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Change for Kruger Day Visitors

SKUKUZA- Day visitors to the Kruger National Park (KNP) will no longer be able to book their entry as this will be done on a strict first come, first served basis.

"We decided to do away with this day visit booking system as it created logistical problems and was considered unfair by many of our visitors", commented the Park's Director of Public Relations, Mr William Mabasa.

Gate quotas will still be enforced, particularly over busy periods like the upcoming Easter Weekend, so it is suggested that members of the public get to their gate of choice as early as possible to avoid disappointment.

"We will honour those bookings already made for this coming weekend as long as the people that made them arrive before 9am at the gate specified on the day specified", added Mr Mabasa.

KNP gate quotas are based on considerations like the amount of tourist infrastructure in the vicinity of the gate, environmental impact and various other conservation reasons. Gate quotas do not affect guests with overnight accommodation bookings.

The KNP has ten entrance gates: Crocodile Bridge, Malelane, Numbi, Phabeni, Paul Kruger, Orpen, Phalaborwa, Punda Maria, Pafuri and Giriyondo.

The current quotas for day visitors are (# people NOT vehicles, by gate):

Pafuri – 300, Punda Maria – 300, Phalaborwa – 500, Orpen – 500, Kruger – 500, Phabeni – 500, Numbi – 500, Malelane – 500, Crocodile Bridge – 300 and Giriyondo – 300.

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Tsendze Rustic Campsite opens

The Kruger National Park has opened a new overnight facility, the Tsendze Rustic Campsite.

Designed with a back-to-basics theme, Tsendze Rustic Campsite includes 34 camp sites, two ablution facilities and two camp kitchens. It received its first guests on November 1, 2006, and is located 7km south of Mopani Rest Camp.

In keeping with the rustic theme, services provided have been kept to the basics with warm water from gas geysers and lighting in the kitchens and ablutions provided by solar batteries.

No electricity will be supplied to the campers and generators will not be allowed to operate, ensuring that noise levels are kept to an absolute minimum.

Each campsite has braai facilities and shared taps. Ablution blocks feature outdoor showers. Guests will be required to check in at Mopani Camp where a specific site will be allocated to them.

Camping rates for Tsendze will be the same as the basic KNP campsite rate of R110 a night for the site itself (up to two people) and R38 per extra adult and R19 a child (up to a maximum of six people per campsite). Normal daily conservation fees will also apply to guests who do not own Wild Cards.

Veteran Mooiplaas section ranger Johann Oelofse, who was responsible for the environmental management plan, says the new campsite has been designed for campers who want to break away from the more modern campsites available in the KNP.

"Like Maroela Campsite near Orpen Camp and Gate, Tsendze Rustic Campsite, as its name suggests, will offer campers their very own camp where they do not have to share with brick and mortar-orientated fellow visitors," he said.

Situated in the shade of ancient and beautiful leadwood, mopane and appleleaf trees, the emphasis of Tsendze Rustic Campsite has been placed on a real rustic experience with the campsites placed in two circles around the ablution and kitchen facilities.

Regional manager for northern Kruger, Ben van Eeden, says the campsite is different to Kruger’s other sites, and will allow visitors to enjoy true bush quality and atmosphere. “It is not an open area. There are individual sites with privacy”.

In total there are 30 sites that can be booked in advance, plus four reserve sites for emergencies.

Van Eeden adds that the site will be a perfect stop over for those en route to the Giriyondo border post and a camping experience in Mozambique. However, the environmental impact process that was started about 3 years ago found that the known water resources would not sustain the camp.

It took several months of searching to find a suitable borehole, and planning came to a halt until one was finally drilled in November 2005.

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Presidents Open Kruger Border Crossing

KRUGER NATIONAL PARK- The presidents of South Africa, Mozambique and Zimbabwe officially opened a new border crossing Wednesday in a small but significant step toward creating the "world's greatest animal kingdom"- a huge transnational park spanning the three countries.

Presidents Thabo Mbeki of South Africa, Armando Guebuza of Mozambique and Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe gathered at the Giriyondo border post linking South Africa and Mozambique for the formal opening. The road was opened last December to limited traffic.



"Nature has triumphed and shown us that we can transcend national boundaries and that we can create "benefits beyond boundaries," Mbeki said in a speech at the opening ceremony. "Today our wild animals- the elephants, rhino, antelope and many others are once again beginning to roam freely."

He said that the Giriyondo Access Facility marked the "beginning of a new era when we will bring down the colonial fences, which divided our nations over several centuries."

It will take years to turn the dreams of the Greater Limpopo Transfrontier Park into reality, with free movement of animals- and people- throughout the 14,000 square miles (36,000 square kilometers) of scrubby, sunbaked bush.

It is hoped that the cooperation between the three countries will improve conservation measures- although there have also been fears the "borderless" park could also make it easier for poachers to operate.

Rob Little, chief conservation officer at the World Wildlife Fund's South African branch, said in an interview Wednesday that benefits would outweigh possible increase in poaching.

"The transfrontier park is a wonderful idea for conservation in general and opening up movement patterns, and also on international commitments to conservation in those regions," he said. "There are management implications and those need to be dealt with, as with any creation of a new conservation area. Some are going to work better than others. We have to remain optimistic as it's a wonderful opportunity."

South Africa's flagship, the Kruger, is well managed. But Mozambique's wildlife is only just beginning to recover from the country's long Civil War and authorities face the challenge of relocating 20,000 villagers living inside the Mozambican section, or at least allaying their fears about the risk of wild animals so that they agree to stay put.

Zimbabwe's economic and political upheavals, which have led to an upsurge in poaching and overstretched the country's conservation programs, are likely to delay plans to incorporate its Gonarezhou National Park in the project.

In Gonarezhou and in nature conservancies nearby, fences has been vandalized or stolen. Minefields left over from Zimbabwe's war of independence also remain a problem. Mugabe said in a speech Tuesday that the army would be called in to clear minefields in Gonarezhou, which means "the home of the elephant."

Much of the funding for the park, which will be about the size of Israel, has come from the World Bank and German government.

Although the area is famed for the "Big Five"- the lion, leopard, elephant, rhinoceros and buffalo- the Kruger Park also hosts 147 species of mammals, 505 species of birds, 116 species of reptiles, 34 species of frogs and at least 2,000 species of plants.

It is hoped that the nature reserves in Mozambique and Zimbabwe, which are much wilder than the Kruger, may host additional species. Experts say the increasing range opportunities provided by a bigger park would help conservation of threatened animals like the endangered wild dog. It would also ease pressure on the Kruger posed by the booming elephant population, which has revived a debate on whether the mighty beast should be culled.

Park proponents hope it will serve as a model for 21 other parks planned across Africa. A transfrontier park linking the Kalahari across the borders of South Africa and Botswana already exists.

Mbeki noted that it will fit into larger tourism development plans.

"I have no doubt that the easy access facilities and open spaces within the Great Limpopo Transfrontier Park, which has been branded as the world's largest animal kingdom, will be a major attraction before, during and after the 2010 FIFA World Cup," Mbeki said.

"We must surely redouble our efforts to ensure that this unique and rich tapestry of life on our planet is turned into a jewel of the tourism market."

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Giriyondo Border Post Opens

NELSPRUIT- Tourists can now travel through the Kruger National Park into Mozambique after the Giriyondo border post was opened on Wednesday.

The border post is part of the Great Limpopo Transfrontier Park (GLTP), which straddles the borders of South Africa, Mozambique and Zimbabwe.

"This (border post) will facilitate tourism flow by providing easier access within the GLTP," said spokesman of the GLTP ministerial committee, John Louw.

The Giriyondo border post links the Kruger to the Limpopo National Park in Mozambique.

The Mozambican part of the GLTP is only accessible in 4x4s, however.

Louw said tourists would also have to produce valid passports when using the border, and that the border is closed to commercial traffic.

The border will be open from 08h00 to 15h00 from April to September and 08:00 to 16:00 from October to March.

The GLTP was proclaimed in December 2002, when the presidents of South Africa, Mozambique and Zimbabwe signed an international treaty in Xai-Xai, Mozambique.

The three presidents will officially open the Giriyondo border post early next year.

The GLTP covers a vast area of the lowland savannah ecosystem, which is divided by the Lebombo mountains running along the border between South Africa and Mozambique.

It is expected to boost eco-tourism and regional socio-economic development.

Read more about the Greater Limpopo Transfrontier Park here.

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Zim Announces Limpopo Park Border Gate

The world's biggest wildlife sanctuary, the Greater Limpopo Transfrontier Park, got a boost yesterday when Zimbabwe decided to build a border post to facilitate passage between Gonarezhou National Park and South Africa's Kruger National Park.

In an interview yesterday, Chief Immigration Officer, Mr Elasto Mugwadi said Zimbabwe had finally chosen a site in Chitulipasi, east of Beitbridge, to construct a border post.

"A team from the Local Government, Public Works and Urban Development Ministry are currently surveying and clearing the place before construction begins as soon as possible," Mr Mugwadi said.

He said, so far the Government has injected $5 billion into the project that seeks to see the full operation of Southern Africa's first mega park.

The opening of the Giriyondo Border Post linking South Africa and Mozambique's components of the park is expected soon.

Environment and Tourism Minister, Cde Francis Nhema yesterday welcomed the move saying it was good to note that a consensus had finally been reached on the actual positioning of the border post.

"The opening of the border post will boost Zimbabwe's tourism by facilitating linkages and entry into the mega park. We hope other consultations will be conducted on possibilities for another border post to directly link our tourists with Mozambique's Limpopo National Park," Cde Nhema said.

He said the development of the mega park is being done in phases and soon the three countries will converge to open the Giriyondo border post. Zimbabwe claims to need more than Z$2 trillion to develop the whole of its side of the mega park, Gonarezhou in

Cde Nhema said logistics to have a bridge linking Zimbabwe and South Africa are also at an advanced stage.

The development of the mega park is of great interest to Zimbabwe, which has embarked on awareness campaigns meant to lure stakeholders to invest in Gonarezhou National Park and urgently upgrade it.

Read more about the Greater Limpopo Transfrontier Park here.

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Cycling The Transfrontier Park

The density of the bush was unnerving, as were the mounds of fresh steaming elephant dung. A few rootling warthogs were surprised by our quiet approach and dashed up a rocky outcrop.

A troop of cheeky chacma baboons (Papio ursinus) barked, while vervets casually leapt about in the fever trees.

Loud rustling alerted our group to an elephant feeding some 20m away: soon we spotted another two that were even closer. One nonchalantly walked onto the track. Fortunately, they seemed unperturbed by our presence.

Continuing cautiously, we came across another group feeding and enjoyed this rare privilege of seeing all the sights of Africa from the saddle.

In mid-August a group of 105 cyclists set off on the first five-day Transfrontier cycle tour through the Greater Limpopo Peace Park which straddles Mozambique, Zimbabwe and South Africa.

Armed with little except our grit, determination and a keen sense of adventure, we intrepid cyclists and our 80-member back-up team (with 100 tons of water and camping equipment) battled across 336km of sand sea and bushveld koppies, braving close encounters with some of Africa's larger fauna.

Apart from offering a rare experience of cycling through two countries, the event enabled all participants to contribute to two charities- the Peace Parks Foundation and Children in the Wilderness Programme- making our efforts seem all the more worthwhile.

Promising more chances of seeing the Big Five than probably any other bike ride ever, the route followed the largely inaccessible Limpopo National Park in Mozambique and then through the Makuleke/Pafuri region of northern Kruger National Park in South Africa.

The border post between Mozambique and South Africa at Giriyondo marked the official start of the ride. As border posts went, this had to be the most informal I have ever crossed. Simply, there wasn't one.

We braved close encounters with some of Africa's larger fauna
We filled in forms and wandered between the farm-style gate separating South Africa from Mozambique.

Ready to ride, we assembled in our pre-assigned groups of between eight and 12 cyclists with our own back-up 4-x-4 that was to follow us through the full 336km of wilderness.

Soon we were barrelling along rocky service roads that quickly degenerated into mostly disused jeep tracks. My team's energetic start was quickly overshadowed by vast stretches of sand that caused many a pile-up.

We soon spotted the first of many strategically placed tea stops. Savouring the dappled shade cast by mopane trees, we happily shovelled in vast quantities of banana bread and jelly babies while knocking back cups of tea and coffee.

Through sand, dust and bushveld all the way, we pedalled on with renewed vigour. The presence of pachyderms was very evident in the trashed trees and dung mounds.

The riding became rockier as the road veered south-east towards the Massingir Dam where we made our first camp.

It looked as though we were arriving at a battle encampment, with 80 tents and one large Arabian-style canopy erected on the banks of a dry riverbed, surrounded by baobabs.

Like successful warriors we sped into camp with a final burst of energy, knowing that a feast awaited us.

After a gruelling day's cycling, we could always de-grime ourselves, enjoy the sunset with iced drinks and marvellous massages, and then relish yet another delectable meal.

This would never have been possible without the back-up team, who managed our campsite set-up on all four days, including the transport of our gourmet caterers, tables, chairs, bike repairs, ice-making machines, and even a hot-and-cold-water shower system. This was luxury camping.

After waking to freshly baked muffins and steaming Maltabela porridge, we put our feet to the pedal, cycling up some rolling koppies that gradually took us onto a plateau overlooking a mopane-forested plain.

This viewpoint coincided with one of our morning tea stops. From here we all got a decent dose of adrenaline bouncing down rocky hills.

After a relaxing lunch of baguettes near a small stream, the road degenerated into sand, which continued for the next 20km. Irate, my "team" swore their way through it all. I was responsible for more than a few pile-ups where a forced mid-pedal stop no doubt comes as more of a surprise to those on your tail.

On a more positive note, we were all becoming far fitter and more skilled at sand-riding techniques.

Only later was it revealed that we had taken a wrong turn and added an extra 20km of soft sand to our ordeal. But how could we really complain when we had ice in our drinks and peri-peri potato wedges?

I asked Colin Bell of Wilderness Safaris, the sponsors, how this cycle tour had come about: "The motivation was to raise funds for Children in the Wilderness.

"The Pafuri camp was on the go, so we thought of a combined fundraising effort for the charities. This appeared to be a win-win situation."

Following the Limpopo River, we passed through little mud-hut villages with children waving enthusiastically at every turn.

Refuelling at the local pub and store in Chitango village, I slurped on Mozambique's Maca-Mahon brew, condensed milk and Coke, and enjoyed conversations with the locals in my bad Portuguese.

This time we set off, accompanied by Antonio and Miguel, two zealous locals on their single-geared bikes, passing en route 105 freshly laundered, white cycling shirts flapping in the wind outside a missionary church.

We battled through sandy stretches, but Miguel and Antonio were sand cyclists of note - swerving, balancing and keeping up with the group.

We calculated it was 68km later when we arrived at a spectacular campsite set up by the Limpopo river.

Hannele Steyn-Kotze, retired South African mountain bike champion, provided us with useful advice on relevant stuff such as the "techniques of sand-cycling" and how to make 80 descents look easy.

As the sun slipped over the Limpopo horizon and the tinkle of goat bells filled the warm evening air, little did I anticipate that the best was still to come.

Crossing back into South Africa at the Pafuri border post, we arrived at "Crooks Corner", where Zimbabwe, South Africa and Mozambique all meet.

The area is known as the Land of the Giants because the riverine, fever-tree, lala-palm and mopane forests are all unusually tall and often outgrow the average baobab.

A group of 40 breeding elephants had been sighted an hour before our arrival.

Warnings were not needed: we slowed to a snail's pace. Soon we stumbled across some hippos lying in tributaries of the Limpopo. Then, as the cry of fish eagles filled the air, we cautiously entered a fever-tree forest filled with jumpy impala and nyala herds.

Soon afterwards we stumbled upon the group of elephants.

Enjoying a final 42km through some of the most scenic parts of the cycle - rocky steep koppies, grasslands, lala-palm and baobab forests, we completed the tour at the Pafuri gate of the Kruger Park without any casualties, apart from a few roasties and ripped tyres.

Looking back, this seemed even more remarkable, considering we had just cycled through an International Big Five Wilderness area.

The organisers, Wilderness Safaris, proudly revealed that the tour had raised more than R360,000 for the charities followed by R30,000 more for the completion of a village clinic.

Another R17,000 was added from an auctioned cycle shirt signed by Jan Ulrich. He could not join the tour this year, but word is his chances for next year are looking very good.

Click here for the Independent article.

Read more about mountain biking in the Kruger Park here.

Read more about the Greater Limpopo Transfrontier Park here.

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Poaching Rife in new Limpopo Park

The Pafuri-Banyini pan in South Africa's north-eastern Kruger National Park teems with game. Elephant bulls amble among clumps of marula trees and impala leap gracefully across the grassland, where buffalo graze.

Located in the triangle between the Limpopo and Luvuvhu rivers where South Africa, Zimbabwe and Mozambique meet, the pan is more than an idyllic corner of the Kruger park. It will ultimately lie at the heart of the Greater Limpopo Transfrontier Park. This conservation area will encompass 35,000 square kilometres, allowing animals to follow ancient migration routes between the Kruger Park in South Africa, the Limpopo National Park in Mozambique and Gonarezhou National Park in Zimbabwe.

The pressures that are being brought to bear on the pan are indicative of problems that the Transfrontier Park as a whole will have to grapple with- a matter of increasing importance as the deadline approaches for dropping another stretch of border fencing to create the conservation area.

The first section of fence to be taken down was a 15km strip in 2002, between Mozambique and South Africa- just north of where the Shingwedzi River enters the Kruger Park. This year, a 30km section of fence will be dropped south of the Shingwedzi- also between South Africa and Mozambique- after the presidents of Zimbabwe, South Africa and Mozambique open the border post at Giriyondo.

This post, between the Kruger and the Limpopo Parks, is the first to be opened under the Transfrontier Park initiative. The ceremony is scheduled to take place in October.

Jack Greef, a former special forces operative who has worked in wildlife security in Angola, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Mozambique and Tanzania- and who now runs a crack ranger unit in the Kruger National Park- believes dropping the fence without beefing up patrols on both sides of the border will worsen poaching.

Reports have already surfaced of rhino poachers from Mozambique driving into the Kruger park through areas where the first section of fencing was dismantled. And, even though the Pafuri-Banyini pan lies some way north of Giriyondo- where the next stretch of fence is to come down- poachers are already taking a toll in the area.

"Zimbabweans cross the river, lay snares and sell bush meat in the villages in South Africa. Then they buy groceries here to take back to Zimbabwe," Greef said during a visit to the pan, pointing to one of several well-trodden footpaths leading to the Limpopo River.

In May, Greef's team of eight rangers found 79 snares at a spring near the Pafuri gate into the Kruger that had been set three nights before. By the time they reached the scene, a buffalo calf, hyena and impala had been killed.

"If we hadn't detected these snares, it would have been a slaughter house," said patrol leader Prison Manganye.

Two months later, Kruger rangers caught a poacher transporting 129 genet skins by car from the Mozambican border post at Pafuri to the Punda Maria gate into the Kruger park.

"That's virtually the entire population of genets along the Limpopo," noted Greef.

Mozambican park official Hernando Vukeya said 36 poachers armed with AK47 assault rifles have been arrested in the district during the past five years. Most were war veterans turned poachers. But, he said, the situation is under control.

"We are dealing with poaching very efficiently here."

There are currently about 70 rangers in mobile units in the Limpopo National Park who are in radio contact with their counterparts in the Kruger.

"Generally bigger is better," Greef concluded at his headquarters. "And with increased cross-border cooperation between ranger units, we can catch more poachers who escape by slipping across the border."

But, he is not as sanguine about the situation as Vukeya is.

Poaching is only part of the problem, however.

Just 30km east of Pafuri-Banyini pan, in the Limpopo National Park, lies Shikumba village: one of a string of settlements along the Limpopo River housing up to 20 000 people.

Inhabitants of these villages have refused to move elsewhere.

"We debated this issue and decided we would rather be fenced in and stay here," said Maria Nyampuli, one of the villagers. "We are not happy about it, it but we will adhere to the law."

However, certain villagers have also threatened to take up arms if the number of elephant in their area increases as a result of park fences being taken down. Elephant may kill people or trample crops, no small matter for communities that rely on subsistence farming for their survival.

"People were saying to me, 'We hear on the radio they will move elephants in here. If the animals come, we will take them out,'" says an ecologist who conducted field work in the area. "It's a war zone out there."

Given the number of weapons that are in circulation in the aftermath of Mozambique's 16-year civil war, the villagers' threats cannot be taken lightly.

"This place is awash with guns from the war, including AK47s," said a South African police inspector at the Pafuri border post. "You will see what happens if you try to force them to move."

Steve Collins, a development worker with extensive experience of communities living next to parks, is also concerned.

"Community development issues have become secondary to conservation," he said. "This is colonialism by conservationists."

Nyampuli and her family members were among thousands who fled the area next to the Limpopo during the war, some going as far as Johannesburg. Many returned when the conflict ended in 1992. By then, trading stores established by Portuguese colonists had been burned down and most game had been slaughtered and eaten. The only means of survival for people in Shikumba and neighbouring villages is farming, but drought has pushed them to the edge of starvation.

"There's no rain," sighed Nyampuli. "Only hunger."

Villagers acknowledge that the transfrontier park may help them escape poverty -- even if it also causes headaches in terms of incoming elephants.

"If it can give our children jobs, if it gives us water and arable lands, then we support it," said one inhabitant of the area, pushing his bicycle down a deeply rutted track that passes for a road.

However, a community in South Africa is less optimistic about the eventual benefits of the Transfrontier conservation area.

The Makuleke ethnic group is the first community to have won back land in one of the country's national parks, under a restitution system that was set up to assist people who were forced off their land during colonialism and apartheid.

It now leases this land to lodge operators, including Wilderness Safaris, with substantial revenues flowing back into the community. The Makuleke are concerned their animals will be poached when they wander into Mozambique and Zimbabwe.

"We need to come up with programmes of direct benefit to communities in Zimbabwe and Mozambique," said community spokesperson Lamson Maluleke, who also complains that the Makuleke have not been adequately involved in decisions about the regional park.

However, the Peace Parks Foundation- which originated the idea of the Transfrontier conservation area- insists that community benefits lie at the heart of its work.

The foundation is based in Stellenbosch, in the southern part of South Africa. It was founded in 1997 to help create cross-border parks and promote regional stability. The foundation assists governments to create these conservation areas by securing grants from donor agencies.

To date, six Transfrontier parks have been established, all in Southern Africa, but there are plans to expand the concept throughout the continent.

The Limpopo villagers, says Ari van Wyk- transfrontier park coordinator in Mozambique- will probably stay in the park, but be allocated hunting quotas.

"There will always be subsistence hunting when people are hungry," he said.

As the amount of game circulating between Kruger and the Limpopo parks increases with the dropping of fences, Limpopo villagers may find that their settlements fall within migration routes. With this in mind, a grant of about $8.7-million has been provided by France to relocate villagers to the edges of game corridors- and to provide them with irrigation systems.

Another group of people inhabiting the Limpopo National Park- 6,000 people living in eight villages along the Shingwedzi River- will benefit from a grant of about $7.5-million made available by the German government.

Part of these funds will be used to establish an irrigation scheme outside the park where soils are better, says Van Wyk, by way of an incentive to get villagers to leave the conservation area.

"Most have already accepted resettlement because they live in remote areas without services," he noted. Resettlement is expected to take three to five years.

In addition, certain camps for tourists in the Mozambican section of the Transfrontier park are to be run by villagers.

"We have calculated Limpopo has a carrying capacity of about 1,000 beds for 300,000 potential visitors a year," Peace Parks Foundation chief executive Willem van Riet said. "That translates to about 3,000 jobs."

According to Van Riet, the Limpopo National Park has already created 250 jobs where previously there were none.

Maluleke's concerns about Zimbabwe are echoed among staffers at the Peace Parks Foundation, however.

The country has become increasingly isolated over the past five years, in the wake of a controversial programme of farm seizures, and three elections marred by allegations of human rights abuse and vote rigging. These events have taken their toll on Zimbabwe's economy, creating mass unemployment and triple-digit inflation. Certain Zimbabweans have turned to poaching in a bid to make ends meet.

"Until Zimbabwe comes back into the fold, nothing will happen there because donors are not going to put up money," said Van Riet.

Wildlife operators such as Wilderness Safaris acknowledge that communities living alongside and in the parks will have to be catered for by the transfrontier initiative if it is to succeed. For all this, the park remains an ideal tourism opportunity for them.

"Eventually you will be able to visit three national parks in three different countries without a passport as long as you exit on your side," said Gary van Rensburg, manager of the newest Wilderness Safaris lodge, which opened at Pafuri last month. "That's really attractive from a tourism point of view- and we're right at the centre of it."

Read more about the Greater Limpopo Transfrontier Park here.

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Massive Transfrontier Park Expansion Planned

CAPE TOWN- Plans to establish a Great Limpopo Transfrontier Area- almost trebling the area of land currently protected by the transfrontier park of the same name- are moving ahead, Minister of Environmental Affairs and Tourism Marthinus van Schalkwyk said on
Thursday.

Speaking in Cape Town's Kirstenbosch Botanical Gardens at the launch of this year's National Tourism Month, he said preparations have started on a joint marketing plan for the area, to be presented at a "high-level investor conference" next year.

"We aim this year to initiate the development of the Great Limpopo Transfrontier Area, which will combine national parks, private game parks and conservancies, hunting areas, eco-tourism development areas and communal land."

These will be brought together into a "world-class eco-tourism destination with some 100,000 square kilometres under protection".

The existing Great Limpopo Transfrontier Park- which straddles Parks and sanctuaries across the borders between Mozambique, Zimbabwe and South Africa, and includes the Kruger National Park- covers about 35,000 square kilometres.

Van Schalkwyk said a further 20km of fence between the Kruger National Park and Mozambique will be taken down.

"Over the past year, South Africa has invested R40 million in tourism-related infrastructure [in the Great Limpopo Transfrontier Park], dropped large portions of the border fence and completed the construction of the South African side of the Giriyondo border post."

There are also plans to build a bridge across the Limpopo to "improve access" between the Zimbabwean and South African portions of the Great Limpopo Transfrontier Park.

Van Schalkwyk also highlighted plans to turn KwaZulu-Natal's St Lucia Wetland Park into what he called "the first transfrontier marine park and the first transfrontier world heritage site in Africa".

"The next phase will see us expanding our partnership with Mozambique and Swaziland, whose ministers I will be meeting before the end of November," he said.

National Tourism Month is a joint venture between the government and the tourism industry, and is aimed, among other things, at encouraging South Africans to travel within their own country.

This year's events will culminate in a ceremony on September 27th in Phalaborwa, Limpopo, to mark World National Tourism Day.

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Transfrontier Park Plans On Schedule

SKUKUZA- The Great Limpopo Transfrontier Park (GLTP) and its plans for this year are still on schedule.

This long-term project, that will unite the Limpopo National Park in Mozambique, the Kruger National Park in South Africa and the Gonarezhou National Park, Manjinji Pan Sanctuary and Malipati Safari Area in Zimbabwe, is already more than just talk.

Although the day-to-day running of each park will remain the responsibility of each country, the GLTP will make conservation and perhaps even issues like law enforcement, much easier.

On the South African side, the new Giriyondo Border Post is almost complete. The road to the post is still under construction and houses for the officials who will man it, are being constructed at Letaba. The road to the border is about 24km long and tourists can access it by turning eastwards 20km from Letaba at the Maloponyna Windmill off the HI-6 main road between Letaba and Mopani camps.

The Makhadzi day visitor`s site has been completed and is open to the public. It is on the road to the border post and can accommodate about 100 people at a time. It has been developed on a previous military base in order to leave as small a footprint as possible.

Although the Giriyondo will be completed in the near future, tourists will only be able to use the post to access Mozambique, once the border post on its side has been completed. The funds for this project were only recently received and the Limpopo National Park is busy with the tender process. It is expected that the post will be ready at the end of 2004.

Many people would like to know how visa requirements and currency within the park will work. Giriyondo will be a normal border post, thus, visitors will need the same passport and visa as required when using the Lebombo Border Post to enter Mozambique. Currency will remain the same- in South Africa rand will be used, in Zimbabwe, the Zim dollar and in Mozambique, metichais.

Security is another issue that concerns visitors. On the South African border there are at least 10 patrols at any given time making sure that there are no poachers and illegal immigrants trying to cross the border through KNP. This will continue, with additional security at the Giriyondo.

Other activities within the GLTP include the relocation of about 6,000 animals of various species, de-mining of certain areas in Mozambique and building of infrastructure such as roads, camps and day visitor facilities.

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