Friday, January 22, 2010

I AM in A-F-R-I-C-A


Just to keep you interested, here's a little someone I saw yesterday. And there is a new blog at www.gorilladoctorsblog.org.
Cyndie and Candi... I may not be IN this picture, but I was there TAKING the picture!!!!
And Tucker, I am missing your comments...

Thursday, January 21, 2010

Christmas in January!

I just received Christmas cards from Cyndie, Chelsie and Lisa Abrash!!! THANK YOU! It is like getting mail at camp!

Saturday, January 16, 2010

Quarterly reports - WAY LATE

I'm sequestering myself in my office for the next several days, working on quarterly reports for the last 2 quarters. Ugh.

On the bright side, here's someone I visited last week. Saw the antelope (I think it is a duiker...) on the way out of the forest. Sooooo, doing quarterly reports in exchange for the privilege of visiting these wonderful animals - no problem!



Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Dog walking...

Yesterday Ama and I walked to Julie's house for a visit - about a 5 minute walk. Ama doesn't quite get the whole leash thing yet, so she was bouncing around as we walked, grabbing the leash in her mouth and tugging a bit. We were quite the spectacle. Around here nobody walks their dogs. They walk goats with a collar and leash, to new owners houses, or the market, but not dogs. So I had one person exclaim "That's a DOG!" as we walked by. In English, which was surprising! There were a couple of teen-age boys following us, making barking noises, as teen-age boys will do. And the best was when someone went by on a motorbike with a camera taking pictures - he even turned around for another pass! Talk about role reversal - that's usually me taking picutres from the car window! I smiled and waved as Ama yanked on the leash. I am in the minority here in so many ways, but getting used to it. Ntakibazo. No worries.

There is a new post on Gorilladoctorsblog about Kuryama. I visited his group on New Year's Day.

Monday, January 11, 2010

Lesser Striped Swallows



This morning Ama and I were sitting in my office working, well, I was working, she was sleeping, when a small flock of Lesser Striped Swallows swooped into our courtyard and flew in circles for about 5 minutes! They are BEAUTIFUL! Ama went to the door and watched with me - her little head went round and round as she tried to follow them. I think it was a family of just fledged babies because 2 of them seemed to want to leave the courtyard, and the others just kept swooping around, one landing on my wind chimes briefly. It was one of those unexpected but magical moments. I couldn't get a picture - these are from the web.



By the way, I posted a new blog, but it is dated January 4 since that's when I started it - fun times in Goma!

Wednesday, January 6, 2010

The past week

The days fly by here. I have so many stories to tell, and not enough time!
Since January 1 I've been to DRC to check some chimps that might have to be confiscated, went to a gorilla group there where Eddy and I thought we might have to anesthetize a young gorilla who got popped in the face by something/someone, but she was better, visited 2 gorilla groups here in Rwanda, gave a talk to a group of tourists, reconciled the accounting, sent a bizillion MGVP emails, did an interview for a new conservation website, played with Ama, planted some flower seeds and watched a few episodes of Lost at night when I have no more energy....
But I promise I'll write more stories soon! EVERY DAY is a crazy new day here. It hasn't gotten old yet for me.

Bob is coming for a visit in 2 weeks - can't wait!

Monday, January 4, 2010

Lake Kivu and Nyamarugira


The view from my balcony.

Last weekend, after checking Kuryama on New Year's Day (see next Wednesday’s gorilladoctorblog), I went to Goma to assess some chimps in captivity with Eddy and Jacques. I stayed at the Stella hotel, right on beautiful Lake Kivu. It was strange to hear the sounds of water lapping, kids splashing in the water, squealing with delight as they jumped in (sounded a lot like the YMCA!), the occasional motorboat, and Egyptian Geese honking as they flew over, all so familiar, and yet in a place so foreign to me. Lake Kivu is one of the African Great Lakes. It is HUGE and lovely, and it used to be a colonial paradise. There is evidence of that past everywhere in crumbling grand old homes on the shore and tired but nice old hotels. As I looked out over the lake to the mountains on the distant shores I was awed, honored, and basically slack jawed that I was seeing the same scenes that Roz Carr, Dian Fossey and countless others had seen just 50 years ago. By the way, Land of 1000 Hills, by Roz Carr, is a nice read and a good history of the area.

Lake Kivu is also one of 3 known “exploding” lakes in the world! It is so deep (about 1500 meters) and sits right on a volcanic rift, so there is a build up of methane and carbon dioxide (breakdown of volcanic CO2) sitting at the deepest levels of the lake. At some point there will be enough volcanic disruption that those deep gasses will surface, resulting in an explosion. If it ever blows, the results will be catastrophic. Really. Millions of people live around the lake, and those within a 20 mile radius would be killed almost instantly. One website said in addition to everyone dying from CO2 release, there could be tsunamis spawned by the explosion – amazing! Fortunately the lake has never blown, and life goes on around the lake as if it were a normal, beautiful resource. The Primus factory (local beer!) in Gisenyi harvests the methane to help run the factory, so at least a little is being pulled off the deep bottom of the lake.

The day before I got there Nyamarugira, the most active volcano in the region, erupted. It is about 16 miles from Goma, but people were not worried because the lava was flowing into the national park. There are chimps, elephants, forest buffalo, monkeys and antelope (not to mention the reptiles, amphibians and birds) in that part of the park, but hopefully the lava is flowing so slowly that most animals can easily outrun it. Goma was hit in 2002 by Nyringongo and there are still huge black lava beds everywhere, and that eruption was quite slow so nearly everyone escaped injury. I really wanted to see the lava from Nyamarugira, but unfortunately when we got to Rumangabo it was cloudy, so we couldn’t see either volcano. Rats.


No good photos of Nyamarugira, but we are always surrounded by volcanoes here!

To get to the hotel we drove through downtown Goma, which is a bustling, loud, colorful, dirty town. There were vendors everywhere selling anything you might need from kitchen appliances to lounge chairs to clothes, in small shops along the lava rock “streets”. Since it was only January 2 there were still some Christmas decorations up, didn’t quite compute for me since this was my first Christmas season in a tropical zone! Big white cardboard Santa nailed to a palm tree in 90+ degree heat, and he and I were the only mzungus in sight! Strange. As we drove I got glimpses of the lake to our left, and glimpses of some beautiful homes behind solid walls with cut glass on the top (you either have it or you don’t here). UN presence is still everywhere – white UN trucks with troops of every race, color and nationality. But life is beginning to return to normal with the past 6 months or so of better security in the area.

When we turned into the hotel it was like night and day. No more dust, beautiful gardens with mousebirds playing in the trees and lizards crawling on the walls. A little tired, but the hotel had a bit of that colonial splendor in evidence. While it felt cool and comfortable, I felt a little too privileged. People tell me I say thank you too often here in Africa, but I can’t help it. The people at the hotel waited on us hand and foot, and I just don’t have that colonial mentality. I wish I could give back more to the people in need. It is so very complicated. So I just continue to do my small part – gorilla health, one health. Little by little. Buhoro, buhoro.

That night, in the Stella Hotel, I laid there in my bed, listening to the waves lapping against the shore, hoping to get a glimpse of Nyamarugira tomorrow, wondering at how I got here! In the middle of Africa, on a methane bomb of a lake, 16 miles from an erupting volcano, working with one of the most endangered great apes, and LOVING it!



Here's my bed at the Stella Hotel.


Another view from my balcony.


Ama, at home, getting big and spoiled!

Friday, January 1, 2010

Umwaka Musha

Happy New Year!

This morning I got up before dawn and listened to Rwanda wake up. The dawn chorus here is amazing - first roosters and ibis, about 4:30, then a million other birds at about 5:00, along with a few people putzing around. By 5:30 it is beginning to get light and by 6am, like every morning, morning has broken. The first day of 2010, African style!

I had to get up early to go to the forest to assess the silverback Kuryama, whose group had been "missing" for 2 days, and when they turned up yesterday Kuryama had acquired a new female from Pablo group along with a new laceration on his hand. It was a great morning. He'll be painful for a while, but it will heal. I'll write this one up for the gorilladoctorsblog so stay tuned.

Umwaka Musha everyone!