Elephants near Lake Kariba, Zimbabwe |
My friend Karen Minkowski, a frequent contributor to The Intrepid Tourist and definitely an intrepid traveler, is currently in Africa, a place that she has visited often. She spent the month of November at the Songo Conservancy site, which is several hundred miles from Victoria Falls, Zimbabwe. She begins her report:
Woodland
Kingfisher (eats
lizards and insects, not fish). |
I recently
spent three weeks in the Songo Conservancy northeast of Victoria
Falls, on the shores of Lake Kariba, volunteering for the International Anti-Poaching
Foundation (IAPF).
IAPF manages lands where both legal and illegal hunting have severely reduced wildlife populations. Some of these lands border national parks and/or could serve as corridors that would allow wildlife to move between protected areas. The organization recruits and trains young women as rangers who conduct anti-poaching operations within their own communities. (Akashinga is a documentary film about the first set of female rangers trained by IAPF (you can watch it at https://www.iapf.org/the-film). IAPF also supports schools, clinics, legal fishing camps and conservation education. The organization was founded by a charismatic, ex-military Australian. His mission is to wipe out poaching in Africa by building communities that coexist with wildlife and have zero tolerance for poaching or other environmental crimes, whether initiated from within or from the outside. The rangers are impressive, and their salaries help support their extended families.
Celebrating after the graduation ceremony for 40 some young women who had successfully completed their training as rangers. |
A full report of Karen's activities with the Songo Conservancy organization, filled with a description of her activities and her wonderful photographs, is HERE as a PDF. It is filled with incredible close-ups of birds--Karen is a devoted bird-watcher with patience to catch the birds at their best. Karen's text makes you feel as if you are a vicarious visitor too. Enjoy!
Hippos
spend their days in the water to keep cool. They feed at night, but on cloudy
days, they sometimes leave the water to graze. |
I have included just a few samples of her photographs. Be sure to go to the PDF to see all of them.
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