Kruger National Park – General Information - Rhino Walking Safaris
The world-renowned Kruger National Park offers a wildlife experience second to none. At nearly two million hectares, it is the largest game reserve in South Africa, stretching 350km along the Mozambican border and is, on average, 60km wide. It is unrivalled in its diversity of species and is a recognised leader in environmental management techniques and policies.

Rhino Walking Safaris and Rhino Post Safari Lodge, lie within a private wilderness concession just north of Skukuza in the Kruger National Park, offering exclusive walking trails and game drive safaris. The park is home to an impressive number of species, has an amazing 16 different ecosystems, and ranks as a prime Big Five game viewing area.
The Limpopo is the park’s northern-most river and the Crocodile forms it southern boundary, while the Sabie, Letaba, Olifants and Luvuvhu rivers provide the park’s interior with water. There are some seasonal rivers like the Shisa and Timbavati, which are usually dry during winter.
The park tends to be mostly grasslands, known in South Africa as bushveld, and woodlands (savannah), with occasional rocky outcrops. The Kruger National Park falls within a malaria area and all necessary precautions should be taken. Consult your general practitioner on medication before planning a visit.
Interesting Facts
- In 1869, a ‘gold rush’ exploded in the region causing the number of game to decrease dramatically due to hunting and trading of animal horns and skins.
- In 1884, President Paul Kruger proposed that boundaries in the region be defined as game reserves to protect the flora and fauna, but his revolutionary vision was met with much resistance.
- The park was first proclaimed in 1898 as the Sabie Game Reserve and the area between the Sabie and Crocodile Rivers was set aside as official reserves.
- The Scottish-born James Stevenson-Hamilton was appointed the park’s first warden in 1902. Many accounts of the park’s early days can be found in the Stevenson-Hamilton Memorial Library.
- In 1926 the National Parks Act was proclaimed and with it the merging of the Sabie and Shingwedzi Games Reserves into the Kruger National Park.

Natural History
- More than 300 archaeological sites of Stone Age man have been found.
- Cultural artifacts of Stone Age man have been found for the period 100,000 to 30,000 years ago.
- There is ample evidence that prehistoric man – Homo erectus – roamed the area between 500,000 and 100,000 years ago.
- Evidence of San (Bushman) and Iron Age people from about 1,500 years ago and numerous examples of San Art scattered throughout the park.
- There are significant archaeological ruins at Thulamela and Masorini
Fauna and Flora
Mammals
The Kruger National Park boasts the world’s greatest concentration and diversity of species.

Rhino Walking Safaris allows guests the opportunity to encounter all the classical African big game including the Big Five: buffalo, elephant, leopard, lion and black and white rhino. In addition there are also hippopotamus, giraffe, zebra, cheetah, warthog and many antelope species. Below is a checklist of the most visual species:
| Aardvark | Aardwolf |
| Antelope Roan | Antelope Sable |
| Baboon Chacma | Badger Honey |
| Bat Epauletted, Peter's | Bat Epauletted, Wahlberg's |
| Bat Free-tailed, Angolan | Bat Free-tailed, Little |
| Bat Tomb, Mauritian | Buffalo |
| Bushbaby Lesser | Bushbaby Thick-tailed |
| Bushbuck | Bushpig |
| Cane-rat Greater | Caracal |
| Cat Wild, African | Cheetah |
| Civet | Dassie Rock |
| Dassie Rock Yellow-spotted | Dog Wild |
| Duiker Common | Duiker Red |
| Eland | Elephant African |
| Fox Bat-eared | Genet Large-spotted |
| Genet Small-spotted | Giraffe |
| Grysbok Sharpe's | Hare Cape |
| Hare Scrub | Hare Red, Natal |
| Hartebeest Lichtenstein's | Hyena Spotted |
| Hippopotamus | Jackal Black-backed |
| Impala | Klipspringer |
| Jackal Side-striped | Leopard |
| Kudu | Mongoose Banded |
| Lion | Mongoose Grey, Large |
| Mongoose Dwarf | Mongoose Selous's |
| Mongoose Meller's | Mongoose Water |
| Mongoose Slender | Monkey Samango |
| Mongoose White-tailed | Mouse Multimammate, Natal |
| Monkey Vervet | Oribi |
| Nyala | Pangolin |
| Otter Clawless | Porcupine |
| Polecat Striped | Reedbuck Mountain |
| Reedbuck Common | Rhinoceros Black |
| Rhebok Grey | Serval |
| Rhinoceros White | Squirrel Tree |
| Springhare | Suni |
| Steenbok | Warthog |
| Tsessebe | Wildebeest Blue |
| Waterbuck | Zebra Burchell's |
The number of different animals varies from year to year depending on climatic conditions. The following is an estimate based on the 2000 census:
| Black rhino | 250 |
| Blue wildebeest | 14 000 |
| Buffalo | 21 000 |
| Burchell’s zebra | 30 000 |
| Cheetah | 200 |
| Eland | 300 |
| Elephant | 9 152 |
| Giraffe | 5 000 |
| Hippo | 2 963 |
| Hyaena | 2 000 |
| Impala | 100 000 |
| Kudu | 3 500 |
| Leopard | 1000 |
| Lion | 2500 |
| Roan antelope | 60 |
| Sable antelope | 300 |
| Tsessebe | 200 |
| Waterbuck | 1 500 |
| White rhino | 2 500 |
| Wild dog | 350 |
Birds
Kruger has a list of more than 500 birds, some of which are not found anywhere else in South Africa. Rhino Walking Safaris offers tailor-made packages including a special birding safari. Birders can look forward to pursuing the Big Six: Ground Hornbill, Kori Bustard, Lappet-faced Vulture, Martial Eagle, Pel’s Fishing Owl and the Saddle-bill Stork.

In addition, Hornbills, Starlings, Vultures, Rollers, Bee-eaters and Shrikes make this a prime birdwatching area. Raptor viewing is extremely rewarding with Bateleur, Martial, Black-breasted Snake, Brown Snake, African Hawk, African Fish and Tawny Eagles seen regularly. In summer birders can spot the Wahlberg, Steppe and Lesser Spotted.
Vegetation
The Kruger National Park boasts 16 macro ecozones and, due to its vastness, it naturally has a tremendous botanic diversity. The northern half of the park, north of the Olifants River is predominantly mopane veld, while south of the Olifants, the ecozones are thornveld.
Rhino Post Safari Lodge, located slightly north of Skukuza in the Kruger National Park, consists of mixed Bushwillow and Acacia veld with numerous riverbeds running through it. An interesting feature of this area is the sodic open plains. These open areas with short grass attract high concentrations of wildlife. They are caused by sodium leaching out of the soil and accumulating in these areas.
Enthusiastic ecotourists can identify a variety of plant species in the park. Varying climatic conditions impact on the type of vegetation within an ecosystem and this, in turn, affects the distribution and population densities of various animals. The park has over 1,986 plant species, of which 336 are trees, including the Big Five: Baobab, Fever Tree, Knobthorn, Marula, and Mopane.
| Baobab | Red Bushwillow |
| Common Cluster Fig | Common Coral Tree |
| Delagoa Thorn | Fever Tree |
| Lowveld Fig | Jackalberry |
| Knob Thorn | Leadwood |
| Natal Mahogany | Marula |
| Monkey Orange | Mopane |
| Transvaal Mustard Tree | Lala Palm |
| Raisin Bush | Sausage Tree |
| Tamboti | Round-leafed Teak |


