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  • Apr 30, 2016 - Tankwa Town, Karoo Desert, South Africa - A man dressed up in costume stands among AfrikaBurn's many other participants during sunset on the Karoo Desert, South Africa, on April 30, 2016. A couple dressed up as bride and groom walk among the many sculptures at this year's AfrikaBurn in the Karoo Desert, South Africa, on April 30, 2016. AfrikaBurn, the smaller cousin of Burning Man, is now in its tenth year and aims to bring together creatives from all around the world to create art, exist in a non-monetary economy, and celebrate an alternative form of living. (Credit Image: © Tobin Jones/ZUMA Wire/ZUMAPRESS.com)
    20160430_shs_j105_763.jpg
  • Apr 30, 2016 - Tankwa Town, Karoo Desert, South Africa - Participants of this year's AfrikaBurn watch the event's last sunset over the Karoo Desert in South Africa on April 30, 2016. AfrikaBurn, the smaller cousin of Burning Man, is now in its tenth year and aims to bring together creatives from all around the world to create art, exist in a non-monetary economy, and celebrate an alternative form of living. (Credit Image: © Tobin Jones/ZUMA Wire/ZUMAPRESS.com)
    20160430_shs_j105_764.jpg
  • Apr 30, 2016 - Tankwa Town, Karoo Desert, South Africa - A couple dressed up as bride and groom walk among the many sculptures at this year's AfrikaBurn in the Karoo Desert, South Africa, on April 30, 2016. AfrikaBurn, the smaller cousin of Burning Man, is now in its tenth year and aims to bring together creatives from all around the world to create art, exist in a non-monetary economy, and celebrate an alternative form of living. (Credit Image: © Tobin Jones/ZUMA Wire/ZUMAPRESS.com)
    20160430_shs_j105_760.jpg
  • Apr 28, 2016 - Tankwa Town, Karoo Desert, South Africa - People walk and ride by one of AfrikaBurn's ''mutant vehicles'' shaped like a snail during the annual event of AfrikaBurn in the Karoo Desert, South Africa, on April 28, 2016. AfrikaBurn, the smaller cousin of Burning Man, is now in its tenth year and aims to bring together creatives from all around the world to create art, exist in a non-monetary economy, and celebrate an alternative form of living. (Credit Image: © Tobin Jones/ZUMA Wire/ZUMAPRESS.com)
    20160428_shs_j105_785.jpg
  • Apr 30, 2016 - Tankwa Town, Karoo Desert, South Africa - A giant sculpture of the letter ''X'', this year's theme at AfrikaBurn, stands out in front of a setting sun at this year's event in the Karoo Desert, South Africa, on April 30, 2016. AfrikaBurn, the smaller cousin of Burning Man, is now in its tenth year and aims to bring together creatives from all around the world to create art, exist in a non-monetary economy, and celebrate an alternative form of living. (Credit Image: © Tobin Jones/ZUMA Wire/ZUMAPRESS.com)
    20160430_shs_j105_796.jpg
  • Apr 30, 2016 - Tankwa Town, Karoo Desert, South Africa - Participants of this year's AfrikaBurn watch the event's last sunset over the Karoo Desert in South Africa on April 30, 2016. AfrikaBurn, the smaller cousin of Burning Man, is now in its tenth year and aims to bring together creatives from all around the world to create art, exist in a non-monetary economy, and celebrate an alternative form of living. (Credit Image: © Tobin Jones/ZUMA Wire/ZUMAPRESS.com)
    20160430_shs_j105_764.jpg
  • Apr 29, 2016 - Tankwa Town, Karoo Desert, South Africa - A modified vehicle adorned in LED lights, also known as a ''mutant vehicle'', attracts onlookers at AfrikaBurn in the Karoo Desert, South Africa, on April 29, 2016. AfrikaBurn, the smaller cousin of Burning Man, is now in its tenth year and aims to bring together creatives from all around the world to create art, exist in a non-monetary economy, and celebrate an alternative form of living. (Credit Image: © Tobin Jones/ZUMA Wire/ZUMAPRESS.com)
    20160429_shs_j105_777.jpg
  • Apr 28, 2016 - Tankwa Town, Karoo Desert, South Africa - People walk and ride by one of AfrikaBurn's ''mutant vehicles'' shaped like a snail during the annual event of AfrikaBurn in the Karoo Desert, South Africa, on April 28, 2016. AfrikaBurn, the smaller cousin of Burning Man, is now in its tenth year and aims to bring together creatives from all around the world to create art, exist in a non-monetary economy, and celebrate an alternative form of living. (Credit Image: © Tobin Jones/ZUMA Wire/ZUMAPRESS.com)
    20160428_shs_j105_785.jpg
  • Family #roadtrip with @ChevroletSA #TrailBlazer into the #BaviaansRiver Conservancy, forests of #Hogsback and the #GraafReinet district of the #Karoo, while testing the new #Pentax #K3II Camera System, Eastern Cape, South Africa, RSA
    JM-PENTAX-20160709-0624.jpg
  • Family #roadtrip with @ChevroletSA #TrailBlazer into the #BaviaansRiver Conservancy, forests of #Hogsback and the #GraafReinet district of the #Karoo, while testing the new #Pentax #K3II Camera System, Eastern Cape, South Africa, RSA
    JM-PENTAX-20160709-0634.jpg
  • Family #roadtrip with @ChevroletSA #TrailBlazer into the #BaviaansRiver Conservancy, forests of #Hogsback and the #GraafReinet district of the #Karoo, while testing the new #Pentax #K3II Camera System, Eastern Cape, South Africa, RSA
    JM-PENTAX-20160709-0623.jpg
  • South Africa's most loved lion Sylvester who twice cheated execution after escaping from a game park has become the proud father to these adorable cubs. Sylvester made world headlines in 2015 when he was chased out of the Karoo National Park by older lions and during three weeks on the run killed 28 sheep, a cow and a kudu. Rangers dubbed him The Ghost as he kept eluding them as he trekked his way 180 miles away from the park leaving a trail of dead animals he had been feeding on behind him. The public begged for him to be spared and when he was found asleep a decision was taken to give him a chance and he was darted rather than being shot in the $60,000 hunt. Thousand of people from around the world added their voice to appeals to spare him from being euthanised. He was airlifted back to the Karoo National Park but when he escaped again in 2016 the fugitive was dubbed a “problem lion” and rangers said they feared it would have to be the bullet. But again the public came to Sylvester’s rescue and thanks to a tracking collar that had been fitted after his first escape he was found after three days having eaten just the one cow. Sylvester was spared a second time when a vet darted him from a helicopter and taken back to the Karoo National Park where a life or death debate raged over the much loved lion. In the end Sylvester got a stay of execution and was moved to Kuzuko Lodge which is a contractual area of the massive Addo Elephant National Park in a bid to rehabilitate him. He was introduced to another male and two lionesses in the hope he would become a dominant male. And now the team at Kuzuko Lodge in Addo, a member of Legacy Hotels & Resorts who care for Sylvester, revealed that the publics’ faith in the the Houdini-like lion had been justified. Lionesses are fiercely protective of their cubs when they are first born and it was 12 weeks before their suspicions were confirmed that Sylvester and his lioness Angel had indeed mated. These two adorable lions
    MEGA275489_005.jpg
  • South Africa's most loved lion Sylvester who twice cheated execution after escaping from a game park has become the proud father to these adorable cubs. Sylvester made world headlines in 2015 when he was chased out of the Karoo National Park by older lions and during three weeks on the run killed 28 sheep, a cow and a kudu. Rangers dubbed him The Ghost as he kept eluding them as he trekked his way 180 miles away from the park leaving a trail of dead animals he had been feeding on behind him. The public begged for him to be spared and when he was found asleep a decision was taken to give him a chance and he was darted rather than being shot in the $60,000 hunt. Thousand of people from around the world added their voice to appeals to spare him from being euthanised. He was airlifted back to the Karoo National Park but when he escaped again in 2016 the fugitive was dubbed a “problem lion” and rangers said they feared it would have to be the bullet. But again the public came to Sylvester’s rescue and thanks to a tracking collar that had been fitted after his first escape he was found after three days having eaten just the one cow. Sylvester was spared a second time when a vet darted him from a helicopter and taken back to the Karoo National Park where a life or death debate raged over the much loved lion. In the end Sylvester got a stay of execution and was moved to Kuzuko Lodge which is a contractual area of the massive Addo Elephant National Park in a bid to rehabilitate him. He was introduced to another male and two lionesses in the hope he would become a dominant male. And now the team at Kuzuko Lodge in Addo, a member of Legacy Hotels & Resorts who care for Sylvester, revealed that the publics’ faith in the the Houdini-like lion had been justified. Lionesses are fiercely protective of their cubs when they are first born and it was 12 weeks before their suspicions were confirmed that Sylvester and his lioness Angel had indeed mated. These two adorable lions
    MEGA275489_004.jpg
  • South Africa's most loved lion Sylvester who twice cheated execution after escaping from a game park has become the proud father to these adorable cubs. Sylvester made world headlines in 2015 when he was chased out of the Karoo National Park by older lions and during three weeks on the run killed 28 sheep, a cow and a kudu. Rangers dubbed him The Ghost as he kept eluding them as he trekked his way 180 miles away from the park leaving a trail of dead animals he had been feeding on behind him. The public begged for him to be spared and when he was found asleep a decision was taken to give him a chance and he was darted rather than being shot in the $60,000 hunt. Thousand of people from around the world added their voice to appeals to spare him from being euthanised. He was airlifted back to the Karoo National Park but when he escaped again in 2016 the fugitive was dubbed a “problem lion” and rangers said they feared it would have to be the bullet. But again the public came to Sylvester’s rescue and thanks to a tracking collar that had been fitted after his first escape he was found after three days having eaten just the one cow. Sylvester was spared a second time when a vet darted him from a helicopter and taken back to the Karoo National Park where a life or death debate raged over the much loved lion. In the end Sylvester got a stay of execution and was moved to Kuzuko Lodge which is a contractual area of the massive Addo Elephant National Park in a bid to rehabilitate him. He was introduced to another male and two lionesses in the hope he would become a dominant male. And now the team at Kuzuko Lodge in Addo, a member of Legacy Hotels & Resorts who care for Sylvester, revealed that the publics’ faith in the the Houdini-like lion had been justified. Lionesses are fiercely protective of their cubs when they are first born and it was 12 weeks before their suspicions were confirmed that Sylvester and his lioness Angel had indeed mated. These two adorable lions
    MEGA275489_007.jpg
  • South Africa's most loved lion Sylvester who twice cheated execution after escaping from a game park has become the proud father to these adorable cubs. Sylvester made world headlines in 2015 when he was chased out of the Karoo National Park by older lions and during three weeks on the run killed 28 sheep, a cow and a kudu. Rangers dubbed him The Ghost as he kept eluding them as he trekked his way 180 miles away from the park leaving a trail of dead animals he had been feeding on behind him. The public begged for him to be spared and when he was found asleep a decision was taken to give him a chance and he was darted rather than being shot in the $60,000 hunt. Thousand of people from around the world added their voice to appeals to spare him from being euthanised. He was airlifted back to the Karoo National Park but when he escaped again in 2016 the fugitive was dubbed a “problem lion” and rangers said they feared it would have to be the bullet. But again the public came to Sylvester’s rescue and thanks to a tracking collar that had been fitted after his first escape he was found after three days having eaten just the one cow. Sylvester was spared a second time when a vet darted him from a helicopter and taken back to the Karoo National Park where a life or death debate raged over the much loved lion. In the end Sylvester got a stay of execution and was moved to Kuzuko Lodge which is a contractual area of the massive Addo Elephant National Park in a bid to rehabilitate him. He was introduced to another male and two lionesses in the hope he would become a dominant male. And now the team at Kuzuko Lodge in Addo, a member of Legacy Hotels & Resorts who care for Sylvester, revealed that the publics’ faith in the the Houdini-like lion had been justified. Lionesses are fiercely protective of their cubs when they are first born and it was 12 weeks before their suspicions were confirmed that Sylvester and his lioness Angel had indeed mated. These two adorable lions
    MEGA275489_001.jpg
  • South Africa's most loved lion Sylvester who twice cheated execution after escaping from a game park has become the proud father to these adorable cubs. Sylvester made world headlines in 2015 when he was chased out of the Karoo National Park by older lions and during three weeks on the run killed 28 sheep, a cow and a kudu. Rangers dubbed him The Ghost as he kept eluding them as he trekked his way 180 miles away from the park leaving a trail of dead animals he had been feeding on behind him. The public begged for him to be spared and when he was found asleep a decision was taken to give him a chance and he was darted rather than being shot in the $60,000 hunt. Thousand of people from around the world added their voice to appeals to spare him from being euthanised. He was airlifted back to the Karoo National Park but when he escaped again in 2016 the fugitive was dubbed a “problem lion” and rangers said they feared it would have to be the bullet. But again the public came to Sylvester’s rescue and thanks to a tracking collar that had been fitted after his first escape he was found after three days having eaten just the one cow. Sylvester was spared a second time when a vet darted him from a helicopter and taken back to the Karoo National Park where a life or death debate raged over the much loved lion. In the end Sylvester got a stay of execution and was moved to Kuzuko Lodge which is a contractual area of the massive Addo Elephant National Park in a bid to rehabilitate him. He was introduced to another male and two lionesses in the hope he would become a dominant male. And now the team at Kuzuko Lodge in Addo, a member of Legacy Hotels & Resorts who care for Sylvester, revealed that the publics’ faith in the the Houdini-like lion had been justified. Lionesses are fiercely protective of their cubs when they are first born and it was 12 weeks before their suspicions were confirmed that Sylvester and his lioness Angel had indeed mated. These two adorable lions
    MEGA275489_002.jpg
  • South Africa's most loved lion Sylvester who twice cheated execution after escaping from a game park has become the proud father to these adorable cubs. Sylvester made world headlines in 2015 when he was chased out of the Karoo National Park by older lions and during three weeks on the run killed 28 sheep, a cow and a kudu. Rangers dubbed him The Ghost as he kept eluding them as he trekked his way 180 miles away from the park leaving a trail of dead animals he had been feeding on behind him. The public begged for him to be spared and when he was found asleep a decision was taken to give him a chance and he was darted rather than being shot in the $60,000 hunt. Thousand of people from around the world added their voice to appeals to spare him from being euthanised. He was airlifted back to the Karoo National Park but when he escaped again in 2016 the fugitive was dubbed a “problem lion” and rangers said they feared it would have to be the bullet. But again the public came to Sylvester’s rescue and thanks to a tracking collar that had been fitted after his first escape he was found after three days having eaten just the one cow. Sylvester was spared a second time when a vet darted him from a helicopter and taken back to the Karoo National Park where a life or death debate raged over the much loved lion. In the end Sylvester got a stay of execution and was moved to Kuzuko Lodge which is a contractual area of the massive Addo Elephant National Park in a bid to rehabilitate him. He was introduced to another male and two lionesses in the hope he would become a dominant male. And now the team at Kuzuko Lodge in Addo, a member of Legacy Hotels & Resorts who care for Sylvester, revealed that the publics’ faith in the the Houdini-like lion had been justified. Lionesses are fiercely protective of their cubs when they are first born and it was 12 weeks before their suspicions were confirmed that Sylvester and his lioness Angel had indeed mated. These two adorable lions
    MEGA275489_003.jpg
  • South Africa's most loved lion Sylvester who twice cheated execution after escaping from a game park has become the proud father to these adorable cubs. Sylvester made world headlines in 2015 when he was chased out of the Karoo National Park by older lions and during three weeks on the run killed 28 sheep, a cow and a kudu. Rangers dubbed him The Ghost as he kept eluding them as he trekked his way 180 miles away from the park leaving a trail of dead animals he had been feeding on behind him. The public begged for him to be spared and when he was found asleep a decision was taken to give him a chance and he was darted rather than being shot in the $60,000 hunt. Thousand of people from around the world added their voice to appeals to spare him from being euthanised. He was airlifted back to the Karoo National Park but when he escaped again in 2016 the fugitive was dubbed a “problem lion” and rangers said they feared it would have to be the bullet. But again the public came to Sylvester’s rescue and thanks to a tracking collar that had been fitted after his first escape he was found after three days having eaten just the one cow. Sylvester was spared a second time when a vet darted him from a helicopter and taken back to the Karoo National Park where a life or death debate raged over the much loved lion. In the end Sylvester got a stay of execution and was moved to Kuzuko Lodge which is a contractual area of the massive Addo Elephant National Park in a bid to rehabilitate him. He was introduced to another male and two lionesses in the hope he would become a dominant male. And now the team at Kuzuko Lodge in Addo, a member of Legacy Hotels & Resorts who care for Sylvester, revealed that the publics’ faith in the the Houdini-like lion had been justified. Lionesses are fiercely protective of their cubs when they are first born and it was 12 weeks before their suspicions were confirmed that Sylvester and his lioness Angel had indeed mated. These two adorable lions
    MEGA275489_006.jpg
  • September 30, 2018 - South Africa - Safari ostrich show farm Oudtshoorn, Little Karoo, South Africa, Africa (Credit Image: © Sergi Reboredo/ZUMA Wire)
    20180930_zap_r133_032.jpg
  • Cape Town - 180814 - Tourists and local nature enthusiasts flok to the West Coast National Park as this years annual flower season starts. The official Flower Season opens on 1 August and closes on 30 September, allowing visitors to the park access to the prolific Postberg section, which is closed to the public throughout the rest of the year. Picture: Armand Hough / African News Agency (ANA)
    70257075WestCoastFlowersINL9109.JPG
  • Cape Town - 180814 - Tourists and local nature enthusiasts flok to the West Coast National Park as this years annual flower season starts. The official Flower Season opens on 1 August and closes on 30 September, allowing visitors to the park access to the prolific Postberg section, which is closed to the public throughout the rest of the year. Picture: Armand Hough / African News Agency (ANA)
    70254721WestCoastFlowersINL9192.JPG
  • Cape Town - 180814 - Tourists and local nature enthusiasts flok to the West Coast National Park as this years annual flower season starts. The official Flower Season opens on 1 August and closes on 30 September, allowing visitors to the park access to the prolific Postberg section, which is closed to the public throughout the rest of the year. Picture: Armand Hough / African News Agency (ANA)
    70257907WestCoastFlowersINL9116.JPG
  • Cape Town - 180814 - Tourists and local nature enthusiasts flok to the West Coast National Park as this years annual flower season starts. The official Flower Season opens on 1 August and closes on 30 September, allowing visitors to the park access to the prolific Postberg section, which is closed to the public throughout the rest of the year. Picture: Armand Hough / African News Agency (ANA)
    70255802WestCoastFlowersINL9237.JPG
  • Cape Town - 180814 - Tourists and local nature enthusiasts flok to the West Coast National Park as this years annual flower season starts. The official Flower Season opens on 1 August and closes on 30 September, allowing visitors to the park access to the prolific Postberg section, which is closed to the public throughout the rest of the year. Picture: Armand Hough / African News Agency (ANA)
    70257687WestCoastFlowersINL9166.JPG
  • Cape Town - 180814 - Jacques Naude from George admires the flowers. Tourists and local nature enthusiasts flok to the West Coast National Park as this years annual flower season starts. The official Flower Season opens on 1 August and closes on 30 September, allowing visitors to the park access to the prolific Postberg section, which is closed to the public throughout the rest of the year. Picture: Armand Hough / African News Agency (ANA)
    70260742WestCoastFlowersINL9008.JPG
  • Cape Town - 180814 - Tourists and local nature enthusiasts flok to the West Coast National Park as this years annual flower season starts. The official Flower Season opens on 1 August and closes on 30 September, allowing visitors to the park access to the prolific Postberg section, which is closed to the public throughout the rest of the year. Picture: Armand Hough / African News Agency (ANA)
    70256876WestCoastFlowersINL9130.JPG
  • Cape Town - 180814 - Tourists and local nature enthusiasts flok to the West Coast National Park as this years annual flower season starts. The official Flower Season opens on 1 August and closes on 30 September, allowing visitors to the park access to the prolific Postberg section, which is closed to the public throughout the rest of the year. Picture: Armand Hough / African News Agency (ANA)
    70256424WestCoastFlowersINL9171.JPG
  • Cape Town - 180814 - Tourists and local nature enthusiasts flok to the West Coast National Park as this years annual flower season starts. The official Flower Season opens on 1 August and closes on 30 September, allowing visitors to the park access to the prolific Postberg section, which is closed to the public throughout the rest of the year. Picture: Armand Hough / African News Agency (ANA)
    70256216WestCoastFlowersINL9204.JPG
  • Cape Town - 180814 - Tourists and local nature enthusiasts flok to the West Coast National Park as this years annual flower season starts. The official Flower Season opens on 1 August and closes on 30 September, allowing visitors to the park access to the prolific Postberg section, which is closed to the public throughout the rest of the year. Picture: Armand Hough / African News Agency (ANA)
    70256074WestCoastFlowersINL9147.JPG
  • Cape Town - 180814 - Tourists and local nature enthusiasts flok to the West Coast National Park as this years annual flower season starts. The official Flower Season opens on 1 August and closes on 30 September, allowing visitors to the park access to the prolific Postberg section, which is closed to the public throughout the rest of the year. Picture: Armand Hough / African News Agency (ANA)
    70255307WestCoastFlowersINL9197.JPG
  • June 30, 2015 - South African Ostrichs, Karoo, South Africa  (Credit Image: © Tuns/DPA/ZUMA Wire)
    20150630_zaa_d20_1430.jpg
  • July 6, 2015 - South African Ostrichs, Karoo, South Africa  (Credit Image: © Tuns/DPA/ZUMA Wire)
    RTI20150706_zaa_d20_1475.jpg
  • June 30, 2015 - South African Ostrichs, Karoo, South Africa  (Credit Image: © Tuns/DPA/ZUMA Wire)
    RTI20150630_zaa_d20_1430.jpg
  • July 6, 2015 - South African Ostrichs, Karoo, South Africa  (Credit Image: © Tuns/DPA/ZUMA Wire)
    20150706_zaa_d20_1475.jpg
  • June 30, 2015 - South African Ostrichs, Karoo, South Africa  (Credit Image: © Tuns/DPA/ZUMA Wire)
    20150630_zaa_d20_1430.jpg
  • July 6, 2015 - South African Ostrichs, Karoo, South Africa  (Credit Image: © Tuns/DPA/ZUMA Wire)
    20150706_zaa_d20_1475.jpg
  • South Africa - Cape Town - 23 September 2020  - Roosterkoek queen tannie Poppie van As making her famous roosterkoek in Paarl. Tannie Poppie van As comes from the Karoo town of Laingsburg and has become a national treasure for her lovable personality and delicious roosterkoek, a local delicacy made of dough roasted on an open fire. Tannie Poppie started her roadside roosterkoek stand to earn an income and won the hearts of passersby. It was not long before she became famous as she appeared on lifestyle TV shows, in magazine articles and even a documentary. Her supporters even included a group of Italian cyclists, who ended up inviting her on an Italian adventure. Drakenstein Municipality and Paarl Wine and Tourism are celebrating unity in diversity on the streets of this historic Boland town with a unique collaboration that forms part of the Tourism Reboot campaign for the region. On Wednesday Tannie Poppie kom Paarl toe! will feature a cast of heritage chefs and local entrepreneurs joining forces to showcase traditional South African delicacies and to pay tribute to the diversity that lies at the heart of South Africa’s proud heritage. Picture: Henk Kruger/African News Agency (ANA)
    Tannie-Poppie-Roosterkoek_Heritage-f...jpg
  • South Africa - Cape Town - 23 September 2020  - Roosterkoek queen tannie Poppie van As making her famous roosterkoek in Paarl. Tannie Poppie van As comes from the Karoo town of Laingsburg and has become a national treasure for her lovable personality and delicious roosterkoek, a local delicacy made of dough roasted on an open fire. Tannie Poppie started her roadside roosterkoek stand to earn an income and won the hearts of passersby. It was not long before she became famous as she appeared on lifestyle TV shows, in magazine articles and even a documentary. Her supporters even included a group of Italian cyclists, who ended up inviting her on an Italian adventure. Drakenstein Municipality and Paarl Wine and Tourism are celebrating unity in diversity on the streets of this historic Boland town with a unique collaboration that forms part of the Tourism Reboot campaign for the region. On Wednesday Tannie Poppie kom Paarl toe! will feature a cast of heritage chefs and local entrepreneurs joining forces to showcase traditional South African delicacies and to pay tribute to the diversity that lies at the heart of South Africa’s proud heritage. Picture: Henk Kruger/African News Agency (ANA)
    Tannie-Poppie-Roosterkoek_Heritage-f...jpg