Tracking animals from a self-drive vehicle using environmental cues — vultures circling overhead, fresh tracks in morning dust, alarm calls from prey species, and behavioural signals from other vehicles — is the core competency that distinguishes productive self-drive safari game drives from random track driving. Professional guides spend years developing these tracking skills, but the fundamental animal tracking cues used on a self-drive vehicle are learnable by any attentive visitor within the first 2 to 3 days of a safari circuit. The five most important tracking animals self-drive vehicle cues are: vulture behaviour, morning track reading, alarm call direction, vegetation disturbance, and other-vehicle observation.
Vulture Behaviour: The Most Reliable Remote Cue
- Circling vultures (high, spiralling): Indicate thermal rising from a warm carcass or active predator feeding site. The vultures are gaining altitude before descending — the kill is beneath the column, typically 0.5 to 3km away.
- Descending vultures (losing altitude, multiple birds): The kill is active and the lions/leopard/cheetah are feeding or have recently left the carcass. Drive toward the descending vultures — the sighting is current and within visual range.
- Vultures in trees near a carcass: The kill has been fed upon — the predator may still be nearby or resting under shade within 100 metres of the kill.
Morning Track Reading on Murram Tracks
The first vehicle on a murram park track at 6am reads the overnight animal crossing record in the dust. Key track identification:
- Lion prints: Large round prints (20 to 25cm), no claw marks visible (retracted claws), front feet larger than rear
- Hyena prints: Similar size to lion but oval-shaped, claw marks visible, asymmetrical toe arrangement
- Elephant: Circular impression 30 to 50cm diameter with rounded edges — often accompanied by scuff marks from the side of the foot
- Leopard: Smaller than lion (8 to 12cm), clean round print, retracted claws, deeply defined toe pads
Alarm Calls: The Wildlife Communication System
- Impala alarm snort: A sharp nasal bark — every impala within earshot immediately raises its head and stares in the direction of the snort. The direction all heads are pointing indicates the predator’s location within 100 metres.
- Vervet monkey alarm call: Vervets have specific alarm calls for different predator types — the eagle alarm (repetitive high bark) causes all vervets to go flat into the grass; the snake alarm (a chutter call) causes them to mob from branches. The aerial predator alarm is the most useful for self-drive visitors as it indicates a martial eagle or crowned eagle working the area.
- Zebra alarm bark: A dog-like bark from a dominant stallion — indicates a predator detected within 200 metres of the herd. The herd bunches and faces the detected predator.