Day 9 (January 1st)
It was a rather untypical New Years morning, no hangover, no fireworks and no "oliebollen", but with hippos... Hippos do make these loud grunting noises and they start with it around 2 in the morning and then just continue...When going for breakfast they were off course the first mammals of the year. The first birds were
Red-winged starlings,
red-cheeked cordonbleus and
Speckled pigeons.
Our car was already waiting for us and thankfully it was not an open vehicle but a closed one, as Tsetse flies were expected... After breakfast we drove to the Park HQ of Katavi NP to pay the fees, but naturally the office was still closed, fortunately our driver new where they guy lived, so he went to pick him up and we waited while watching a band of
Banded mongoose running around the buildings and sheds. The night before I had given my girl friend some instructions about which antelope was which and which predators we might see, though I did have little hope she would remember, but how wrong I turned out to be....
By then the park guy was brought in and thankfully paying with Visa went right for once, so within minutes we were out. Our driver knew the park by hard and he insisted we go to the Katisunga floodplain first. The Katavi National Parks habitats can basically be divided in floodplains and wet miombo woodlands and where floodplains are good for wildlife watching, miombo woodland really isn't, especially not in rainy season when we were there... Getting to the Katisunga floodplain was quite a drive and in the woodlands we did not see any mammals, but birds were still aplenty and everything was tickable as it was January 1st

. The birds we saw include
White-crested helmet shrike,
Malachite kingfisher,
Ruaha red-billed hornbill,
Bare-faced go-away bird, Red-necked spur fowl, Helmeted guineafowl and
Green wood hoopoe. After some time the landscape got a little bit more open and the first mammals to be seen was a small group of
African elephant that was quickly retreating in the miombo. Around the corner the first
Impala were a fact and it was rather surprising they were not the first mammals we saw, as in any park
Impala were the easiest game to spot by far...
We had now reached the edge of the floodplain and we saw some more nice birds including
Black coucal and
Black-winged kite. When we drove a little bit further my girl friend at once shouted "stop, go back, I saw a wild dog" and while African wild dog occur in Katavi, they are difficult to see and I expected to see a jackal... How wrong I was as 30 meters away a single
African wild dog was standing on the plain.... This was one of the mammals I had really wanted to see in Tanzania, but I knew my chances were not very good, but there they were and the single dog was soon joined by several more, though all keeping their distance to the road. The drive along the flood plain was also very productive birding wise with
Grey kestrel, Brown snake-eagle, Yellow-billed oxpecker, White-headed vulture, Eurasian hobby, Martial eagle and many
European bee-eaters. After some time more mammals came into view and we saw several
Masai giraffe, African buffalo, Grant's zebra and more
Common hippo and
Impala. These were naturally the first giraffes my girlfriend saw in the wild and as always the giraffes were amazing. Giraffes somehow look more natural in a zoo then in Africa, where they are complete freaks, but very beautiful ones. They are the mammal we stopped the car for most often every single day....
Continuing along the floodplain new birds and mammals kept dropping in with
Saddle-billed storks,
Southern ground hornbills (which are extremely common in Katavi),
African wattled lapwing,
African fish eagle and
Pallid harrier as most notable ones. We also saw the first
Warthogs, Defassa waterbuck, Bohor reedbuck, Topi and even a single
Bushbuck, which can be quite shy...
From this point onwards we started following a seasonal river, which was like every water body full of hippos and in this case they were joined by some huge
Nile crocodiles. A very good bird we saw here was an
African crake, which untypical for a crake walked out in the open. From this point onwards we did not see a lot of new animals, but more elephants, giraffes, impalas, buffalo and more of the common bird species. At the edge of the floodplain we flushed a
Spotted hyena and shortly afterwards we saw several
Jacobin and
Red-chested cuckoos. At Lake Chade we saw a large elephant group, which was unfortunately far away, but closer by where the usual topi, zebra & waterbuck. In the surrounding bushland we saw
Dwarf mongoose and some
Yellow-winged bats. A nice feathered surprise was a single
Swallow-tailed bee-eater, a bee-eater restricted to Miombo and Mopane woodlands and even there surprisingly scarce. At this point we had somewhat surprisingly still not seen any cats and I was also hoping to see roan antelope and lichtensteins hartebeest, which should be rather easy to see in Katavi, but maybe not in the wet season.... National Parks close in Tanzania at 6:30 and this rule is rather strict unfortunately.... On the way out we drove along the Katisunga floodplain again, but apart from elephants close by and a
Lappet-faced vulture there were no real highlights. During the whole day in the park we saw a shocking number of 2 other cars, which considering the landscape and abundance of birds and mammals was maybe a bit surprising.... But Katavi is promoted as being almost unreachable and allthough it is a long drive, it is easily reached with both public transport and normal cars, as the "highway" crosses straight through the park...
We finished our first day of the year with about 70 bird species and almost 20 mammal species and in the next day would also be spent completely within Katavi, so there was still hope for cats and nice antelope...