Balule Restcamp - Kruger National Park:Balule Restcamp is the smallest and most basic of the Kruger National Park's restcamps and with only 6 quaint huts and 15 camping sites! If you want to experience a semblance of what the park was like in the 70's then this is it! Without shops or restaurants, the camp is ideal for persons seeking solitude. Location: Balule is situated on the southern bank of the Olifants River, approximately 11 km from Olifants Restcamp and 87 km from Phalaborwa Gate. Regulations: Visitors should report at Olifants at least half an hour before the gates close. Day visitors are not permitted. Accommodation: This small camp comprises six rustic three-bed huts with communal ablution facilities. The huts have no windows, only a 20cm gauze covered gap between the top of the wall and the thatch. See Services / Facilities below. 15 camping sites for tents and caravans are also available with decent communal ablution facilities. A communal kitchen with scullery and gas stoves is available. Limited space is available in a communal freezer. Activities:
Services
/ Facilities:
Services / Facilities at the nearby Olifants Camp:
Wheelchair Access:
Ecozones
near this camp:
What to do and see nearby: Routes:
Places of special interest:
Wildlife: Mammals: The
Olifants area plays host to most of the parks classic larger
game. As the name of the camp suggests, elephant are common in
the area. Baboon and Vervet Monkey both inhabit the camp as do
fruit bats and thick-tailed bush babies at night. Lion and leopard
are regularly seen on game drives. Cape Clawless Otter has been
seen from the Olifants lookout point on the gravel road to Letaba. Birding: Two birds to look out for on the Olifants River are Whitefronted and Whitecrowned Plover, both of which can be seen in the riverbed. The bridges on the main tarred road and at Balule are the places to look for these species. Search the riparian trees on the Olifants River near Balule for the Pels Fishing Owl. Camp bird-life in Olifants, like all camps is busy. Red-winged Starlings are particularly prominent. Trumpeter Hornbills and Pied Barbet are regularly seen in camp, and when the many aloe plants in camp are in flower, they act as a magnet for sunbirds. Rufous-bellied Heron has been recorded on the Olifants River. Vegetation In the camp itself there is a plethora of trees and plants, some that are scarce elsewhere in the park. A variety of aloe species are a real highlight. Next to the filling station there is a Sesame Bush. This is probably the only accessible place in the park where it can be seen. In early spring the Sjambok Pod (yellow flowers) and Weeping Boerboon (red flowers) are both in bloom so the veld is a contrast of colour. Also look out for tree euphorbia. Other Camps:
Kruger National Park Links: Info: -:- Introduction -:- Accommodation -:- Activities & Adventures -:- Facilities -:- Wildlife: -:- Ecology -:- Amphibians -:- Birds -:- Fish -:- Mammals -:- |