19:27, Wednesday, 25 July, 2012
I cannot believe the migration has not yet exploded. Last year at this time the wildebeest
were everywhere; this year the biggest herd I’ve witnessed consisted of about
300 individuals. True, there are
now zebra everywhere where before there were none; they tend to come first, so
hopefully the troops are still on their way. Unfortunately, the Tanzanian government allows great burns
of the Serengeti Plains along the wildebeests’ path. These burns are intended to slow the migration, keeping the
wildebeest in Tanzania longer for the benefit of the country’s tourism
industry. From what I hear, the burns
have been exceptional this year.
Can we ever learn to just leave
things alone? Is it really that
hard?
I sure love having the zebra return. They are beautiful animals, and
rekindle the love I’ve always had for equines. Their stripes are something truly amazing; they struck me
the other day the way underappreciated things sometimes do. Sure, zebras are black and white
striped. But no! It’s more than that! The stripes swirl and thin and thicken
in all the right places, swaying in long arcs across the body to join fluidly
in a pin-prick, invisible spot.
The lines on the face are thinner and flow out slightly around the eyes,
only to converge beautifully into a velvety black muzzle. These animals are a work of finest art,
each unique. Yesterday we came
upon a female whose white stripes were much thicker than her black ones –
anyone who saw her would settle the age-old question and assert that zebras are
white with black stripes. I’ve
never seen a zebra like her.
Looking at a group of zebra, I get the feeling I’m looking at an optical
illusion, the type of photo where the stripes start to blur together until you
can no longer distinguish them. If
this occurs with my primate vision, the best in the mammalian kingdom, I have a
hard time doubting that the evolution of stripes had something to do with
predator evasion. The newest hypothesis
involves flies; supposedly zebra stripes work to dissuade flies in some way or
another – who knew?
If the adults aren’t cool enough, baby zebras are to die
for. Brown fuzz robs them of being
anything but adorable – they cannot earn the artistic title bestowed by a
magnificent sheen of their older counterparts, but they don’t need it. CUTE! Itty little heads and gangly proportions. On the 22nd we had to stop
and oggle over a tiny one, pulling out our cameras. Then, with all the classiness of the horses I’ve always
known, it promptly posed in a pooping stance, remaining that way for what
seemed like forever before darting off after its mother. Typical. Some of the baby zebras are hidden inside their mothers, and
the poor females look like they’re going to pop, their bellies bulging with the
fetus so that it looks like an enormous egg got lodged horizontally between
their shoulders and hindquarters.
It pokes out awkwardly on either side and bounces up and down like a
water balloon when they trot, appearing most uncomfortable. We’re nervous driving up behind
pregnant zebras on the road, worried even a slight startle will send them
full-blown into untimely labor.
21:35, Friday, 27 July, 2012
Well, I hold the title. Although Tyler and Charlie have both attempted to beat me, I
have still eaten the most food in one sitting. We have pancake wars; Joseph cooks up a gajillion delicious
cakes. Hungry as all get-out
returning from obs, we tear in like we’ve been starved for a week. I ate 12 ½ today, beaten only by
Tyler’s 13 and Charlie’s 13 ½, but when adding in the four mango slices and one
sizeable bit of pineapple I ate, I was the reigning champ. And had there been more pancakes left,
I probably would have run them even further into the ground.
I was all excited to announce, for my parents’ benefit, that
it appeared the snake epidemic had ended.
Earlier in the week I noticed that our slender mongoose is hanging
around again, and our slithery friends hadn’t been seen since I last watched
the potential mamba slide past my tent.
I thought Mom and Dad might rest easier, plane tickets already bought
and no turning back. But Tyler’s
unhappy “Ohhhhhhh, theeeeere’s a snake” two days ago has stopped that message
dead in its tracks. It’s the same
one I saw before, headed toward my tent!
At least a meter and a half long, thick, gray-black. I yelled for the
others to come see as it slid toward the back of the log outside my tent, the
same spot it fancied before. It
was scared out of sight by the time Julie, a reluctant Tyler, and Ian gathered
behind me. However, about five
minutes after they dispersed, as I sat on my bed working with the window
unzipped to the screen, I watched it explore the log where I sit to brush my
teeth (or rather used to sit). Thank God for the sock that tightly
closes where the zippers on my tent meet, because that snake poked its head out
from under the log and looked curiously right at me, two feet away through the
screen. It might have thought my
tent a fun place to explore had that blessed sock not been in place. But really, that snake has been hanging
around and we haven’t even known it.
All I have to do is be careful to make enough noise around my tent; it’s
clear he/she wants to avoid confrontation. And who knows?
Maybe it’s not even a mamba (kind of thrilling to think it might be
though!). Either way, I’ve named
it to help its reputation. (Names
work wonders. On my first trip to
Africa, I saved a spider from my tentmate by having her name it. She might be able to bring herself to
harm any old spider, but she couldn’t harm Albert.) I thought “Mo” would be a nice name for the mamba in
question, but then I couldn’t resist Tyler’s suggestion of “Mia”...Mamba Mia. Mia it is.
My ID’s have finally come together. With my new binos sent from home, I can
whip them out much faster. The
night still brings a challenge, especially when our maglights refuse to hold a
charge at the den, where bushes complicate things enough in the daylight as
is. The other night we were watching
the hyenas around one of the den holes, only to look down and check ourselves
on a couple ID’s in the book. When
we looked up, the hyenas had been replaced by warthogs! Where not two seconds before there had
been hyenas, now the headlights shown on two warthogs that must have popped out
of the den hole, the surrounding darkness swallowing the hyenas (unless our
hyenas are actually transformers, in which case the secret it out and we need
to define a new shorthand for the behavior “turns into warthog”).
Den succession is actually a very interesting topic. I can’t remember the exact progression,
but I know that hyenas don’t dig their own dens, instead stealing them from
warthogs, who steal them from someone else, etc. right on down to the actual
digger (whose important identity has slipped my memory). Just this morning at Shit Show Den
(aptly named), a warthog’s ears and head poked out of the hyena-less den
hole. It stayed like that for a
couple minutes, hilariously staring at us while Nora snapped pictures, then all
of a sudden pew! pew! pew!; the hole spouted three warthogs that tore away,
tails in the air. I never get
tired of warthog-spewing den holes.
Gets me every time.
Be careful where you pee, especially if it is behind a large
bush whose other side you cannot see.
Lesson number 5,000 in the book How to Relieve Yourself when Living
in the African Bush. I was following an earlier lesson while
out on obs the other morning, namely never pee around an elephant that might
freak out and charge you (common sense).
But in my avoidance of the elephant, I drove to a large bush appreciably
far away, asking Julie to please keep an eye on the elephant and yell if it was
in any way perturbed. Never mind
that Parcheesi might be sacked out right behind my carefully picked bush. Poor Parcheesi, I gave her quite a
scare! Needless to say I decided
to just wait, and popped back in the car to record her identity and the location
of the infamous bush. Geesh, can’t
pee on the savanna because of tour cars.
Can’t pee near the lugga because of elephants. Can’t pee in the bushes because of Parcheesies.
On the morning of the 21st, we came upon Lust and
Sloth wandering about Lone Tree Plain.
All of a sudden, Sloth happened upon a hiding baby tommy in the grass,
and I don’t know as I have ever seen anything so adorable as a cub hyena
chasing a baby tommy. It was
miniaturized life! I felt like I
had gotten a lightning bolt in MarioCart and everyone around me had shrunk,
including an adult hyena chasing an adult tommy. Baby tommy got away, and Lust and Sloth returned toward the
den, but not until after a good sprinting chase.
That same morning we saw Loki wandering with the entire
carcass of an adult male tommy.
I’d never seen a kill so intact.
It’s entire head, back legs, and all the hide in between were present as
it hung limp in her mouth, staring at us blankly upside-down. Turquoise, Tellaviev (sp; our newest
male), and Harlem followed Loki around like the cars of a train, but she wasn’t
about to share. Lucky for her
Helios was nowhere to be seen.
I am meeting adult Fig Tree hyenas at last! Compared to before, they are everywhere
in their territory now. I find
their clan cozy compared to Talek West.
It’s about half the size, and the territory’s tall grass makes it feel
peacefully quiet, removed from the areas of shorter grass more prone to
tourists. I love all of the Fig
Tree hyenas, but as far as adults go, I have a special like for Lu (Lucy). She is not nervous around the car like
the others. I don’t see her
aggress too often, but yet she doesn’t take crap. She’s the equivalent of a strong, reasonable but fearless
woman in a world awaiting her.
As far as other animals go, we finally have two resident
cheetahs! I can’t remember what
Tyler has named them (I’m having him help me with the big cat stuff for Dave),
but they are both very handsome males – so handsome that, sadly, one of the
times we saw them they were being totally hounded by about 30 tour cars, each
violating the space limit a little more than the last to try and get in
front. It’s a tough problem; I
just wish the rules were enforced more strictly by the park management like
they are in our sister part of the park, the Mara Conservancy. Aside from cheetahs, the resident lions
have totally shifted since last summer; in just one year, I’m not recognizing
any of them! Pictures prove there
is a whole new pride hanging around where only twelve months ago was firmly in
the hands of M.J. Mewomorial, Mick Jagger, Kanye and their lionesses. Now, in even more support of a total
shift, the only lion I have recognized in Talek West is David Bowie, who lived
way out in Prozac last year – an hour’s drive away! There are some major overthrows going on somewhere. It’s a shame no one is more seriously
studying lions in the Mara. Final
non-Crocuta species account: baby banded mongooses = SQUEAK! (A.K.A. beyond adorable). Imagine them, then multiply the cute by ten and cube it. That’s what we saw a few days
past.
I can’t believe the IRES boys, Nora, and Julie will be
leaving in just over a week. It
really saddens me, the realization hitting me a couple evenings ago as we sat
around the table playing banana grams, spoons, BS, and poker while Maina fixed
the cars. August already! I’m
becoming afraid to blink my eyes should my
plane be waiting when I open them!