoo. Or opt for a de-stressing massage in the spa on the lodge’s lower level. Book this ahead because the spa therapist needs to come from outside the reserve.

During our visit, staff were clearing a nature walk around the camp perimeter, which will be a wonderful place to stretch your legs after a nature drive. Take your binos and see how many birds you can find. Another great addition scheduled for the week after our visit was a solar installation. By now, guests will be able to enjoy the lodge without even having to think about Eskom power cuts/loadshedding – a holiday in itself.
Layers of mountain at Sanbona Wildlife Reserve, Little Karoo
Rocky outcrops and layers of mountains in the Little Karoo
Conservation and community
If you’re the sort of traveller who likes to support responsible organisations that benefit conservation and communities, you’ll be pleased to know that Sanbona Wildlife Reserve is owned by a non-profit foundation with a strong conservation ethic. The driving idea is to create a balance where ecocystems, endangered animals and plants can flourish. By underlining environmental sustainability and conservation, they’re recreating an ecosystem as close as possible to the way it would have been three centuries ago. Keywords are rehabilitation, restoration, and reintroduction of animals that have become extinct in the area but would have roamed freely back then, before agriculture changed the Little Karoo.

Sanbona is part of CapeNature’s Biodiversity Stewardship programme in which land owners take responsibility for using sound conservation principles to safeguard our natural heritage for future generations.

As far as community development goes, Sanbona has a learning centre that educates the children of the reserve’s staff and those of the surrounding farm community, and a specific programme teaching children of the greater community about wildlife and conservation.

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17 things to do in Barrydale on Route 62 in the Karoo

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