The lion sleeps ... undisturbed by traffic on a warm tar road in Kruger
Image: Kruger National Park section ranger Richard Sowry
The pictures were taken by ranger Richard Sowry and the park said the pride was usually resident on the Kempiana Contractual Park, an area Kruger tourists usually do not see.
The park shared the photographs of the pride on the tar road just outside the Orpen rest camp on Wednesday afternoon.
South African National Parks closed its tourism facilities to the public from March 25 in support of the nationwide lockdown.
SANParks spokesperson Ike Phaahla said the pictures were rare because animals would normally stay away from the roads because of continuous traffic during the day. However, they liked the road because it was warm and dry compared with the bush.
He said rangers were working at the park.
“Rangers are essential services, they look after fauna and flora, infrastructure and the entire ecosystem of the Kruger National Park.”