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The Intando Yemvelo "Will of Nature" project is a biodiversity monitoring initiative within the KwaMandlangampisi Protected Environment (KPE), a 30,000-hectare area near Lüneburg, Mpumalanga, South Africa. Formally gazetted in 2010, the KPE consists primarily of private land used for commercial livestock farming, forestry, and cash-crop cultivation. There is a strong conservation ethic amongst the role players. Details of the KPE are provided in the MTPA. (2025). KwaMandlangampisi Protected Environment Five Year Management Plan: 2025 - 2030. Zenodo. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18803474). One of the goals of this project was visual documentation, establishing a comprehensive, enduring photographic record of the landscape and vegetation. This involved taking multiple photographs at fixed sites using mobile devices. Latitude/longitude locations are associated with each site (in CSV metadata records) as well as each image (in EXIF fields). Limited drone photography and video clips were taken to capture the area's rugged, often inaccessible terrain. Fieldwork targeted diverse features, including landscape vistas, invasive alien plants, erosion scars, forest margins, and historic human artefacts like graves, rock walls, and abandoned dwellings. The project draws on the tradition of repeat photography to document ecological change over time. While the immediate result is a collection of approximately 12 MB of imagery and data, its primary value lies in providing a baseline for future researchers to return to these specific locations and identify environmental shifts. The archive of imagery is stored here, being loaded incrementally, usually in tranches of images taken during one calendar month. The B00_manifest.csv is the definitive guide to the contents of this database. Little attention has been given to future retrieval because within a few years, technological advances will make today's methods obsolete. The criteria have been to preserve as much raw data as possible with accurate location details. The project was funded by a grant from the Edumbe Agri Centre NPC, Paulpietersburg, KwaZulu-Natal. Details of the methodology used are in the README.md document.