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Mara crisis bites harder as tourists stay home

Category: Emergency appeals, Mara Triangle | Date: Mar 07 2008 | By: admin

Although the political crisis in Kenya may be over or at least reduced, tourist and tourism revenues have not and will not snap back. The cancellation of flight routes, closure of hotels and tour companies, and booking cancellations all took place over a few weeks. Restoring confidence in Kenya as a tourism destination however, will take years and massive investments in marketing Kenya.

While in the Mara I had long discussions with the CEO of the Mara Conservancy, Brian Heath.

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His dream was and is to make the Mara economically sustainable from tourism revenues. I thought you’d like to read some of the extracts of his February report to get a good understanding of the scale of the problem. Notice how long the security section of the report is!

Tourism

February has been another disastrous month for tourist visitations. There was a short period in the middle of the month when people began to return and it looked as if the situation might be salvaged to some extent. However, the stand-off between the two main political parties and renewed threats of mass action throughout most of February meant that tourists are still very reluctant to visit. We may be lucky and maintain the expected 30% of our original estimates for the coming months but can not foresee any significant improvement in tourist visitations before July.

Security

Ten poachers were arrested during February, 9 of them were Tanzanians and the tenth a Luo poacher who had been arrested before. This brings the total to 1,013 poachers arrested since June 2001.

The Ngiro-are team arrested one poacher on the evening of the 9th. He was one of three people entering the Lemai Wedge to hunt along the escarpment near Kinyangaga.

Some meat was found stashed in a tree near Ol Kurruk by a routine patrol between the community scouts and our rangers on the 15th. The following day we mounted a patrol in the Sankuria forest and arrested one Luo poacher, he had been in the forest for six days and had killed a zebra and a waterbuck. Three wire snares were recovered.

The Ngiro-are team arrested two wa Kuria poachers on the 19th as they were traversing the Lemai Wedge, on their way to hunt hippo along the Mara River. They informed us that they had met with another group of poachers, also on their way to hunt hippo on the Narok side of the river. The following day we mounted a joint patrol along the Narok side of the river but found no poacher activity.

The Ngiro-are team arrested one poacher as he and his companion came down the escarpment to hunt in the Lemai Wedge late in the evening of the 22nd. They recovered four wire snares.

The Ngiro-are team were asked to assist the rangers from Kinyangaga on the 24th. The rangers had confiscated some wa Kuria cattle for illegal grazing in the Lemai Wedge and were taking them to Kinyangaga when they were accosted by an irate mob of wa Kuria, trying to recover their cattle. The situation became tense, with arrows and bullets fired at the rangers. Our rangers assisted in getting the cattle into the Kinyangaga compound and then withdrew. The wa Kuria continued firing into the compound. The Tanzanian rangers managed to apprehend one person with a firearm, only to discover that he was a policeman from the local village.

The Ngiro-are rangers found a temporary poacher’s camp at 9.00 am on the 25th in a water-course between Ol Dono Nasipa and Konyoike – about half a kilometre into Tanzania. The five poachers were the group we had been looking for on the 19th on the Narok side of the river. They had camped upstream from the search area, had killed one hippo and were on their way home after drying the meat. All five were arrested, four by the Ngiro-are team and the fifth after they were joined by the Serena rangers. Three wire snares and three heavy pears were recovered.

Revenue and Accounts

In January we had to re-calculate our budget, based on possibly receiving only 30% of our anticipated revenue. Although we implemented most of our cost-cutting measures in January our January Profit and Loss account indicated that we have a shortfall of Ksh 1.576 million (US$ 22,500 at the current rate of exchange.

We have been very fortunate in receiving support to meet our projected shortfall and would like to thank the following for their support. I would particularly like to single out Asuka for her support; she has raised US$ 29,000 in three weeks through her articles and blog for the Mara Conservancy. This shows the power of the Internet in raising funds if the message is right.

CMC Motors - 2,500,000 (approx US $ 40,000) for vehicle service and spares for one year

Asuka - 2,030,000 (approx US $ 23,000) Donations through her blog

Anne Kent-Taylor Fund 1,050,000 (approx US $ 12,000) donation for community scouts and security allowances

WildlifeDirect 700,000 (US $ 10,000) Donations through the blog

Care for the Wild 70,000(US $ 1,000) Donation for anti-harassment

Mc Phelps and family 70,000 (US $ 1,000) for Cheetah 1 (patrol team)

Total Raised to date 6,420,000

The exchange rate is about 1$=Ksh70Brian also noted that the Masai who had been laid off by hotels had returned to their villages where they were now herding livestock. These include diploma holders who just can’t make a living anymore in tourism.

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We interviewed Dixon qualified in hospitality, who had returned to the village to herd cattle, a job normally reserved for boys. He was not alone, there were hundreds of cases like his. He was very bitter not about the hotel that fired him, but with the Kenyan leaders who are ignoring the suffering of so many as a result of the violence that followed the election dispute.

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If the Maasai cannot get jobs in the tourism and wildlife sector, they will do what they need to do to survive- increase their herds in the Greater Mara ecosystem. This is perhaps the greatest threat to wildlife which migrates through the entire ecosystem which includes the Serengetti in Tanzania. Cattle, sheep and goats all compete for the same grazing as the wildlife…if we lose the Greater Mara, it will only be a short time before we lose the Mara as a consequence. The harmony between the Maasai and wildlife is on the verge of shattering as a result of this crisis. You can learn more about the Maasai wildlife interface in Asukas blog (she deals with livestock diseases that could affect wildlife) and at this website called reto-o- reto which means ‘I help you, you help me’. It’s a research project all about finding better land use management for pastoralists.

For the Mara Triangle the lack of funds means that planned developments have been put on hold. Only essential road works are being done (anyone who has been to the Mara knows what why roads maintenance is so critical).

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These workers were on a break - the machine had broken down! Most of the road working machines are lying idle now.

Roads can wait but patrols cannot.

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Despite all the cost cutting, we are now facing a situation where patrols are threatened. If patrols are halted, poaching will escalate and could go out of control, this we must prevent.

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Before I go, this one’s for Theresa, Sheryl, FJP and all the others who love donkeys. This foal was absolutely tiny and adorable. Enjoy :)


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14 Responses to “Mara crisis bites harder as tourists stay home”

F. J. Pechir, on 07 Mar 2008

Thank you so much dear Paula for this beautiful photo! I will print it and put it in a frame here in my office!! The info you are given is really worrying, I hope that things could go better…

Theresa Siskind St Petersburg FL, on 07 Mar 2008

Thanks for this pic of the foal, very sweet baby. Beasts of burden don’t have glamour but sure have helped mankind throughout the ages, bless them all. Emmanuel’s trip to the states for fundraising has some of us brainstorming for possible future venues here in the US to raise funds for the gorillas. Can it be possible for Mr. Heath to do the same thing? The Bronx Zoo, Washington Zoo, and the San Diego Zoo would all be great places to hold such an event. If one is held at the Bronx Zoo, in NYC, the American Museum of Natural History offers free advertising for non profit events in the NY area. PLEASE, if anyone has any ideas, contacts, that might prove helpful, just email me @ siskind8@msn.com.

F. J. Pechir, on 07 Mar 2008

Dear Paula, please allow me to write more news about elephants. Until a few days ago I didn´t think that contraception is a good choice to control the overpopulation of elephants in South Africa, because this kind of method would be stressfull for elephants. Females elephants give birth only each 4 or 5 years, and with the contraception females do not give birth but come in heath every four months, with all the stress and energy loss for adult females and for the adults bulls, bringing inestability to the herds. But 10 years of research in contraception in elephants in Natal could give some new light on this matter. This reaserch has been done in the 30,000 hectare KwaZulu-Natal´s Tembe National Park, bordering south Africa and Mozambique. The contraception consists of a vaccine that inhibit sperm from entering the egg, it can be used indefinitely and is reversible, slowing down the elephant´s growth rate. It is not reported any stress in the more than 200 individuals in the park, and abouth 80 females have been darted with the contraceptive. Maybe now this option is also a viable one in South Africa combined with the reubication or translocation, instead of a slaughter. The Tembe tribe gave some of their lands to create Tembe National Park in 1983 and are willing to put more land to the east and south-west of the park under conservation. More land for elephants!

F. J. Pechir, on 07 Mar 2008

By the way, this lovely and all-energy woman, Theresa Siskind, has give us the link to sign a petition against the possible slaughter of elephants in South Africa, just google “petitions to ban culling of South African Elephants”, then choice the first option and sign! Your sign can make a real difference!! Thanks to all of you in advance!

sheryl, washington dc, on 07 Mar 2008

Oh you Luddites … here’s a link to a petition: http://www.ipetitions.com/petition/ElephantCulling/

Here’s another petition from Care2 that’s booming: http://www.thepetitionsite.com/takeaction/502818212

s.

Paula, on 07 Mar 2008

Hi FJP, thanks for your comments and research! I was involved in early efforts on elephant contraception in Kenya with Joyce Poole - we recognized in the late 1980’s that it was an important management option for fenced in populations. Sadly after Dr. Leakey left KWS the program was stopped mid track and all our work was lost, but we could see the merits. The research was moved to South Africa where indeed contraception based on a vaccine approach (you inject proteins from pig ovaries into elephants which develop an immune response to their own eggs). The method is easy, can be done remotely (darts with slow release pellets) and it can be temporary or permanent depending on use of boosters (just like our vaccines). for this to work you really need to know the elephants and monitor them closely. What it does is creates a population of menopausal elephants - which is not that unusual in the species but it can have social effects. If all females are menopausal it means none will go into estrus (no not frequent hot flushes)and the males will get very frustrated. So one approach is to only vaccinate part of the population which obviously means doing it before there’s a population size crisis. Also, having no babies in any family will affect the family quite significantly and Cynthia Moss of the Amboseli Elephant Research Project has published on the importance of babies. Frankly, managing elephants isn’t about culling or not culling, it’s about taking appropriate steps before the population becomes a problem. In Kenya elephants break electric fences using tusks to twist the wires, or big males push young males through fences - females crawl under electric fences …They are so clever that we will need to come up with solutions faster than they create them. There’s a funny film on Zooillogix with elephant painting a picture of another elephant!

Paula, on 07 Mar 2008

Theresa, thanks so much for all your ideas and suggestions. I will talk to Emmanuel and perhaps we can schedule a skpe conference for those interested in talking directly to us about the situation in Mara and Congo, as well as to talk about how we can do more together to raise support for these two crises. Would that be of interest to you… and any other interested bloggers?

Theresa Siskind St Petersburg FL, on 08 Mar 2008

Good morning to you Paula! Most definetly sounds like a wonderful idea. Please keep us posted.

sheryl, washington dc, on 08 Mar 2008

I dunno, Paula. I don’t have skype, I don’t own a land line phone (cell phone only), but since you’re going to be in my TOWN can we meet, if only for a conversation and a drink?

s.

Susan Sharma, on 09 Mar 2008

Just chanced upon this blog through google alerts. Enjoyed reading through. All the best for saving endangered animals.

F. J. Pechir, on 10 Mar 2008

Thank you paula for your kind comment. I agree with you that the problems of elephant´s overpopulation must be prevented to happen, but now that the problem is here, a solution not involving a slaughter mut be find. Thank you so much for your work and information!

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