On 24 April 2004, Sibella was released onto the reserve, regaining her freedom and making history in the process – the first wild cheetah back in the Great Karoo in 130 years.
From the moment of her release, all those involved in her rehabilitation waited anxiously to see whether she would be able to fend for herself, given her injuries and the trauma she had suffered at the hands of man.
But we needn’t have worried. Within days she had made her first kill, a steenbok, and she went on to become a capable hunter despite the occasional twinge from her previous injuries. The coalition of male cheetahs were released a few weeks later, once Sibella had established a territory. This delay was designed to ensure that she had the best chance of survival. And survive she did. In fact, she thrived.
Several months after her release, Sibella gave birth to her first litter of 5 cubs. Instinctively an exemplary mother, Sibella made her den on a steep mountain slope to avoid potential predators. When the cubs were old enough to eat meat, she would allow them their fill before eating herself. Perhaps most extraordinary, however, was the unspoken bond she shared with the human beings in her new home. With the birth of each new litter, when the cubs were old enough to leave their den, this wild cat dutifully presented to her human guardians her latest bundles of fur, calling her cubs to her at she sat proudly in full view.