The South African shot was taken in the late evening with fill flash. The dogs wanted to drink at a waterhole but were worried that there might have been a crocodile in it - there wasn't. Just after this the driver stopped the vehicle and we all had drinks from the " cocktail bar" at the back. While we were doing this, the dogs were assembling for a hunt in the gloom about 70 yards away. Very surreal - drinking gin and tonics in the African bush in near darkness while the pack worked itself up for the hunt so close by.
On a previous trip we had seen interaction between a pack of 9 dogs and a hyena. The pack was feeding on an impala kill in long grass when a female hyena came up and stole a leg bone. The pack turned on the hyena and our driver was expecting them to kill it. 5 of them formed a circle round the hyena which went into total submission mode. Eventually the dogs let the hyena go and it went off with its bone.
The dhole shot that I posted when taken in a National Park when 4-5 dhole were milling around close to a breakfast/toilet stop for the tourist vehicles. On another very early morning drive we saw a pack of 15-20 dhole making a kill. It was about 300-400 yards away in long grass, so the only way we knew that there had been a kill was because the whole pack gathered round to feed. Our tour leader told us that large packs of 40 or so dhole had been known to kill tigers - although at a heavy cost to the pack. The Indian National Parks are mostly 90% or so forest with relatively few open clearings, so the dhole's hunting techniques must be different to the African dogs.
African wild dogs, along with cheetah and martial eagles, are definitely are favourite Soutern African animals.