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Park W and the Large Mammal Survey
Three times a year park officials and the PCVs (Peace Corps Volunteers)
perform a large mammal survey. Eric, Tony (the other volunteer in Tapoa),
Boubakar (the driver), Sadu (a guy who spoke only French), Kaku (a hilarious
little old man with more gaps than teeth in his smile), and I went out for
two days and drove around the park looking for animals.
We took a Land Cruiser nicknamed "God",
and the moniker was well-deserved. The roads wash out every rainy season
and the park can't afford to treat the problem (lay down better roads
that won't wash out), so every year they treat the symptoms and just scrape
and flatten the roads as best they can. Our survey ended after two days
because the roads were just too bad. It was really amazing that we made
it two days- we came to some incredibly uneven ground, sometimes with
little canyons where the rainwater flooded out the road, and each time
I thought "there's no *way* we can make it over that-" and each
time we did. (A few hours into the park I found out we had no radio or
way of contacting anyone if we did get stuck... It added to the excitement,
at any rate.)
Boubakar and Sadu rode in the cab of the truck while Eric, Tony, Kaku and I
stood up in the bed (there was a cage frame that we held onto, or clung
to, in some cases) and we drove along slowly looking for any animal within
100 meters of the road on either side. When we saw something we knocked
on the roof of the cab and Boubakar stopped, and then Eric or Tony recorded
the species, number of animals, sexes, approximate ages, habitat, distance
from the road, and the reading on the odometer at the time of the sighting.
Later they would extrapolate animal populations in the park based on our
observations.
This is one of the better "roads."
Tuesday December 15
We're on the large mammal survey now. We didn't make it to our intended
campsite because the "roads" are really bad, so last night we
just camped out in the bush, built a fire to keep the carnivores away
and slept on some darn hard ground. I freaked myself out quite a few times
thinking I heard animals right outside the tent, but I guess it was just
the wind. Yesterday we saw warthogs, baboons (at left), waterbuck, buffon's
cobb, gazelle butts as they bounded away, buffalo, red monkeys, and elephants.
The elephants were the coolest- I tried to get a picture but there were
too many trees in the way. One of them started to charge us but as soon
as she crashed through the first line of bushes she stopped. She was flapping
her ears and huffing and it would have made a great picture, but when
she starting charging, Boubakar slammed on the gas so she wouldn't ram
the truck and I had to grab onto the truck instead of my camera. Dang.
We also almost got caught
in a brushfire- that was pretty thrilling. We lost the road quite often
because it was really overgrown, so Kaku and Sadu would get out once in
a while and walk around, looking for the road, and then they and Boubakar
would argue and discuss which way to go. Eventually we'd start driving
again but since we couldn't see where we were going exactly we occasionally
crashed into a ditch or downed tree. (Since we were standing up in the
back of the truck, that kept us on our toes; we got knocked around quite
a bit.) One time we stopped and Kaku was walking around for about ten
minutes. (He's in this picture, but you have to search pretty hard- look
about an inch left of the photo's center) He got back in the truck and
we'd started to inch forward again when
Tony turned
to look behind us and his jaw dropped open. "Fire!" I turned
around and about 20 meters behind us a small fire was quickly spreading
across the extremely dry grassland.
Eric shook his head and said that Sadu must have started it,
and Tony and I, assuming that the man would not start a fire in this big
dry field while we were still in it, thought he must have thrown a lit
cigarette out the window. Nope. He threw a lit match out to start the
fire so that it would burn away the grass and we could find the road...
It spread really fast, and I would have been pretty scared if Eric and
the others had seemed more concerned. Tony was flipping out, and I was
harboring some doubts about the intelligence of the plan, but everyone
else sort of ignored that big wall of fire and the black smoke billowing
into the air behind us. Sadu started quite a few fires, and each time
I thought, "Oh man, this one's going to get us..." but we always
managed to find the road and get the truck unstuck fast enough to keep
one step ahead of the flames.
Boubakar (center), Kaku (left) and Sadu chop up a
tree that had fallen across our path.
A sunset out in the bush.
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