I've just got back from another month in Tete. The temperatures have been phenomenal, and the highest I have ever experienced (watching the weather channel the other evening I noticed that Tete currently has the highest temperatures on the continent)
There hasn't been much rain, and with the heat most wildlife is sheltering during the day. There was a small P. natalensis that was killed by an excavator digging out rocks, but I wasn't able to retrieve any of it or get any photographs. Another small Rhamphiophis oxyrhynchus, several more B. arietans, and two N. mossambica. One large one, 1.6m, was killed by a machine, and the second smaller one I managed to rescue on a small branch, and relocate into the bush, with much spitting in my direction. As you can see, it covered the camera with it.
Megatyphlops schlegerii I think
Lunar Moths, Argema mimosae, have also been quite common
We also took a weekend off and went up to Cahora Bassa, where we stayed on a houseboat and did some tigerfishing. They were biting at a decent pace and we caught quite a few around the 3kg mark, as well as a couple of 10kg Vundu...
I'll be heading back in on the 15th Dec, for a month. by then the rains will have been in full swing for a week or two, so there should be a LOT more to see. Since the site will be pretty much shut down from the 20th I am planning on doing some road cruising after dark, after rainy afternoons. I will also be going back up to the lake in late January, and hopefully there will be a lot more out and about then as well.