Ulusaba Private Game Reserve, owned by Sir Richard Branson as part of the Virgin Limited Edition luxury property portfolio, consists of about 13,500 ha of land set in the heart of the Sabi Sand Private Game Reserve. This private game reserve borders on the sprawling Kruger National Park in South Africa's Mpumalanga province and is home to an abundance of wildlife. Ulusaba means fearful in the local Tsonga Shangaan language and it was a name given to the Sabie River by the Shangaan people. The Sabie River was originally called Ulusaba (fearful river) by the Shangaan simply because there was once a large concentration of dangerous Nile crocodile in the river, hence Ulusaba. Before the establishment of the Kruger National Park, Ulusaba was once a proud home of Tsonga Shangaan people, the Shangaan were evicted from this land when the Kruger National Park was established and were relocated in nearby villages adjacent Ulusaba Private Game Reserve.
One of a handful of private game lodges in the Sabi Sand area, it benefits from the recent removal of fences between private reserves and the greater Kruger National Park. This creates a much larger contiguous body of land available to wildlife in the area. Other than the obvious conservation benefits, this is beneficial to the private lodges which can now boast full access to a much larger variety of scarce wildlife.
Within this solitude of cemetery soil
The breeze embraces me
With the hand of death
And the marble angels
Study us with spying eyes
Relaying messages to god
About the evil walking atop
The slumbering dead
Explaining the feeling of this
Tranquil environment
Is to explain the feeling
Of a first kiss
And to reminisce about the ones
Who were tortured to live causes me to weep
As I watch their loved ones cry
Tombstones are beautifully inscribed
With homage to a former contemplator
Who was consumed by the rite of passage
An eventual obligation
To become as one with the earth
And now their bodies
Which were once beautiful