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Fauna · Kuruman, Northern Cape, South Africa

Pangolin Night Walk — Tswalu Kalahari South Africa

The Tswalu Kalahari Reserve in the Northern Cape is southern Africa's finest destination for Temminck's ground pangolin (Smutsia temminckii) observation — the reserve's dedicated pangolin research programme, combined with the world's most pangolin-rich privately managed landscape, produces night drives with a 70–80% success rate during the pangolin's most active season from October through April. The pangolin's armoured keratin-scale exterior, its walk on its hind legs with the tail counterbalancing, and its defensive curl into a perfect sphere when threatened make it the most visually extraordinary mammal encountered by most visitors. With an estimated 1 million pangolins trafficked annually, the species is the world's most poached mammal, and each wild encounter at Tswalu — the animal walking in the spotlight with complete purpose, its tongue extending 40 centimetres into termite mounds — is simultaneously one of wildlife's finest moments and one of conservation's most urgent.

When
Oct — Apr
Best viewing
A guided night drive through the Kalahari in search of the world's most trafficked mammal, with a 70–80% success rate in season — if found, expect close observation of an armoured, bipedal pangolin foraging at termite mounds in spotlight.
Category
Fauna
Status
Returns Jan 2027

About this spectacle

In the ink-dark Kalahari night, the spotlight catches something extraordinary: a pangolin moving with deliberate, prehistoric purpose across the red sand. Tswalu Kalahari Reserve is the best place on Earth to find Temminck's ground pangolin, and the reserve's dedicated research programme pushes encounter rates to 70–80% during the October–April active season. Visitors watch from the game vehicle as the animal's overlapping keratin scales catch the light like living armour, its body rocking with each bipedal stride, thick tail swung low as a counterweight. When the pangolin reaches a termite mound, it rakes open the crust and extends its tongue — reportedly up to 40 centimetres — into the colony. If startled, it coils into a near-perfect sphere, disappearing into itself. The silence, the darkness, the rarity of the animal, and the knowledge that pangolins are trafficked on a catastrophic scale combine to make each encounter feel both precious and urgent. This is wildlife viewing at its most intimate and unrepeatable.

When to go

Oct — Apr

Getting there

Nearest airport: JNB. Nearest city: Upington.

Booking options

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