PHOTO: GLENN ZORPETTE
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While interviewing software company founder Louis
Liebenberg in South Africa last October, Executive
Editor Glenn Zorpette got to tag along on foot with some
experts as they tracked lions in the wild. Liebenberg,
profiled in this issue's Dream Jobs report, founded
CyberTracker Software Ltd. in Cape Town, which produces
an acclaimed program that automates the task of
monitoring the wildlife in an area.
When his schedule permits, Liebenberg, who counts
animal tracking among his many talents, teaches and
evaluates less-experienced animal trackers. In fact,
during Zorpette's visit, Liebenberg began a weeklong
stint evaluating trackers in the tony Singita private
game reserve in South Africa's Kruger National Park.
On the second afternoon of the trip, Liebenberg
evaluated Sylvester Makhubela, a young black African
candidate for senior tracker status. His test was,
basically, to find a lion. Liebenberg, Zorpette,
Makhubela, and two other trackers scrambled out of a
Land Rover at 3:00 p.m. "The last thing they said to me
before we headed into the bush was, 'Whatever happens,
don't run unless we tell you to,'" Zorpette recalls.
With Makhubela in the lead, the group trod over tawny
clumps of grass and among scattered bush and acacia
trees near the N'wetsi River. Between 3:15 and 3:30
Makhubela was on the trail of some lion paw prints; a
little after 3:30, he came upon a fresh antelope
carcass. At 4:10, Makhubela found what he was looking
for: a pride of lions [photo], including three
lionesses, a dozen cubs, and a big male lazing nearby.
Liebenberg was delighted. "There are few people alive
who can do what we just did," he told Zorpette, clearly
proud of Makhubela, who earned his senior tracker
stripes that day.