Wildebeest calf

A lost and confused Wildebeest calf followed a car thinking it was its mother, the couple filming made sure it was safe and led it to the herd 7.5kms away.

 

Zaheer and Asma Ali were heading to their camp in the Kgalagadi Transfrontier Park when they spotted a very curious sight. They shared the story with LatestSightings.com about a Wildebeest calf mistaking a car for its mother. They stuck with the calf to make sure it remained safe and the ending was just the sweetest!

“The Kgalagadi is known for its vast desert plains and open landscapes with dunes of red sand. We were traveling up to Mata Mata, one of the camps, which is the border into Namibia when we turned a corner and came across this little wildebeest calling and standing next to the car in front of us. We were shocked to see that the wildebeest calf moved and stopped when the car did.

At first, we didn’t understand what was happening, but after a few minutes of viewing the wildebeest, checking our surroundings and seeing that there wasn’t a herd in sight, we realised that he was probably lost and the had taken to the car in front of us as its mother. We knew it was a natural instinct for him to follow the biggest moving object closest to him, as he would have done in the herd.

We were afraid for him as he was all alone and vulnerable in prolific lion and cheetah territory and our aim was to help him back to the safety of his herd. At the same time, we felt excited because we knew how rare this sighting was, we had only ever heard of things like this on TV.

We followed the calf and the blue car for about 2kms when the calf decided to follow another car that was passing in the opposite direction. The calf ran in the direction of that car and almost got ran over. Luckily the ABS on the Toyota was better than that on the little calf. He went flying into the car but luckily was not injured.

Then the calf decided to turn towards our vehicle. It was going to the tyres trying to suckle. Looking for a spot on the vehicle to suckle. My wife, Asma, rolled down the window and this little guy was obviously quite distressed. We moved the vehicle forward hoping it would start following us.

We moved quite a distance away from the calf so he didn’t get hurt by the car’s tyres. We drove for about another 4-5km like this in search of a herd of wildebeest. The whole way he was crying out for us to stop, at the same time we saw him run through a puddle of water, which was sweet.

Eventually, the herd of wildebeest appeared. There were around 50 wildebeest in this herd… the calf stopped and within 5 seconds the mother came running towards him and they were reunited. He immediately started suckling on her.

Watch the incredible video below.


Sources: Kruger Sightings YouTube
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About the Author

Tyler Leigh Vivier is a writer for Good Things Guy.

Her passion is to spread good news across South Africa with a big focus on environmental issues, animal welfare and social upliftment. Outside of Good Things Guy, she is an avid reader and lover of tea.

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