Skip to the content

info@mammalwatching.com

Join a trip

logo mainlogo darklogo light
  • Places
  • Community
    • Getting started
    • Community forum
    • The mammal list rankings
    • Join a trip
  • Resources
    • Conservation
    • Primates
      • South America
      • Madagascar
    • Trip providers
    • The mammal list rankings
    • Global mammal checklist
    • Mammalwatching gear
    • Mammal vocalisations library
    • World’s best mammalwatching
    • IUCN newsletters
  • Podcast
  • Login
  • Register

DONATE NOW

logo main
  • Places
  • Community
    • Getting started
    • Community Forum
    • The mammal list rankings
    • Join a trip
  • Resources
    • Conservation
    • Primates
      • South America
      • Madagascar
    • Trip providers
    • The mammal list rankings
    • Global mammal checklist
    • Mammalwatching gear
    • Mammal vocalisations library
    • World’s best mammal watching
    • IUCN newsletters
  • Podcasts
  • Login
  • Register

Archive

Home(Page 17)
17 April 2024
ground pangolinhoney badgerNamibia

Namibia late 2023 – Altoe + Balmford

Read More
15 April 2024
Gambian mongooseGeoffroy’s colobusGhanaLarge-spotted genetLong-tailed pangolinLowe’s mona monkeyOlive colobusPel's flying squirrelWestern hartebeest

Ghana trip report – February 2024

Here is a report of our trip done in Ghana in February 2024. Several cool Western African mammals were observed during this 2-week long trip, including two marvelous sightings of l

Read More
14 April 2024
!Khwa ttuCape townSouth Africa

South Africa: Western Cape edition

The Western Cape is not the premier mammalwatching destination in South Africa. Although I was pleasantly suprised by the amount of mammals I saw. A fun trip that was very suprisin

Read More
12 April 2024
South Africa

South Africa trip report

Klil and Assaf Zaitlin, mammals and birds. 10 days and 48 species including Aardvark, aardwolf and brown hyena.

Read More
3 April 2024
BeiraDibatagEthiopiaHorn of AfricaSomaliland

New Trip Reports: Somaliland and Ethiopian Somali Region

Here are two reports from Hakan Pohlstrand covering trips to the Horn of Africa at the start of this year. Ethiopian Somali Region: Hakan Pohlstran, 8 days & 13 species includi

Read More
1 April 2024
indriLac Alaotra Bamboo LemurLemurlemursmadagascar trip reportmadagascar wildlifemammalwatching madagascar

Mammals of Madagascar Part 4

Hi people, In the summer of 2023 I went on a birdwatching trip of five weeks, chasing as many mammals as I could! I got to a whopping 77 species of mammals, of which most were also

Read More
28 March 2024
antilopeGrevy's zebraHorn of AfricaKenyaprimate

Northeast Kenya Antelope Survey

Northeast Kenya is the most poorly known region in eastern Africa as concerns the taxonomy, distribution, abundance, threats, and conservation status of its larger mammal fauna. No

Read More
27 March 2024
Ivory CoastTai National ParkWhite-bellied pangolin

Ivory Coast 2024 – the Charles Foley version

Here is my account of the recent trip that Jon Hall and I took to the Tai Forest. Mine is the low-rent, gossipy version compared to Jon’s high-brow fare. ‘The Sun&#8217

Read More
23 March 2024
Cote D'IvoireIvory CoastLiberian MongooseTai National Park

Tai National Park, Côte d’Ivoire, 2024

Tai National Park is some of the best remaining rainforest in West Africa. Over the last few years it has become a top tier mammalwatching destination with regular trips from Pictu

Read More
23 March 2024
Lemurlemursmadagascar trip reportmadagascar wildlifemammalwatching madagascarRing-tailed LemurSpotted Fanaloka

Mammals of Madagascar Part 3 (of 4)

Hi people, In the summer of 2023 I went on a birdwatching trip of five weeks, chasing as many mammals as I could! I got to a whopping 77 species of mammals, of which most were also

Read More

Posts pagination

01 … 016 017 018 … 027

Community

3 July 2026
Malaysia and Thailand trip report, April-May 2026.
2 July 2026
Advertising: Bolivian Cat Specialist Tours in October 2026 & October 2027 with Royle Safaris
2 July 2026
Borneo guides

Latest comments

  1. Munkhnast on Mongolia Suggestions6 July 2026
  2. tomeslice on My Big Cat Year – Borneo and the search for the five Wildcat species and other unique wildlife and habitat6 July 2026
  3. Jon Hall on Three days in Panama, 2026: Clouded Oncilla and more!5 July 2026

Subscribe to updates

Enter a few details to subscribe to this site and receive notifications of new Community posts by email.

Create Subscription

Follow us

%%tb-image-alt-text%%

Offset your Greenhouse Gases when you fly - and protect Gola Rainforest

Special thanks to
rewild logo
Zeiss Seeing beyond

About Jon Hall

Genetically Welsh, spiritually Australian, currently in New York City. I’ve also lived and worked in London, Canberra, Paris and Lusaka, and visited almost 120 countries.

More about Jon
About mammalwatching.com
Terms and conditions
Get in touch
Buy me a coffee

Latest comments

  1. Munkhnast on Mongolia Suggestions6 July 2026

    Hi Adrian, please check out at www.menentours.com

  2. tomeslice on My Big Cat Year – Borneo and the search for the five Wildcat species and other unique wildlife and habitat6 July 2026

    That's a freaking amazing report, Marc! I'm very happy for you! 6 Sunda Pangolins.... oh the jealousy ;-) Cheers! Tomer

  3. Jon Hall on Three days in Panama, 2026: Clouded Oncilla and more!5 July 2026

    Thanks. We will read this one. Do send any more to me that you recommend.

  4. Sebastian Kennerknecht on Three days in Panama, 2026: Clouded Oncilla and more!5 July 2026

    Hey Jon, Glad to start the discussion! There are some biologists who have looked at this specifically, like Vincenzo Penteriani,…

Community

30 June 2026
Three days in Panama, 2026: Clouded Oncilla and more!
30 June 2026
Mongolia Suggestions
29 June 2026
Trip report Georgia – September 2025
29 June 2026
Bang Lang and Hala Bala in Southern Thailand (May 2026)

© 2026 Jon Hall. mammalwatching.com | Privacy Policy

Have a question?

Get in touch!

Our info

+0011 22 344 45

jon@mammalwatching.com

Brooklyn,
New York USA

Follow us