Showing posts with label namibia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label namibia. Show all posts

Tuesday, 7 January 2014

800 Challenge - 2013 That's a wrap!


2014 has kicked off with a bang if the traffic in uptown Johannesburg is anything to judge these things by! To close off last year's challenge one or two stats:

Southern Right Whale - in "Whale" Bay
We covered a little over 100000 km cumulatively ie: over the duration of the year, inclusive of commercial / chartered flights, ships, boats, vehicles, buses, flat-bed trucks, rickshaws, bikes, ferry, by helicopter, by horse-back & in a makoro. I have no idea how many kilometers we walked.. but if the bathroom scale is anything to go by probably fewer than we should have!

We spent 151 days in the field ie: away from home. We saw 825 species from end to end and from pillar to post within the sub-region.

Over the period we did 4 trips to Namibia; 3 trips to Botswana; 2 trips to Zimbabwe; 2 trips to Mozambique; 1 trip each to Lesotho & Swaziland (transit). Most of the cross-border trips we kept as short as possible, a function of necessity rather than by design or preference. Our longest trip (12 days) was to Namibia's northern region incl. of Kunene & the Zambezi region (Caprivi).

The Namib desert / Namibia
We flew most of the major domestic routes at least once & as many as 10 times ie: to Cape Town. Exclude PE & Bloemfontein from that list. We missed our flight to PE & who flies to Bloem..? The only 'international' flight was the flight to Windhoek (Namibia). The other cross-border trips we did by vehicle.

If pushed to pick a favourite trip I would have to say central Mozambique & for reasons unrelated to the birds. [See the 'Stranded out to sea..' blog for some insight.] Alisha, by comparison, prefers Namibia over most other spots. The most surprising cross-border trip was to Zimbabwe's Mana Pools area. This was our 1st trip to the north of Zimbabwe & to be fair, a highlight & somewhere we'll return to as soon as we can.

My bird of the year - African Pitta [inside 3 m / Coutada 12 - Moz]
Alisha's bird of the year - Spotted Creeper [party of 4 / Marondera - Zimbabwe].
Surprise of the year - 2 Grass Owls 8:30 pm, in torrential rain; Ongoye -KZN. [also happens to be Alisha's 'worst trip of the year' - see blog post 'Ongoye -Muddy bloody barbet']
Dip of the year - Pintado Petrel..! [The sparrow of the winter seas]

Species seen by Alisha or by myself but not by both of us & therefore excluded:

Eurasian Blackcap - Marondera; Zim (Alisha & 3 others)
Lesser Seedcracker - Mt. Gorongosa; Moz (Mark & 1 other)
Amsterdam Albatross (Probable) - Zest pelagic; SA (Mark et al)
Slender-billed Prion - Zest pelagic; SA (Mark et al)

Probables excluded - ID inconclusive

Gull-billed Tern - (Kgomo Kgomo; SA) Photographs inconclusive
Sunnyside-up
Zambezi Indigobird - (Masoka Village; Zim) Impossible to separate from other non-br indigobirds.

Possibles (excl): -

Yellow-bellied Hyliota - Chinizuia; Mozambique

Birds heard only: -

Madagascar Cuckoo - Biyamiti; KNP
Basra Reed Warbler (probable) - near Caia, Sofala [Moz]

To conclude we added 30 (approx) new species to our regional life list and we added 60 (approx) 'photographic' lifers over the period.

Thursday, 2 January 2014

Footprint in the African hourglass


Grosse Spitzkuppe - finding Herero Chat


As the dust settles on the thrills, spills, trials & tribulations that was [at the time of writing] our 800 Challenge, three, as yet, unanswered questions spring to mind - Each has an Old & a New; a past & a future, some tense, some not. In the context of our global village we consider http://www. We consider the hard to truthfully pinpoint: // Where, What & Who or even the who, what & why..

Time is fleeting; a lesson made all too clear throughout our challenge. As the old sets on the eve of something new, you might lend me your eyes for a minute.
In the context of our 800 Challenge some examples in the Std-grade category:
  1. Where has our journey taken us? or even Where has the time gone? All over the region, from corner to corner, more than once; in the blink of an eye.
  2. What inspired us? or perhaps What have we achieved? A self-motivated, time-constrained goal, within a predetermined set of rules & governed by a self-imposed code of conduct. That & more.  
  3. Who have we met along the way? Accountants, teachers, the needy, the greedy, policemen, judges & a jury of our peers.
Dune Lark - The abominable sandman..?
Will we do it again? Hard to truthfully say. 

If the old sets the standard then the higher-grade questions lie somewhere in the new. The answers are as elusive as they are pressing. Here are some examples. You'll know your own.
  1. Where have the numbers gone? or even Where will we find the courage & make the effort? 
  2. What must be done? or perhaps, more importantly, What will our children say?
  3. Who will toe the line? & Who's responsibility is it anyway?
Rooibank  -  West Coast. Namibia

Will we find the answers? Hard to truthfully say.

Our footprints, etched in time, leaves a stain. This we know for the stain lies in the old. It's the future that stands dawn-lit & at the start of something new. 
    Birds are not food & yet the plight of birds, in our ever shrinking global shanty, is food-enough for thought.

    2013 played host to an unforgettable adventure; the avian protagonists foremost in our thoughts. We hope, this year, to reciprocate a little. 
    One or two G. Flamingos : dismissively attentive.

    Ruppell's Korhaan


    Our last & final leg, in central Namibia & on her west coast, was perhaps a fitting end to what had been a fantastic year. Namibia stands first & foremost in the countries we love most. Burn't skies, open fields & singing sands call to us. 

    Our suite at the Hansa Hotel

    A half-dozen, unaccounted-for species secured our flight from South Africa's OR Tambo to Namibia's Hosea Kutako International, a large skip east of Windhoek, the country's capital. A more convenient flight would have been a few minutes further westwards to Walvis Bay. Nevertheless, the range restricted Herero Chat & the rain-seeking / desert-loving Ruppell's Korhaan necessitated an inland stop & go. We added both in quick succession, in two uneventful sessions, en route Swakopmund's Hansa Hotel, our desert home away from home. Germanic influence; a local ja, das ist gut attitude; seasonal holiday fever & an outdoors-orientated lifestyle cements this coastal town's status as Namibia's premiere holiday destination.

    Migrant waders clog the salt pans, tidal zones & nearby tundra-like vegetation

    If a free-flowing piste down the autobahn-like aisles at the local Food Lovers Market is your passion, then December is not the time of year to travel. Notwithstanding the urban crush, December is also rarities season & as the drapes fell on our year we hoped for nothing less than an encore performance. We weren't disappointed.

    Pygmy Right Whale - beached in the lagoon









    Joined most mornings [afternoons & evenings too] by local resident Mark Boorman, friend & part-time banding mentor, we were assured of something special. In fact we had a whale of a time.

    We were after three specific birds for our 800 Challenge. Wading through a sea of waders for three specific individuals takes a keen eye & some experience. Wilson's Phalarope, seen intermittently since the start of the season would, as suspected, pose a challenge. As it turned out the Wilson's stayed in the bag, unseen.

    In the interim we had recorded Red-necked Phalarope in the lagoon & Dune Lark at nearby Rooibank. One special remained. Earlier in the year we had missed this particular bird & were seemingly well on track to do the same again. Fairly regular to date, this repeat-vagrant had, for selfish reasons no doubt, made itself scarce the instant we disembarked.
    Alisha & Mark B trying to relocate a probable American G Plover

    If worms hate 1st-call then, by rights, they have good reason. Finding visiting avian guests, eager to explore the unfamiliar, usually means a wake-up call sometime before the sanity bell. Walvis Bay is no different. We'd arrived most mornings in time for morning tea which secured a vacant lot. Getting to the lagoon on time, however, proved more rewarding & on our last morning in the field we recorded our final species for our 800 Challenge, Pacific Golden Plover; a magnificent likeness of himself, in non-breeding garb & a lifer to boot. Fitting; unscripted & more than a little poetic.

    A. Penguin - in moult. Escorted, by rental, to Hotel Boorman
    As an aside, Mark introduced us to the world of long-distance avian travel. We spent a day scrutinising waders & terns for foreign-flagged / ringed / banded individuals ie: caught & marked for identification in the field. The foreign-caught, long-distance migrants are also the most intriguing. By end-of-day we had successfully identified a handful of birds. One particular tern, as it turns out, was originally processed in Scotland, some 9000 km further north, undeniable evidence that Scotland, is in fact, the very hub from which all good things emanate..! It's an amazing feat of endurance in itself & a confirmation, more importantly, of the role that Southern Africa plays in the seasonal lives of many long-distance migrants, drawn from all around the globe.

    For those who have followed our exploits what would our story be if we had no tale to tell?

    Poking the stupid stick at the gods!
    Poking the stupid-stick at the gods is something I do well, clearly. One poke is not as good as another & this time I thought I'd give it stick. At the start of our year we acquired a diesel A-class Mercedes from which we'd do most our local birding. The rationale was simple; for a simpleton that is. We'd keep our carbon footprint to a minimum... No point ruining the world chasing the ridiculous, yes? In hindsight, it's a bowl of hot air! We've traveled further than a godwit's bill & the reasoning is akin to a bag-full of sticky-pie & a diet soda.. but I digress.

    Notwithstanding the frail-nature of good intent, we ignored the rows of gas-guzzling 4x4s, vehicles for the insensitively boorish & secured, instead, the mechanical services of a rented front-wheel-drive sedan. As the manual reads - adequate on tarred surfaces or salt-hardened gravel but, like all Toyotas, somewhat skittish in the dunes..

    A trip highlight - Dune Lark nest
    Dune Lark happened to be on the morning menu. To secure the lark we'd need to travel a touch inland to nearby Rooibank, a haven for sand-experts & the closest landmark to the bird in question. To get from Rooibank to the red-sand habitat is a walk of a 1000 meters. We thought we'd drive.. Her words resonate in my left ear still! WTH soon became WTF! The adequate on tar proved inadequate in sand. Mechanically belly-beached, 4 wheels lazy in the desert breeze & less upwardly mobile than might have been expected came, at the time, as a complete surprise to me... Fortunately, as it turned out, we'd saved ourselves a measured 23 paces to the nearest dune; an Eskom-like energy-saving during a summer thunderstorm black-out. Small mercies as they say.. We walked the remaining 981 meters to the dune & found the larks, on a nest. We walked the 981 meters back to immobility & spent the next two hours digging, cursing & larking about under the chassis.

    If Namibia is nothing else then it's a country of unmatched hospitality & good people. From the nearby Rooibank hamlet two German/Afrikaans-language [preference] sand-experts approached our sand-spit & found me in full display. I was immediately addressed in well-spoken English, relieved of the car-keys & in soothing, single-syllable west coast tones encouraged to take a seat under the nearest shady tree. The sun had, no doubt, found a chink in my thinking -cap. They were taking no chances, evidently. I chewed, somewhat thoughtfully, on the cork clogging my senses, put there by my own wife, familia no less..! Is there no honour left in this cruel world?

    Damara Tern - the week's highlight

    I'm not too displeased to report the untimely demise of not one but two 'nooit-nie (can't break)' snatch-straps before the vehicle was eventually recovered a third strap & a short snooze later.

    Namibians know their sand. We live & we learn!







    Monday, 23 September 2013

    Spectre-like wraiths of Northern Namibia


    Damara Dik Dik - prehensile & poignantly beautiful
    Northern Namibia's heat-stressed hills resonate an ancient energy and in the jagged fissures the furnace-like breeze recalls the ghost-like laughter of fallen friends & foe from the folly of a futile past. The echoes of The Border are long-since silent & all but forgotten.

    The upside of the then South Africa-controlled South West Africa (Namibia since Independence in 1989) and the 'secret war' waged along its northern borders is a road-infrastructure that persists & which permits stress-free access to a rugged, desolate geography which, when coaxed, reveals a beauty unlike anywhere else on earth. In this heat-mirage lurks a fauna treasure-trove & a bird-list largely unique in the sub-region. Alisha & I ventured here for the latest leg of our 800-Challenge.
    Ruppell's Parrot - not uncommon & a favourite


    African Hawk-Eagle (L) - Ayre's Hawk-Eagle (R)
    Two images merged  for interest & comparison

    Time-allocation conflicts premised a condensed month-long excursion into two frenetic weeks. Our efforts would be confined to Namibia's northern areas only, excluding Etosha but inclusive of the Zambezi Region, formally known as the Caprivi or Caprivi Strip. 

    The strategy was simple - we would devote each sunlit hour to the pursuit of the many endemics hidden among the rocks; on the thermals high above; on the plains below; on or under the flint-like scrub and on or in the gallery-'forests' along the many sand-locked waterways. Later we would glass the perennial Kunene & Kavango rivers for more... 

    We were successful, on the whole, based on a generous dose of good fortune and Alisha's relentless determination. 

    African Hobby - a breeding resident...??
    Grey Kestrel - one of a handful of birds
    Other than the distraction posed and the time spent pursuing two hitherto unconfirmed species more commonly found further north & outside the sub-region, we dipped on Augur Buzzard & Angolan Cave-Chat. Unless we return to the Kunene-region's Zebra Mountains, an unlikely eventuality, the localised Cave-Chat will remain forfeit for the 800 Challenge & is, perhaps, the first bird we've called time on before the year's expiration. 

    The northern Namibian [Koakoland / Ovamboland] region also boasts a plethora of raptors & owls, from the more commonly seen Booted Eagle to the generally rare Grey Kestrel. Ayre's Hawk-Eagle & an unusually confiding African Hobby were seasonally-rare gifts and evidence of our good fortune.
    African Barred Owlet - Kunene River Lodge
    Of interest & an intriguing consequence of the region's geographical isolation is the prevalence of disjunct populations of species readily considered more common elsewhere. Whilst the north western race (ovamboensis) of White-browed Scrub Robin is not considered disjunct it illustrates, quite nicely, the many remarkable plumage variations regionally separated individuals of the same 'species' often develop over time. In the case of Orange River Francolin vocalisation is succinctly different too.
    White-browed Scrub- Robin [ovamboensis]: Distinctly different
    I usually avoid a 'then we went there & then we saw this' trip report believing that the birds are complimentary to the whole experience rather than the experience itself. Even so, on the birds themselves, on this particular trip, I'll offer the following two words:     MAG    NIFICENT!

    A smorgasbord of delightful tits & bits from Bare-cheeked Babblers to Rufous-bellied Tits; & from Rockrunner to Short-toed Rock-Thrush. Yes we've seen them all before & notwithstanding the rather mundane yet commonplace 'once seen - once learned' attitude some birdmen suffer, even the most jaded traveler concedes a return visit to this trough..!

    Rufous-bellied Tit
    Black-faced Babbler
    Bare-cheeked Babbler



    Rockrunner
    White-tailed Shrike
    Short-toed Rock-Thrush
    I could wax-on about shredded tyres in 40 degree heat; or confiscated meat (smoked & vacuum-packed...) at a disease-control barrier; or speeding fines I considered grossly unfair / illegal & specifically targeting foreign travelers; or interesting local custom - red-ochred bare-breasted innocents & some fancy head-gear; or diminutive San people; or bare-footed, bearded proprietors but I will limit, if not prefer, to tell two stories only.

    Both stories involve unusual interaction between people & animals and sadly, as it turned out & at the time of writing, both ended tragically.

    For comparative purposes only, intent & consequence were spectrum-opposites. In the first incident the animal was lost & in the second, two children were drowned.The intentions in the first were trite & perhaps the consequence of humanity at its best & worst. All things being equal you might be forgiven for concluding differently in the second incident. You may, in fact, decide otherwise..

    In rural Africa we expect to apply urban logic whenever faced with a scenario we find unpalatable, intended or otherwise, even if only at first glance. It's grossly unfair & an injustice. People are measured by a standard against which they couldn't / shouldn't possibly comply. Take the procurement of meat for example. A vacuum-packed fillet steak had the same consequence for the donor at origin as awaits the hog-tied village beast.

    Mtoti [African Clawless Otter] - Shamvura
    Mark & Charlie Paxton from Shamvura Camp are, first & foremost, people with their hearts in the right place even if, at first glance, they appear a touch eccentric, by urban measurements. Goats, guineafowl, dogs, trees of remembrance & otters clamour at the feet & arms of both guests & owners for their daily fix of TLC all organic life seemingly demands. Whilst it makes for a memorable experience, the antics, in which the menagerie features strongly, are no less unusual than the bare-footed, big-toe-etched sand-scribbles of the Kunene Namibian lodge-proprietor further west; much further west..
    Souza's Shrike
    A short while ago locals 'found' another young African [Cape] Clawless Otter and as before (3x) the Paxtons accepted the now-orphaned otter for what I assume & I stress this point, was some reward. Mtoti, as she was dubbed, flourished on a diet of good intent & milky fish. Her canine companions accepted her into the owners' bed; guests accepted her in the pool and all was well. Her antics were enjoyed by all, none more so than by my own family.

    It was with extreme sadness that we subsequently learnt of Mtoti's death. Our condolences to the Paxtons who considered her nothing short of kin. She lies buried, along with the other, mostly long-lived pets, under the remembrance tree overlooking the river from which she came. Without abrogating from the tragic events as they unfolded & as I write this, I can't help wondering why so many otter 'orphans' emanate from one small stretch of river.
    Pygmy Goose - male
    Returning to South Africa from Namibia via Botswana for Pel's Fishing Owl and some R&R behind a fly-rod for nembwe (bream) & tigerfish, we fell foul of rural Africa's timetable once again. This second incident will live-on in our memories for, I suspect, a very long time and for reasons less sure than I might have been before the incident.
    Nile Crocodile
    We were based at 'New' Drotsky's [Shakawe, Botswana] & by new I mean bloody awful.. The creaking, wooden monstrosity ['The Lodge'] & its accompanying wooden chalets, a long-iron away from the river & in scrubby bush, is a poor substitute for the charm of old Drotsky's, a putt away from the water's edge & in a natural, well-established garden dominated by towering trees.

    Notwithstanding my irritated backward glare from the bow of the boat as the pre-fabricated lodge thankfully vanished over the papyrus-drenched horizon, this water has my ticket. Birds hum a deafening lullaby; crocs splash and tigerfish titillate. Following on from a morning session, interrupted by a cold lunch & a snooze, this particular afternoon started no differently. Reels screamed laughter & joy, teeth snapped & the bravely-fought were returned safely from whence they came. The Pel's Fishing Owl we had sought at first light stood stoically for the afternoon's shoot.

    Meanwhile, no more than a short-cast upstream from where we played the drift, rural Africa demanded audience. Local people hastily gathered at the water's edge & although the rural African's audible reaction to an incident is usually muted, at best, we could tell from anxious faces that tragedy would accompany us home this afternoon. As we later learned the incident had transpired immediately behind us on the opposite bank.

    A father & two children, as water-resident people usually do, had crossed the river in a wooden makoro [a canoe hewn from the trunk of a single tree eg: Sausage Tree] to collect reeds which they would later sell or use themselves in their home. Unbeknownst to the father & his boys they had inadvertently stumbled into the personal space of a hippopotamus bull which immediately attacked the boat & her occupants. The father made shore but the boat floundered & the two boys were lost, presumed drowned.

    Our boat was later boarded, with permission, by the local police & we joined the army in a fruitless search late into the night. The boys & the bull had vanished as had the curious crowd from earlier in the afternoon. Friends & family stood silently in hope but dispersed immediately, almost trance-like, on confirmation of the worst. We're not unaccustomed to death in its many forms, far from it, but I remember returning home that night in reflective contemplation. Beneath our boat the river's flow had not diminished. Pods of hippo gathered in morbid murmur & watched us pass them by. The land was quiet but for the ordinary sounds of life.


    PS: - I had video footage, post-incident, but it seems a little crass to keep. I haven't. In isolation we'd had a great day on the river. We had, in all likelihood, spent more in boat fees than that family might have earned in a year's toil. Much later that evening I carried that thought to bed.

    As I write this two things come to mind. The first was from my boat skipper who in answer to my 'will they shoot the hippo..' shrugged & said: 'This is Africa. This is how it has always been & this is how it must be. We take from the river & the river takes from us..' The second was my late-night knee-jerk urban measurement of worth & associated misguided guilt. The boatman's wealth is the river, inclusive of its bounty & its dangers. If in fact the privilege to spend a few days on the water had cost me a resident boatman's annual toil, then by extrapolation & by my measurement, given that the boatmen spend the entire year afloat, are these people not more favoured than I could ever be? Isn't it strange that 'the world' doesn't see it that way...?

    Next morning the makoros plied back & forth ferrying reeds, gathering nets - as they had done yesterday & if the world allows, they'll do tomorrow. Up above, low-flying military planes scoured the river in vain hope or perhaps just in performance of their daily duty. Hippos looked on & the birds thrilled the sunrise.




    Wednesday, 17 July 2013

    Old-Africa's a cappella is soul music

    Botswana's AIDS epidemic - 2nd only to Swaziland

    Those of us who defy confinement & who acknowledge Old-Africa in our veins, even those of less fashionable hue, are compelled by the natural order. Thus inspired, modern nuance & material comfort blend with ancient custom.
    Sedentary Botswana / Caprivi where wealth walks

    Black & white become shades of grey & are neither simple nor singular in interpretation but we sing acapella*, in time ...

    * harmony. Dusty shades of grey 

    Sunset at the Chobe / Zambezi confluence 

    Generations, however far removed, draw nourishment from this dust & from within the herds.

    As the second quarter of our year draws to a close our attention turned north; far north: - to eastern Botswana & nearby Namibia's Caprivi Strip.

    A shining beacon of hope for Africa Botswana plagiarises a perfect world. Fields of amber & ephemeral swamp blend seamlessly with salt-encrusted thirst-land.

    World-class infrastructure; legislated tradition; unrivaled respect for the rule of law & an AIDS epidemic which threatens the fabric of Botswana's psyche, ensures a delicate contrast; uniquely managed by the people, for the people. Ancient & modern live in trust.


    Home - Chobe


    It was to these land-locked shores that we took our son to celebrate his 13th birthday; a traditional coming of age he'd have to carve off the back of the Zambezi Queen & from the papyrus-choked depths of the Chobe & Zambezi rivers in search of tigerfish & bream. If the 'remuneration committee' ie: Mom & Dad kept an eye out for the feathered fiends endemic to these parts, what harm....?
    Like all teenagers; these bite
    The old ways / nylon new -  modern tradition 

    Ostensibly a fishing trip to Botswana's Chobe river & later to Namibia's Zambezi river near Kasane & Kilizo respectively, most of our time was spent on the water. Confined as we were, either on the house-boat or on one of the fishing skips, our birding was specific & focused.

    In retrospect we had the latitude & the charter to come and go as we pleased which allowed for arm's-length encounters with many of Botswana's avian specials including White-backed Night Heron, African Finfoot, Western-banded Snake-Eagle, Rock Pratincole, African Skimmer, Slaty Egret & others.

    From off the boats the birds are confiding - African Darter
    Wattled Crane - in decline
    Other specials seen from the boats on our Chobe leg included the rarely seen Sitatunga, the more common Red Lechwe, Puku and herds of Elephant, Sable & Buffalo. A road trip into the Chobe National Park yielded good sightings of lion & a myriad species of bird including Wood Pipit & Three-banded Courser.
    White-backed Night Heron - common
    Rufous-bellied Heron

    The abiding avian memory from our Chobe leg was undeniably the large flock of African Skimmer & Rock Pratincole which vocally trawled the crepuscular waters in search of fish & insects respectively.

    There are few evenings spent more honestly than those in Botswana from off the boat-deck; nodding quietly at anchor; condensation-wrapped sun-downers close at hand; family in tow & a wild Africa-cloaked sunset. It's pure.
    African Skimmer - crepuscular feeders






    The Katima special
    Choking Chobe in our winter dust we headed further north & into Namibia's Caprivi, a striplet of land no wider than a piece of string and adjacent Botswana's northern watery borders.

    Arbitrarily demarcated in the yesteryear for political / military convenience, many of its peoples share blood-ties with ancestral kin across the Zambezi river in Zambia. Namibians by decree, the Lozi-speaking people of eastern Caprivi are comfortably rural & largely reliant on subsistence.

    Nearby Katima Mulilo, the region's capital, provides for some urban relief; services the domestic & transitory markets & is the gate-way further north into central Africa.

    Winter pickings are good.... Middle-age spread?

    Unlike the other, 'more discerning', members of my family I find Namibia's Caprivi quite compelling. I like & trust her people; refuse to accept the rumour that nocturnal raids on tourist spots, largely by makoro-bandits, are the workings of local fishermen and most importantly find its wilderness less orderly than the more manicured parks south of the river.

    I was sad to hear that the poaching of migratory elephants for ivory through Namibia's Bwabwata region is becoming more prevalent. I wasn't surprised to learn that one of the (recently apprehended) poaching gangs were neither Namibian nor from Botswana but rather from the Congo & from China.
    Hartlaub's Babbler - politician-like. Scratch mine first, mate....

    African Skimmer - scrape (Locals revere these birds)
    I was equally annoyed to learn that the Namibian fishing grounds were being extensively poached, if not wholly decimated, by foreign fishermen conducting nocturnal sorties from Zambia. Indiscriminate netting of fish, at night & not for own-use but rather for the US $ -based markets in faraway Congo, whose own fishing grounds have long-collapsed, will spell the end of Namibia's fresh-water fishery. From my own perspective, as a recreational catch & release angler specifically and an eco-tourist generally, this short-sighted indifference from Namibia's authorities makes little sense.

    Schalow's Turaco - a 'primary' feather


    One of the many birds in the region we'd yet to photograph successfully was the Schalow's Turaco. 

    In four previous attempts we'd been unsuccessful. This time, however, we were fortunate to locate a briefly confiding bird.. Not only were we permitted a few record images in harsh midday-light, but the bird, rather unexpectedly, donated a wing-feather as it scorched over our heads, not too dissimilar from a wind-assisted, adrenaline-infused grouse in open season.

    As it turned out the feather fluttered down to our feet as we watched, some might say somewhat trance-like & slack-jawed. At the very last instant a gust of wind blew the feather out of Mills & Boon & into the most diabolically thorn-infested shrub known to science.

    Our son retrieved the memento & for his chivalry spilled a goblet-full of skin & claret.. No doubt the bird cackles from the tree-tops still..!

    Notwithstanding, the image of the Schalow's is a milestone & our 800th species we've photographed in the sub-region. [This life-time photographic milestone is distinct from our 2013: - 800 Challenge where the Schalow's Turaco was species no. 698 seen in the sub-region since we initiated the 800 Challenge in January, earlier this year].

    Dare I say it ... - it's a feather in our cap..!