Kruger National Park in the 1960s

1960

  • 3 June – Olifants Rest Camp officially opens. It replaces the 'old' Olifants Rest Camp, which is renamed Balule.
  • 5 June – An outbreak of anthrax rapidly spreads throughout the area north of the Letaba River. A total of 1 054 carcasses were located and burnt by the time the epidemic ends in October 1960.[1]

1961

  • 20 April – Warden Steyn retires. He's replaced by the chief biologist, A. M. Brynard, who takes the new title of Nature Conservator.[2]
  • 14 October – White rhinos re-introduced to the Park. The first batch of 4 that arrives from Natal are released in a special enclosure near Pretoriuskop.[3]

1962

  • 9–12 April – The first comprehensive aerial census of elephants yields a total of 1 601, mainly north of the Olifants River.[1]

1964

  • 25 May - Due to a severe drought that started in 1962, a campaign to cull 100 Letaba River hippos starts. This campaign ends in August 1964.[4]

1965

  • 30 November - A symposium, attended by many South African biologists, is convened in Pretoria by the National Parks Board on the "over-protection" of nature. Acting on recommendations emanating from this conference, the National Parks Board decides in 1966 to commence with the culling of seven species (elephant, buffalo, hippo, giraffe, zebra, wildebeest and impala).[5]

1967

  • 4 March – Ranger D. Swart reports seeing a group of 6 bat-eared foxes (Otocyon megalotis) near Shingwedzi. Previously thought to occur only in the more arid regions of western Southern Africa, this is the first sighting of these animals in the Park. Further sightings in June 1967 and early 1969 confirm that bat-eared foxes do indeed occur in the Park.[6]

1968

  • 1 January – Two trains collide near Randspruit between Skukuza and Crocodile Bridge in the worst train disaster in the park. Fourteen people die with a further 38 seriously injured.[7]
  • December – A game-driving operation, Operation Numbi, starts in order to remove animals from a 6000 ha excised section of the Park north of Numbi Gate. This area of the Park, around Numbi Kop, was exchanged for other areas due to the rerouting of the Selati railway line which ran through the Park.[8]

1969

  • 1 February – Commercial Airlines (Comair) starts the first scheduled flights from Johannesburg and Phalaborwa to Skukuza with a DC3 aircraft.

See also

References

  1. 1 2 Joubert, Salomon, The Kruger National Park: A History Volume II, High Branching, Johannesburg, 2007
  2. Bulpin, T.V., Treasury of Travel Series: Kruger National Park, Creda Press, 1974.
  3. Pienaar, U. de V. (1970). "The Recolonisation History of the Square-Lipped (White) Rhinoceros in the Kruger National Park (October 1961 – November 1969)". Koedoe. 13 (1): 157–169.
  4. Pienaar, U. de V.; Van Wyk, P. (1966). "An experimental cropping scheme of Hippopotami in the Letaba River of the Kruger National Park". Koedoe. 9 (1): 1–33.
  5. Whyte, I.J. (1999). "A new policy for the management of the Kruger National Park's elephant population". Koedoe. 42 (1): 111–132.
  6. Pienaar, U. de V. (1970). "A note on the occurrence of Bat-eared fox Otocyon megalotis (Desmarest) in the Kruger National Park". Koedoe. 13 (1): 1–22.
  7. Pienaar, U. de V., Neem uit die Verlede, Sigma Pers, 1990.
  8. Penzhorn, B.L. (February 1975). "Operation Numbi". CUSTOS. 4 (3): 29–31.


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