Painted Dogs- Enthusiastic
Brilliant predators, dedicated family creatures and, no matter what, they are dogs. And, dogs are cool.
“They are the most enthusiastic animals,”
said Rosie Woodroffe of the Institute of Zoology in London, who has studied
wild dogs for the last 20 years. “Other predators may be bigger and fiercer,
but I would argue that there is nothing so enthusiastic as a wild dog,” she
said. “They live the life domestic dogs wish they could live.”
In 1997, while devising an action plan to
help save the wild dog species, Lycaon pictus, Dr. Woodroffe felt anything but
exuberant. Wild dogs were considered among the most endangered of Africa’s
mammals; Dr. Woodroffe had yet to see one in the wild, and she feared she never
would.
“I remember sitting on my kitchen floor
thinking, ‘They’re going to go extinct,’ ” she said. “They have such a massive
requirement for space in a world where human populations are only increasing.”
“Everything I thought 20 years ago was, if
not entirely wrong, then certainly inaccurate,” said Joshua R. Ginsberg, the
president-elect of the Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies in Millbrook, N.Y.,
who was Dr. Woodroffe’s adviser. “Wild dogs turn out to be far more resilient
than anyone expected.”
We Need More Mines
There are few places
in this country more beautiful than the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness
in Minnesota, which is contained by the equally staggering Superior National
Forest. So, naturally, it's just the perfect place to drop a massive copper mine.
Over the weekend,
former vice president Walter Mondale and Teddy Roosevelt IV wrote an op-ed in The New York Times calling our
attention to this free-market brainstorm.
Gap Year Colonialism
The gap year is a right of passage for many young people in
Europe. Sadly, for some it is an excuse to be real jerks.
Westerners writing about their gap year in
Africa should be aware of the risks by now. After Gap Yah guy’s satire of his
time in “Tanzaniaaa”, “Africaaa”, where he actually saw someone contract
“Malariaaa”, travellers have had to think carefully about how they talk about
their year abroad.
At best they risk ridicule. At worst they
will be accused of colonialism, cultural blindness and perpetuating an outdated
narrative of the developing world for their own means.
But no one seemed to have warned Louise
Linton, whose article “How my dream gap year in Africa turned into a nightmare”
appeared in the Telegraph this week to promote a book about her experience.
Despite being in Zambia, she writes about
becoming a “central character” in the Congolese war of the late 1990s –
terrified of what the rebels from across the border “would do to the ‘skinny
white muzungu with long angel hair’”.
She goes on to rattle through the dictionary
of “white saviour in Africa” cliches: from 12-inch long spiders, “brutal tales
of rape and murder”, “close encounters with lions” and helping a “smiling
gap-toothed child with HIV”.
The response on social media was immediate.
One tweeter known as Mr Aye Dee, said that Linton’s piece had “echoes” of
Rudyard Kipling’s poem The White Man’s Burden – except of course that in 1899
people couldn’t tweet Kipling to complain about his imperialist overtones.
Zambians and Africans from around the
continent were furious as Linton’s piece started to circulate online. “Hell
hath no fury like an African scorned,” tweeted BBC presenter Sophie Ikenye.
The Duke of Cambridge
Tusk Award finalists. Individuals working to save wildlife in
Africa.
The economic security of millions of African
people relies on the tourism industry, with around 80 per cent of tourism
revenue in Africa coming from people watching wild animals. If current poaching
rates continue, diminishing opportunities for tourists, the impact on the
future development and prosperity of large parts of this continent will be
incredibly damaging.
That is why I am so proud to congratulate
the three Tusk Award finalists [see below] for their tireless commitment to
preserving Africa’s important natural heritage.
Since its formation in 1990, Tusk has raised
£30 million for a wide range of projects across Africa. These not only aim to
protect wildlife, but also help to alleviate poverty through sustainable development
and education among rural communities who live alongside wildlife. The Duke of
Cambridge became royal patron of Tusk in 2005 and supports its work both
privately and publicly.
Cathy Dreyer, South Africa
Cathy Dreyer started her career more than 17
years ago with South African National Parks (SANParks), as a conservation
student. There she developed a deep concern for black rhino which has shaped
her career in conservation.
Olivier Nsengimana, Rwanda
Dr Olivier Nsengimana, a survivor of the
Rwandan genocide, taught science in secondary school for several years before
being chosen by the government to attend veterinary school. He works as a field
veterinarian with the gorilla doctors. Through his project Saving Endangered
Grey Crowned Cranes, Olivier hopes to inspire the next generation of young Rwandans
to help with the conservation of the country’s wildlife and natural heritage.
Rachel McRobb, Zambia
“I am one of those lucky people in life who
finds fulfilment just being in wild places surrounded by wildlife,” says Rachel
McRobb. “The possibility of losing this in South Luangwa and other parts of
Zambia is enough for me to fight the daily battles involved in running a
wildlife conservation NGO in Africa and managing an anti-poaching unit.”
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