
Is the lion king of the African jungle? I8217;m not sure anymore. It probably depends on what you mean by king. But the lioness is surely queen. Only yesterday she came close to our four-wheel drive at the Ngorongoro Crater and brought her cubs along. The sun was beating down hard and the driver said she wanted to lie down in the shade of the car. Personally, I think she came over to say hello. She looked me in the eye and I looked back at the gorgeous yellow brown eyes and was mesmerised. In the African jungle it is the lioness who rules. She hunts and brings home the bacon. She brings up the cubs and is seen about more often then the male who is generally taking a siesta under some rock.
And then in the evening we had just entered Serengetti National Park and our driver took a detour. We saw three jeeps under an acacia tree. Our first reaction was that there was a leopard in the tree. But no. It was lion and a lioness perched high in the branches. How they got there, only God knows. But they seemed mighty comfortable and were looking curiously at us below while we stared up at them. A few minutes passed and the lioness seemed to think that this was too much of a good thing. Deftly she picked her way down the acacia tree. The lion followed her and made it down alright though he hesitated somewhat in the lower branches.
Two days later at Masai Mara National Park, we came upon a most impressive sight. Four young male lions were busy demolishing what looked like the carcass of a baby buffalo. They were crunching at the bones and trying to escape the tse tse flies buzzing around. The eating was interspersed with an occasional toss of the mane and a roar. The hyenas, jackals and vultures were hovering around just out of reach. It was a primeval scene. There were no lionesses around. But I wondered whether the cape buffalo had been brought down by a lioness.