There are over 10,000 birds in the world and I want to see and photograph them all. It is the very definition of an impossible task. Too little time and too many birds. I need to post a picture on a daily basis to finish before I am 70. Lets see where we get to...
Monday, November 11, 2013
288 : Sulphur-Breasted Bush-Shrike
Sulphur-Breasted Bush-Shrike - Malaconotus sulfureopectus
This is real blow up of a bird that you hear but don't see normally. Hidden in the canopy this beautiful Bush-shrike is a real birder's bird. That's a real tequila sunrise of a breast - orange juice and grenadine !
I think I connected with this bird on our last game drive down by the Great Ruaha River. A River I now read is in danger of drying up and the national park dying. A project to help people by irrigating rice paddies is taking away the water further upstream - in the dry season the water completely stopped flowing and the animals are being forced away from the river and out of the park. The situation is either changed now or the park dies.
I am not sure what the answer would be - you would have to compensate the farmers and find them a livelihood elsewhere. We cannot let Tanzania's largest national park just die - starved of water that fuels the abundance of big game.
All these pictures were taken on a 2 or 3 hour drive where we didn't get more than a kilometre or two from the camp. There are two types of birders - stompers and a*sers. This game drive was an abject lesson in lazy birding - Take a much smaller patch and see what turns up. There were several birds that we couldn't get onto with the bins let alone the camera - a Klaas cuckoo for example that drove my assistant guide Tony nuts as it would have been a lifer and we barely got a peek at it. We just moved 10 yards at a time picking up birds but all the while surrounded by an abundance of game that would have been the main event on any other drive.
But looking back I was just soaking it up - not in hurry - not looking for Cheetahs, Lions or Leopards, just looking for birds and tripping over a whole ecosystem on the doorstep of my tent.
And to top it all a family of elusive Lesser Kudu - I have only just noticed the third animal in the left hand of the frame - Here at range and then blown up so that you can see the more pronounced barring. Perhaps half the size of the stately Greater Kudu we only came across these creatures on I think one or two other occasions.
And zoomed in a bit you can see the differences on these elusive Kudu. More stripes, much smaller.
I am not sure what needs to be done or can be done but I do know its a place that needs protecting. There are enough people on this planet and we need to be cleverer about where we build our rice paddies. The day we wipe out the last big wildernesses for these big animals I will probably be gone - but I hate to think of what we will have done in just 2 or 3 generations. Its easy for me - a safari going lawyer who lives in a villa in the Gulf fuelled by desalinated water to preach about protecting national parks - I have a carbon footprint the size of Mars. The only thing I do know might work is to get numbers of people paying large amounts to visit these places, do it in a sustainable way and then get the money to the people around the edge of the park - farming wildlife !
I see lots of good news stories as well based around wildlife tourism - 300 or 400 people at a time employed to support game reserves in Botswana that are being restored for example - but if the tap is turned off by mismanagement of a river system as it has been in Ruaha then its going to be hard to get people to visit a gameless dust bowl and people still need to be fed.
What to do. I am not Tanzanian.
Sulphur-breasted Bush-Shrike, Malaconotus sulfureopectus
Ruaha National Park, Tanzania
July 2013
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