New Haven woman considers her roots on trip to Africa

Like many other African Americans, I can only trace my family lineage back to one or maybe two generations. There is not a great deal of written information to search for when you were enslaved. The names were changed once they came off the slave ships, it was not their doing, but by their slave owners. What were my people’s original names? What tribe did they come from?

Dale & Lucinda Cockrell’s adventures with animals in Africa, part 3

The Secretarybird. If a Park visitor is lucky they will get to see one of these striking birds, for they aren’t common. We were extraordinarily lucky on this day, for not only did we see one, but it strode along (at about 2 mph) in close parallel to our c … (read more)

Dale & Lucinda Cockrell’s adventures with animals in Africa, Part 2

We packed up early on this relatively cool day and headed the 72 km (45 miles) to Punda Maria, a trip that takes about three hours. Punda Maria is our favorite camp. It’s smaller than any of the others, more out-of-the-way, quieter, hilly, with fewer visi … (read more)

Dale & Lucinda Cockrell’s adventures with animals in Africa, Part 1

In the fall of 2024, Dale and Lucinda Cockrell of Lincoln traveled to South Africa for a five-week stay in Kruger National Park. Over the course of the trip, Dale Cockrell snapped more than 18,000 photos.

Lincoln couple share stories of African photo safari

On a snowy, below-freezing evening in Lincoln last week, Dale and Lucinda Cockrell shared with listeners at the Lincoln Library stories of their recent adventures in a much warmer climate.