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Write a User ReviewEswatini’s Biggest Park
The guest huts at Ndlovu Rest Camp have no electricity to distract safari-goers from the bush experience (though there is power in the restaurant and reception area). The camp comes alive at night. Nesting barn owls screech in the wooden eaves of the restaurant, epauletted fruit bats squawk in the surrounding trees, and a crash of white rhino sidle up to the camp’s low fence where they contentedly bed down for the night. Just three strands of electric fence separate you from the heavy-breathing rhino, as you watch them snooze peacefully by the light of the moon. You’ll feel like you’ve died and gone to heaven.
An extensive network of game-viewing tracks criss-crosses the national
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park, allowing visitors to explore the area on guided open-top game drives or in their own vehicles (note, however, that self-drivers are not allowed in the lion enclosure). Guided early-morning game drives in search of lions lead through a surreal landscape of skeletal knob thorns. This can be followed by a guided mid-morning mountain-bike ride or bush walk to the hide at Mahlindza waterhole. Here you can munch on your packed brunch in the company of crocodiles, nyala, wildebeest, warthogs and woolly-necked storks. It is reassuring to know that these adventure activities are conducted in sectors of the park without lions.Hlane Royal National Park belongs in the elite of Eswatini’s wildlife parks. Along with wonderfully low-key wildlife-watching experiences, there’s plenty more to keep you occupied, including wildlife drives, bushwalking, mountain biking and local cultural tours.
Up Close With Rhinos
One of the most under-appreciated parks in southern Africa, Hlane Royal National Park is a great option for rhino lovers. Not only are sightings of white rhino practically guaranteed, you can also opt for a drive which allows you to exit the vehicle and walk within metres of these endangered giants. During our walk, we were only about five metres from a mother and calf, though that distance closed quickly when the young one took an interest in us. We slowly ambled back to the jeep, all the while followed by mum and her child. It was exhilarating and petrifying to be that close to a rhino, but the calm and experienced ranger made us all feel that we were not in (too much) danger.
Hlane Royal National Park is also the only park with lions in Eswatini, though they are featured in a separate enclosure, which takes the ‘safari feel’ away from the experience.
Eswatini’s Royal Flagship Park
Just sitting around the huge Ndlovu Camp waterhole in the evening is sure to provide sightings of a lot of wildlife, including jostling white rhino. The lions are in a large enclosure, which is unfortunately inaccessible to self-drivers and detracts from the wilderness bush vibe (the quantity of prey skeletons makes it feel more like a velociraptor compound), but does mean that visitors on guided game drives are likely to enjoy close-up sightings and good photo opportunities. Large numbers of white rhino roam the park (heavily protected, of course) and they are often encountered on walking safaris.
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The guides are well trained and knowledgeable and, as a front-line force in combating rhino poaching, Hlane’s rangers have been selected from the local community and some are reformed ex-poachers themselves. Their traditional bush skills provided the ideal foundation for the SAS training they received during induction. As one Big Game Park’s guide points out, “There were probably times when the SAS boys were learning as much from some of our guys as we were from them.”