For me, the two sightings that automatically come to mind are my last-minute, "Hail Mary" of sightings of a trio of sable antelope in Kruger National Park and of a lone Cape mountain zebra stallion in the Cape Point Nature Reserve. Both creatures were high up on my list of animals I wanted to strive to see during my time in South Africa, both animals coming with a certain degree of difficulty, but not edging on near impossible.
Now, I had seen sable antelope from the road several times while driving about the countryside, but none of these animals were truly wild, living on game ranches or small reserves, and most were outside of their natural range. The only time I was within their natural range was during my four days in Kruger National Park. I was based at the Pretoriuskop Camp, which has the head of a sable as its symbol, as they were once quite common in that area. Unfortunately, sable have become increasingly rare, and we were told that it was very unlikely that we'd actually see one. And that was the case for almost all of the four days I spent in the park. Then, finally, on my last day, on my last game drive before heading back to Johannesburg, not far from the camp entrance, three sable dashed out of the brush on a distant hillside, running down through the shallow ravine. They were gone as quickly as they appeared, so I'm left with only a couple of out of focus photos and my memories, but it made for an invigorating sighting!
Being endemic to such a small region of South Africa, the Cape mountain zebra is an animal that I desperately wanted to see, not knowing if I'd ever get the chance to see one again; however, with them being found in only a handful of locations, mostly in the more remote areas of the Cape provinces-- minus the population in the Cape Point Nature Reserve outside of Cape Town-- I knew my chances were slim, as for the majority of my time in the country, I was based in Pretoria with limited transportation options. My last week in the country, I ended up flying out for a last-minute four-day-weekend to Cape Town with two vet students from Spain that I worked alongside at the National Zoo in Pretoria. On our second full day in the city we took a guided bus tour of the Cape peninsula, which included a game drive through the Cape Point Nature Reserve to the Cape of Good Hope. The fynbos in winter is rather bare, but its starkness is truly beautiful. In our several hours in the park we saw some notable wildlife, including beach-combing chacma baboons and ostriches and herds of bontebok and eland but no sign of the zebra other than some old dung and tracks. At sunset, we were exiting the park and heading down the road back to Cape Town, when I looked over and saw a single Cape mountain zebra stallion grazing on the hillside amongst a small herd of bontebok! The bus pulled off the side of the road, and we were able to get out and admire the stallion for quite a while as he grazed in the fading sunlight. Our guides said that we were extremely lucky to have seen one, as they had not seen one in almost two months.