Watch: Poachers fire at elephant-viewing tour boat; ‘scariest day of my life’

Video footage shows the scary moment as the tour boat driver shifts into high gear and the guide yells to ‘lie down, lie flat, flat, flat.’

A dozen people aboard an elephant-viewing tour boat in South Africa were forced to duck for cover when they came under fire by poachers Wednesday morning.

It occurred on the eastern shores of the Jozini/Pongolapoort Dam, located on the southern border between South Africa and Eswatini.

Several shots were fired at the double-decker tour boat Jozenic, allegedly by a group of nearly 20 armed men linked to the recent slaughter of about 25 elephants and other illegal wildlife poaching activity around Jozini Dam, according to the Daily Maverick.

Video footage captures the scary moment as the tour boat driver shifted into high gear and the guide yelled for the passengers to “lie down, lie flat, flat, flat.” Two sounds that might be shots can be heard early in the video, though it’s unclear whether that was part of the gunfire.

On board at the time were five Germans, two Americans, one Australian and four South Africans, including local elephant and rhino monitor Suzette Boshoff, who described the attack as “the scariest day of my life.”

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Several elephant carcasses have been discovered along the shoreline of Jozini Dam in recent months. They are part of a herd of more than 70 elephants originating from the private Pongola Game Reserve that roamed into the area during a severe drought seven years ago.

More from the Daily Maverick:

The herd later ran into conflict with rural communities — culminating in the death of a local resident in September 2022, who was trampled by an elephant cow.

The exact circumstances of that incident remain unclear, but it is understood that the cow went on the attack in retaliation for the killing of its calf by elephant poachers.

Some sources have suggested that the death of resident Bheki Nyawo triggered a family vendetta against the herd, leading to the killing of up to 25 elephants in the area over recent months.

“Armed groups of poachers have now completely laid siege to the eastern shores of the lake, with several elephant carcasses recently found, while dozens of gunshots have also been reported in the region,” Heinz de Boer, a Democratic Alliance member of the KwaZulu-Natal Legislature, told the Daily Maverick.

“Guards near the Eswatini border have allegedly also come under attack and infrastructure damaged and torched by the armed gang.

“Furthermore, the DA has now also received video and photographic evidence of a tour boat coming under fire by armed gangs who continue to lay illegal gill nets in the lake…

“The DA will escalate the ongoing war against poaching to the highest levels of government and demands the swift arrests of those who believe they can destroy our natural heritage and tourism sector. The situation can no longer continue.”

Generic photo of African elephants courtesy of Wikipedia Commons; image of tourists ducking for cover courtesy of tour guide aboard the Jozenic.

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Watch: Tour boat goes airborne upon hitting whale, sends tourist flying

Video shows at least one tourist being ejected from a tour boat that went airborne when it struck a whale as it returned to port in Baja.

Six tourists were injured when a small Mexican tour boat returning to La Paz on the east coast of Baja California struck a whale, sending the vessel airborne and ejecting at least one passenger.

The incident occurred Friday afternoon around 4:30 as the boat was returning to port after a trip to Isla Espiritu Santo in the Gulf of California, according to the Daily Mail.

The boat was being driven at an “excessive speed,” according to Veracruz Radio. When it struck the whale, the boat went flying and ejected a passenger as it came back down atop the water. It was not known if the person landed back in the boat or in the water.

Representatives of the Mexican Navy treated the injured, including a father and two children, whose injuries were minor, but the 41-year-old mother was hospitalized with a liver injury, a blow to the head and a fractured right hand, according to Veracruz Radio.

Veracruz Radio also reported that the Environmental Attorney’s Office is planning to apply sanctions against the owners of the boat.

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“Mexican regulations require boats involved in whale watching to stay a safe distance from the creatures, but the boat involved in Friday’s incident did not appear to be engaged in whale watching — or watching out for whales,” the Associated Press wrote.

Civil Protection spokesman Benjamin Garcia said in a press conference that the boat’s operators might not have known of the whale’s presence.

“The whale came up from the sea and that is when it pushed the boat, with some passengers falling and suffering injuries,” Garcia said, according to the Mirror. “Three people were hospitalized, one of them seriously, and two others were treated at the port.”

The whale was believed to have been a humpback. Its condition is unknown.

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