Conversation with a chief
Category: Mara Triangle, Podcasts | Date: Apr 04 2008 | By: admin
While in the Mara I enjoyed how quiet it was, the absence of noisy irritating tourists, there were virtually no other cars around, the wildlife was having a great time. But the people and the Mara are suffering. This post was recorded while I was visting Kimojino a few weeks ago. I posted stories, podcasts and photos earlier about the tourism collapse here and the killing of a lion by a warthog here. This post is about a conversation I had with Kipas, the village chief.
This is Kipas, the chief of Enkereri Masai village. I think that what he has to say about the effect of the tourism collapse on his community is one of the most touching conversations I’ve had in a long time. Another person has written about his wisdom, charm and wit here.
The photos help to illustrate the scenes
The village is perched on the escarpment. The community and their goats have a view to kill for!
I don’t think these are all his wives, but he is chief of all these women, 18 families in all.
The women are among the most beautiful creatures on earth!
In the village, work is segregated, men carve weapons and talking sticks using only a machete
Women adorn the talking sticks - listen to the podcast to learn more about the Masai talking stick
All the women are involved in the beautiful art of beading, including Kipas’s mother here.
And apart from beauty, and crafts, the women are sensational singers.
The men are responsible for bringing the cows home at the end of the day.
I’d really appreciate feedback. Did you like this podcast? Shall I keep them coming?
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.
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.
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.
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).
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.
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.
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
10 Mara magnets
Category: Amazing facts, Mara Triangle | Date: Mar 04 2008 | By: admin
I am back at home, close to Nairobi. It’s going to be a late morning to work as my son is not well. I don’t mind the delay, my house in one of the most spectacular spots over looking the Great Rift Valley. My view is awesome, I get to birdwatch with a cup of tea in my hand or just spend hours gazing all the way into Tanzania across smokey mountains.
As lovely as it is here, I do feel a dull heaviness, I’m missing something deeply. The truth is that my heart is still in the Mara. I can’t believe how deeply I have fallen in love with that spectacular place, the people, the wilderness.
So here are my ten top secrets to why I love the Mara
1.The beauty is breathtaking. Can you imagine dressing like this every single day?
2.If you are not naturally beautiful, you can spend the entire day in the spa and blame the mud mask for your bad smell.
3. You can be fat, short, stubby, naked and still be proud… it’s not only about the big cats you know (anyone know who this friendly animal is?)
4. Adorable Asuka aka Mara vet– Her stories will make you laugh and cry, you can’t help but love her (she is the first field person that I have ever met who can get away with wearing cute outfits in the African bush).
5. I adore the small guys - don’t you wish you could just hug them?
6. Siesta’s over looking the world. The Masai live on the escarpment overlooking the Mara - it is a view to die for every morning.
7. Food….the buffet is to kill for. We saw five different predators on our first day!
8. No one minds your spots. One can get ridiculously close to these cheetahs who have world fame in the BBC’s Big Cat Diary
9. Tanning weather all year round. I thought this guy was sick and drew attention to Simon who had a good laugh at my ignorance.
10. You can reserve the worlds best viewing points. Leopards are so secretive that sightings are usually the no. 1 wish of every visitor. Seeing this spectacular chap at close range in full daylight was like dying and going to heaven. Leopards are so lazy that they just sit there ….actually, he slept through most of our encounter and looked up when we started the engine to leave….I snapped this shot just before he closed his eyes and curled up like a kitty, covering his face with a paw. Others were not so lucky. An american family we met had spent days looking for leopard and when they finally did spot one, the kids exclaimed with such excitement (naturally) that it terrified the leopard which took off before they could get a single photo. You can imagine their sweet but sour feelings….I felt a bit guilty showing them this photo.
I actually took all those photographs, recorded podcasts, and video plus so much more in three days. It felt like a dream….you know what it’s like when you first fall in love? Euphoric yes? You feel like you’re the only one feeling it….
Then I met an Austrian lady who so infatuated with the Mara that she leaves her home in England and lives for six months at a time at a lodge in the Masai Mara each year – and she has been doing this for years! There’s no competition, her love for the mara far exceeds mine. I feel pathetic, how can I compete with my three days? My last trip to Mara was 3 years ago! I feel like a little like a mistress - stealing a few moments with the Mara from time to time!
I have to remind myself that I was in the Mara Triangle for work not play, to learn more about the crisis that Kimojino is blogging about, and find new ways to help him and the Mara Conservancy secure the Mara Triangle for the longterm. It’s unthinkable that we could lose the Mara because of a collapse in tourism brought on by politics of a few egocentric individuals who would like to be called ‘leaders’. As Kenyans and global citizens, we all can help the Mara survive the crisis - I hope my pictures and podcasts convince you. Book your flight today … or make a donation on the Mara blog to secure this precious heritage for your next visit.
Lion killer escapes
Category: Amazing facts, Mara Triangle, Podcasts | Date: Mar 04 2008 | By: admin
Last week I spent three days in the Masai Mara and went on patrol with the rangers of the Mara Conservancy to catch 7 alleged hippo poachers that were believed to be in the area. While on patrol we had a few ‘adventures’ and dramatic though amusing incidents. Though I wasn’t there, the five poachers were finally caught two days later with a dead hippo which Kimojino reported here.
This podcast and these photos document an extraordinary and rare incident that I’ve never heard of before and nobody that I know has ever observed a warthog killing a full grown lion! Listen to this new post here
The incident took place during a break in the middle of the patrol – we broke off to investigate a report of an injured lioness and what we found was almost too amazing to be true.
A ten year old lioness, killed by a warthog. She looked pregnant. That’s the broken off warthog tooth. Can you see the tiny wound in her neck? Surgical! Only after we turned her over did we notice the pool of blood beneath her.
The brave Masai rangers couldn’t resist getting a few photos with the slain lioness
Here’s the proud lion slayer in a hole just a meter from the dead lioness. Impressive teeth no?
Being the coward I am I wouldn’t put my head in it’s hole (thank God!) but stuck my camera in and took into one but 2 photos with the flash. She or he didn’t budge a millimeter despite all the noise and flash… we were convinced she/he was dead. Can you see the missing tusk?
Here is the deadly tusk - source of much exclamation and awe.
Though I’m very sorry for the lioness I cant help wondering what the heck she was doing? Putting her head into a warthogs hole??? Everyone knows that the first law of African savanna bush, don’t ever EVER stand in front of a warthogs hole. Now you know why.
I hope you enjoy the podcast
Mara skulls
Category: Mara Triangle | Date: Mar 02 2008 | By: admin
On arrival in the Mara one often sees bones on the ground all over the place and sometimes they get collected and left at key spots. I love studying bones so took these photographs and wondered if you could identify them…
Easy? Try these then…..
Sorry about the missing teeth….
How many could you identify?
Our trip to Mara was punctuated with some really fun and interesting adventures. Tomorrow I will upload another podcast about an amazing incident that I and many others, still find hard to believe. It involves a fight between a lion and a warthog.
Mara Poachers and hippo attack
Category: Mara Triangle, Podcasts | Date: Feb 28 2008 | By: admin
Friends,
Today I’m going to try a much awaited experiment and upload a podcast -
I recorded this in the Mara Conservancy last week where I spent three days finding out more about the effects of the collapse of tourism on this world renowned conservation area.
I hope you enjoy sound trip which hopefully will give the visually impaired a feel for the Mara which is among my most favourite places in the world.
I’m attaching photographs to help you visualise the patrol. These 5 minutes reflect what happened during the 4 hours anti-poaching patrol in which we were searching for 7 hippo killing poachers. Kimujino has more on the arrest of these poachers on his
This is the sign between the Mara Reserve and Transmara Reserve which together make up the Masai Mara

A hippo slide
On patrol looking for footprints on the soft earth
Can you see the new born hippo by his mothers legs?
A sad yet happy Monday
Category: WildlifeDirect news | Date: Feb 18 2008 | By: admin
I have had an interesting time monitoring all the new blogs and the variety of comments that are coming in. The amount of interest and the suggestions we’re getting on comments are enormously encouraging. I realise that there’s so much more we can do with the power of so many minds. Thank you all for your your contributions it’s so invigorating to hear from you.
Today is a sad but happy day for several reasons.
First, I had the pleasure of meeting Gwili from the Colobus Trust. It was a happy meeting - I discovered he’s Welsh and not from some as yet to be identified African tribe! Such a strange name! He updated me on the situation at the Colobus Trust where the tourism collapse has had a devastating impact on the income of this small charity - which I actually started in 1997! Yes, it was! And it was my brother who designed those crazy arboreal colobus bridges to enable these spectacular black and white monkeys to cross the highway safely. The good news is that the number of monkeys killed by vehicles is now negligible.
The sad news is that more than twenty colobus and fifty other primates are electrocuted every year on high voltage cables serving this touristic area. The Power company has promised to insulate the cables, but are demanding that the Colobus Trust pay for the materials. In my mind, that’s retarded and I think we should write to those guys and demand that they act a bit more responsibly.
The second bit of sad news was from a new blogger, the Maasai Wildlands - While training Douglas I was shown photos of children covered in flies. The flies were in the children’s noses, eyes and mouths. I cant imagine how they breathe without swallowing those dirty creatures! I could see the diseased eyes in at least one of the children. It made me realise just how lucky I am that I have a good clean supply of water at my home. I showed them the playpump system which is so brilliant! I hope that the funds raised through the Maasai Wildlands blog will help to bring clean water to the Maasai children.
And another piece of sad news, William Deed, our in house blogger who helped create the Gorilla Protection Blog, trained Atamato, Diddy and Innocent, has now left us. We will forever be indebted to Will for his amazing insight, expert online networking skills and his dry humour. Below is Will and Diddy checking out photos for the gorilla blog in December last year.
The good news is that he hasn’t gone far - he will be working from the Mara Triangle to help with the emergency fund raising campaign. As you all may know, we are trying to raise 150,000 dollars for the Mara Triangle to help them through this extraordinarily difficult period. Brian Heath, the CEO of the Mara Conservancy came in to pick up Will and to update Richard Leakey on the situation on the ground. They ended up recalling stories about an earlier discussion on the future of the Mara and about Brians Serval cat kitten!
It feels like a long day but we’re only just getting started. I am energized because more than 20 bloggers received donations last week (thank you everyone) and that means that things are looking up which is a great change for us living in Kenya where things have been so depressing lately. But for those who follow Kenyan politics the Koffi Annan mediated talks are progressing and despite some hiccups, there seems to be a light at the end of the tunnel. “Harambee” as Kenyans say, “Lets pull together”.
Saving Elephants
Category: elephants | Date: Feb 05 2008 | By: admin
The largest living animals in the world, it’s not surprising that elephants inspire all sorts of large things….Jumbo jets, jumbo meals, jumbo size….. I suspect that Jumbo is a corruption of the world Jambo which actually means Hello in Kiswahili.
Google ‘elephant’ and you’ll find out about the election race in the United States, the trampling of Guinea in the gripping Africa cup of Nations (soccer) in which the Nigerian team, Elephants, have made it into the semi finals, and about the sad story of three elephants that were hit by a train in India yesterday. We all know and love Dumbo – the story was inspired by a real African elephant called Jumbo. When I was studying elephants I spent often talked with my counterparts in other parts of Africa and Asia. My main concern was the devastating effect of the ivory trade on elephants I worked hard to have the ban on ivory trade maintained.
We saved elephants from being killed for their teeth but it always amazed me that one of the most serious threats to elephants in India was the train. You’ll learn from Joyce Poole and Petter Granli on elephantvoices blog that elephants have incredible perceptions of sounds – not only do they communicate with vocalizations through their trunks but they also communicate through the ground and hear through their feet. One of the most exciting findings I thought was that elephants will stand on three legs to triangulate and determine which directions vibrations come from – and so determine where the rain is falling …. And where to move next. Or where their friends or enemies are … to avoid them. So what I don’t understand is why they can’t hear the train. One can’t help but love elephants –we know so much about them, they are intelligent, feeling, emotional, family oriented, caring and loving…. Most of the time.
But imagine this scenario – you live in a traditional African village. After a hard day of work in the fields, ploughing and weeding, you have your evening meal and retire after the sun has set. The first sound of rumblings would probably melt into your dreams but then you are suddenly awakened into a real life nightmare when you hear the sound of your granary being smashed – looking out side you might just see the dark shapes of elephants lumbering around, you scream, shout, throw things and the elephants trumpet, stampede, smash things. They leave ….your venture out cautiously with your only light, a paraffin lamp that casts a dull glow over the demolition of your destroyed granary, your crop in the field is gone, smashed as the herd fled through it. Some irate villagers chase after the fleeing herd sending smouldering lumps of elephant dung and lighted branches in their direction. This sometimes only angers them more and results in often fatal attacks. This is the conflict that we call ‘human-elephant conflict’ in Africa and Asia. It may not happen as often a cockroaches, weevils or even baboons get into our crops, and elephant losses may not cause as great in total compared to other commone pests, but when elephants do strike – well, one is absolutely helpless against these massive creatures. It’s a big problem – and one that’s hard to get used to or to tolerate. Some people say that elephants and humans can’t live together. I think we can – if we’re clever about it. Three things we can do
1. Fence ourselves in to keep elephants out - an electric fence in Africa is expensive, works well if its maintained, but if not monitored, can be converted into deadly snares …. ![]()
2. Use chilli peppers to make your crops distasteful to them! Another cool, I mean hot solution to keeping ele’s away – they hate the smell and taste of chillis –smouldering piles of chilli infused elephant dung piles produces a smoke that debilitates elephants super sniffing power.. read about it here and here. You can even buy chilli sauce to promote this .
3. Use bees – Ian Douglas-Hamilton and Fritz Volrath have shown how the sound of bees can keep elephants at bay – African bee stings on a sensitive elephant trunk – ouch! Elephants avoid swarming bees so bee hives can be used to keep elephants away from farms - everyone is raving about this innovation… having experienced the wrath of African bees, I wouldn’t have African bees near my house in case they went for me instead of the elephants, instead I’d use a simulated bee sound. I wonder if someone could invent a wind chime or musical instrument that produces the buzz of bees so that it’s cheap and completely sustainable?
The post election crisis in Kenya has directly affected efforts to protect elephants – there just isn’t any money being generated by tourism for the payment of antipoaching and enforcement activities, as well as community support for managing human elephant conflict. I’m scared that we will soon see reports that elephants are being killed, snared, hunted with guns, poison arrows and other barbaric killing tools. If communities are facing greater threats from elephants due to the absence of wildlife conflict activities, they will have no incentive to protect these animals.

Having met many hundreds of elephants during my work, I took my son Josh to meet Shimba, one of they newest orphans at the sanctuary. Shimba comes from the Shimba Hills in south east Kenya – where I did my Phd research on this population of forest living (though sometimes crop raiding!) elephants – she’s available for adoption at the orphanage run by the David Sheldrick Wildlife Trust.
We are concerned that the Illegal trade in ivory is still a problem and hunters are always on the ready to attack herds whenever antipoaching efforts are compromised. Our focus is on the Mara Triangle right now - any donations you give them will support elephant protection - both anti-poaching and community support for protection.
A baraza of blogs…
Category: WildlifeDirect news | Date: Feb 05 2008 | By: admin
Besides the politicians and hoodlums, I can’t help but think there are actually a lot of good and caring people in the world. Perhaps not enough, or maybe because we are all so scattered across the globe that, it is sometimes not easy to feel a common bond of humanity. However, when I started working with WildlifeDirect and began to really understand the power of online communities, I realised that we are now sitting on the most powerful and positive tool of all times.
Then, when my wife, Elodie and I created an emergency appeal blog, Sukuma Kenya (which literally means “push” Kenya but is also the name given to the staple vegetable eaten by all Kenyans as it literally helps to push you through the week), I trully felt that no matter how few people out there really do care, we can actually make a difference. All it took was one mass email to all our friends, and through the simple science of 7 degrees of seperation, Sukuma spread and within one month we had raised over $10,000/-! I can’t even begin to tell you how many people have been helped with this funding.

What was just as inspiring is that I realised just how many Kenyans and friends of Kenya there are out there. The blogs dealing with the crises just kept springing up and everyone has been linking to eachother to increase our networks and increase the outreach. People from all sectors are dealing with the crises at hand ranging from poets like Shailja Patel to Kenyan Harvard student Joseph Karoki to and of course the whole literary movement came together under a common banner of Concerned Writers and within weeks, literally a couple of books worth of material was public for everyone to read. A lot of this amazing writing can be found on the Kwani blog
Kenyans do care and we are in shock about what is going on. What I realise is now more than ever we see our country in it’s whole - the people, the environment, the wildlife, the economy. So much is at stake. As a conservation organisation we recognise that everything is intedependant and sometimes certain issues must take precedence over others for the sake of long term sustainability just as the Gorilla Protection blog has done with raising funds to buy fuelwood for all the displaced people in DR Congo.
And now in Kenya, WildlifeDirect must focus its energy of saving one of the greatest ecosystems in the world - the Trans Mara- which is coming under serious threat due to a lack of financial resources to continue security as there are no tourists paying entrance fees which the Mara Conservancy is entirely dependant upon.
My good friend Stephen Partington and a muse to many of us writers in Kenya lives a humble life teaching at a school in Machakos, recently wrote the following poem which says it all for me:
WONDER OF THE WORLD: A STUDY OF EXODUS
Kenya, February 2008
(NOTE: in 2007, Kenya’s wildebeest migration was declared The Seventh
Natural Wonder of the World)
Forget the wildebeest.
Forget the birds that flock abroad.
Forget safari ants,
those harsh, acidic hordes
that strip each leaf from the acacia tree.
Forget the spawning salmon
or the moulting northern caribou,
the nightly rise and bloom
of tiny plankton from the deep.
Forget the flock and mindless plodding-on
of fold-returning sheep.
Let’s venture lower, to inanimates:
forget the iron filings,
how they journey to the pole.
Forget specks of dust that quiver
with a Brownian lack of control.
Forget how photons in their millions
pulse rhythmically from lamps.
Forget the molecules of water
forced to tumble-stream from taps.
Forget the swarming of the sand from dunes,
the orbits of our planets’ moons…
Yet smaller, less substantial
than a mote, the lowest low:
evicted children
on the margins of the roadway,
who have nowhere left to go.
(Stephen Derwent Partington)
Technorati : Kenya, Masai Mara, Sukuma, WildlifeDirect fundraising crises, blogs, post-election crises
We must prevent a crisis in the Maasai Mara!
Category: Mara Triangle | Date: Jan 25 2008 | By: admin
The post election violence caused by the disputed outcome of December 27th presidential elections has completely rocked Kenya and everyone is hurting. We have had to close the office many times to avoid getting caught up in riots. Some people are scared and are just moving altogether.
This family used a cloth donated by USAID to cover their pick up as they moved away from a trouble spot in Nairobi
Hundreds of children, women and men have died violently as neighbours and even familes have turned on each other, hundreds of thousands are suffering after being displaced, losing property and their livelihoods.
Only a few businesses have from the trouble
People are tired, scared and desperate.
I pass this billboard everyday - it was erected in happier times, its so out of touch now!
Everyone here in Kenya is pinning their hopes on Koffi Annan’s mediation genius. It seems has made a major breakthrough by getting President Kibaki and the main opposition leader, Mr. Raila Odinga to actually meet over the crisis. We’re yet to find out what actually transpired in those meetings …. But at least they are both talking peace.
Today’s front page news that Koffi Annan had succeeded in getting Mr Kibaki and Mr Odinga together has brought smiles back to faces
You’d think something catastrophic had happened - newspaper stands were crowded this morning
While peace may soon return to the violent hotspots around the country, it will be years before the vibrant tourism can recover which has direct implications for wildlife conservation. The scenes of violent demonstrations and confrontations with police which have been frequently screened on international TV networks have wrecked untold damage to the tourism industry. I met with the head of KWS Mr. Julius Kipn’getich this week, he told me that visitation to the parks had dropped by 90%. Hopefully the parks which include Amboseli, Tsavo, marine parks, Lake Nakuru and Mt. Kenya will get some promised government support but I’m personally a bit skeptical that government will come through with significant help, they have a reputation of not following through with promises. For example, only this week showed that they would be unable to follow through with free secondary education country wide as promised.
Things are slowly returning to normal. Most schools are now open - this little girl’s father gives her a ride on a specially adapted chair
Trade is going on and this guy was weaving dangerously through traffic to get his produce into the city!
Jake Grieves Cook, the Chairman of the Kenya Tourism Board (KTB) told me that the disruption to tourism is the worst disaster for industry that Kenya has ever faced. The KTB and related organizations are working overtime to reverse the negative image of Kenya and lure tourists back because the parks are actually not affected by the trouble in the country.
The British Travel Advisory was amended on Saturday so that it is no longer a blanket “non-essential travel” warning against the whole of Kenya and applies only to specific locations which his on similar lines to the US and German government advisories. This may bring slow relief – we expect it over coming months or years, but with only 10% visitation at a time when over 85% occupancy in hotels was expected has driven the industry to take extreme measures. Some hotels have even closed down and all businesses are hurting.
We are already seeing a cascading effect. Tourists have stop coming, hotels are closed, staff have been laid off, transport, supplies and other service contracts are canceled.
With no tourist plying the roads, all the roadside business will lose out, women who supply farm produce lose markets, and nobody has money to send home to rural areas. Tens of thousands have fled cities for rural areas where there are no jobs and no food. We predict that the protected areas will be unable to sustain anti-poaching activities and poaching will escalate.
Brian Heath of the Mara Conservancy, has raised an alarm and we are compelled to respond. The Mara has always been close to Richard Leakey’s heart - it is, after all, Africa’s greatest nature preserve . We believe that there is a looming conservation catastrophe that can only be averted with a well prepared program to raise funds. In response we intend to launch a major program to save this wildlife spectacle which was voted the worlds 7th Wonder just two years ago.
The Maasai Mara is home to the worlds most famous wildlife spectacle and beautiful people
Yesterday we launched a press release which was picked up by some papers here. We are going to ensure that the Mara Conservancy blog raises 160,000 dollars in the next 5 months. To achieve this we urgently need 16,000 dollars immediately to set up a sub station in the Mara that will enable Brian Heath to produce materials for blogs that will be as effective, if not more so, than gorilla protection blog. In 2007 we established camps in Bukima and Mutsora to enable blogs to operate from the bush. These blogs raised 350,000 dollars which has tremendously improved the protection of mountain gorillas in the Virunga National Park. We are certain that we can replicate this for the Masai Mara to avert a wildlife disaster of similar magnitude to losing mountain gorillas.
In our press release yesterday, we stated ‘The damage to the local economy means many people are expected to turn to poaching wildlife for the bushmeat trade, causing irreparable damage to the ecosystem. With its millions of animals, the Maasai Mara is especially vulnerable; over 900 poachers were arrested in recent years. In 2007 alone nearly 500 wire snares were collected, 15 animals rescued and 46 animals were found either dead in snares or recently butchered. The tourism crisis has lead to reduced manpower for surveillance which will lead to an immediate rise in poaching’.
Wire snares like these are made from any source of wire - fences
Traditional means of poisoning and shooting wildlife is also a threat
As are modern weapons
Snares are indiscriminate and cause unimaginable suffering to many species
Dr Kashmiri (center) responded to an alarm from Brian Heath (right) and with help from the Ann Kent Taylor Foundation saved this lioness and this baby elephant below
He now has a permanent limp but is fine
We know that the Mara depends on tourism because the entrance fee contributes to the protection of wildlife and management of the conservation area. We’re hoping that would be visitors will still be willing to contribute the equivalent for a 4 day safari, about 80$ to ensure that the Mara is protected and therefore survives this crisis.
We need to raise Ksh 10 million in 5 months to protect the wildlife in the Mara. That translates to 158,000 dollars. We can raise this with only 2,000 people donating 80 dollars or with 615 people give us 50 dollars each month for 5 months. We’d appreciate your help with circulating this information and helping to raise this money.
The mara is home to the worlds most famous wildlife spectacle, losing it because of political unrest in Kenya would be a global tragedy. Please help us. Paula






























































There are only 2,100 lions left in Kenya. We need to save these lions and improve their conservation. You can help by joining us as we embark on the
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