Greenery returns to Soysambu!

Over the last two weeks the Conservancy has finally been getting some much needed respite from the drought. Below are some pics I snapped this afternoon on a drive through the Conservancy.

1. For the first time in 5 months there is finally some water in the Mereroni River, while it is not quite flowing into Lake Elmenteita yet, we are hopeful that with a few more showers the stream will reach to the lake shore.
The Mereroni River

2. Two young male Water Bucks enjoying the fresh juicy grass.
Water buck

3. This Jackal and his mate stop mid Dikdik hunt to watch with curiosity as we drive by.
A Jackal

4. A Rothschild’s Giraffe enjoys the freshly budding leaves of a mathuthi bush.
A Giraffe browsing

5. Finally, the glorious site of The Nose and flamingos reflected in the lake water.
Lake Elmenteita and Delamere Nose

It is amazing that the colours in the landscape have changed so dramatically over the last two weeks. Incredible what a bit of rain can do!

-Kate

Saving a beautiful flamingo sanctuary from extinction

This article written by Beatrice Obwocha appeared in the Kenyan national newspaper The Standard today (5//11/09)

From the Nairobi-Nakuru highway, the shoreline of Lake Elementaita looks like a desert surrounding a small patch of water.

The western and eastern shores of the lake hold little patches of water from hot springs while the main basin of one of Rift Valley’s smallest lakes is turning into a dust bowl.

One gets the impression that they can walk right across the remaining muddy patch that stretches several kilometres.

When strong winds blow, a whirlwind of grey dust sweeps right across the lake whose water levels have declined to less than half a metre deep.

Not even water from the recent rains pounding Nakuru and its environs seem to have made a difference on the lake.

Thousand of flamingos that used to line its shores, giving them a pink hue, have migrated elsewhere as the lake’s water level has declined to its lowest in 20 years.
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Soysambu Conservancy has entered in America’s Giving Challenge!

Soysambu Conservancy has just entered in America’s Giving Challenge, which gives us a chance to win $$$! The competition is only running for another 5 days so we may be out of the running for the $50,000 major prize, but there are daily awards of $1,000 and $500 if we can get the most people to donate in any 24-hour period.

The great thing about this Challenge is that it doesn’t matter how much you give, but instead how much you do to encourage friends and family to get involved in our cause.We all need to come together and start promoting Soysambu Conservancy to win some money to help conserve this beautiful patch of land.

Each of us has tonnes of friends on Facebook who we can ask to donate to our cause. But let’s think big too—can you put our cause in your email signature, can you throw a party and get people to donate through the cause when they enter, can you organize other people to go out and fundraise from all of their friends? As you reach out to your friends be sure to tell them why Soysambu Conservancy matters to you. The possibilities are endless so let’s talk about what we can do to win on the Conservancy Cause Wall or by replying to this bulletin.I think we can do it! But it’s going to take all of us.

Check out the Giving Challenge ( www.causes.com ), then visit our cause to see how we’re doing so far and get involved.

You can donate right now by going to http://www.causes.com/donations/

Let’s win some money for Soysambu Conservancy!

Thank you

Kate Jennings

Bless the rains down in Africa…

Slowly, but hopefully surely, we are beginning to get some rain here on Soysambu. Yesterday we got 5ml, the day before that 3ml and from the thunderstorm that rolled through here this afternoon we are hoping to have got around 10ml.This rain is so desperately needed, particularly in the centre of the 48,000 acre property which seems to be in a rain shadow. We often sit here and watch the rain clouds drifting over the northern and southern ends of Soysambu, but all to often the  centre is left dry. Grass coverage here is long gone and when the winds come the dust picks up. Below is a picture I took on 29th September of a dust storm blowing across the plains infront of the main house and Conservancy office.

A dust storm blowing across from Kikopey town

On a clear day this picture would show the end of the Lake Elmenteita and the nose. Through the dust it is near impossible to make out the trees on the other side of the plain, about 3km away. The dust has come from the eastern side of the lake, the opposite side to the Soysambu boundary, from a town called Kikopey, where thousands and thousands (no exageration) of local pastrolist’s cattle, sheep and goats are decimating the land everyday (pictured below). There is nothing left there. Nothing. I drove past recently and saw the desperate site of a skeletal goat pulling up the grass roots in an attempt to get something to eat. It is a sad state of affairs there.

A Masai cattle herd

Luckily the cattle grazing on Soysambu has been much better managed and the damage far less. This can only keep up for so long though and unfortunately if we dont get decent amounts of rain soon cattle and wildlife will start dying of starvation, a situation already occurring over the fence in Lake Nakuru National Park.Below are some pictures I took this afternoon, both from the roughly same place as the dust picture above (see the difference). The first picture I took just as the storm was easing and there was an amazing amount of water lying around, made extra visible by the lack of grass cover. 

A well saturated Soysambu plain

This second picture was taken about half an hour later and shows just how thirsty the soil is- most of the water has soaked in already, and a herd of the beautiful Boran cattle are wandering across. 

The rain soaked quickly into the parched soils

We are all hoping that this steady rain continues and that in a few days time we will begin to see a green tinge returning to the land.

-Kate

Soysambu Wildlife Census, September 27th.

Twice a year a Game Count is conducted on the entire of the Soysambu Conservancy, to give an idea of animal numbers. It is impossible to get an exact count on most animals, however using particular techniques a general idea can be established!

Rangers, staff, volunteers and residents assembled at the head office at 6am to collect counting sheets, binoculars and vehicles. The property was divided into 11 sections and groups of 3-6 people designated to each section, plus an aerial count of larger animals, like Giraffe and Buffalo, over the entire property.

The count took most groups about 3 hours, but the last group didn’t finish until 11am after scrambling through the dense scrub of the Lake Sanctuary!

Rangers counting animals near the Lake

Some of the notable sightings included a Leopard, 4 Hyena, 4 Bat-Eared Foxes wrestling across the plains, and 3 Ground Horn Bills. 63 Rothschild’s giraffe were counted, including quite a few newborns! There were only 7 Colobus Monkeys seen, which adds to suspicions that the population size has dropped.

Over 200 Eland were seen, and 67 warthog were counted, both numbers having increased since last count in MayThese figures are very encouraging as both these species are targeted heavily by poachers. And last night I saw my first Aardvark on a night drive! Very exciting stuff!

Rangers on a lookout hill counting wildlife