Back in the mara after a
good vacation in Mozambique and enjoying the solitude and driving around
watching animals that I get to enjoy all by myself. The grass is crazy tall
once again and animals just disappear into it. Watching a lion walk in tall
grass is almost mystical, just a slight movement out of the corner of your eye,
and then it’s gone. Then the tail flick and like the drop of a stone your mind
recognizes that ancient predator: lion. Then the tail is down and there’s just
a gentle movement of grass that sets your senses tingling as you watch its
gentle hidden motion.
I saw this lioness just
before sunset on my way to the den. When I drove closer three more lionesses
appeared out of the grass. Literally appeared as if out of nowhere. The way
they blend in is simply fantastic, as as they walked past me and into the sunset
all that I could see was the black tips of their ears just above the swaying
grass.
Later last night the
Maruti died, Emily and I did not have any overlap in Serena, we traded places
on the drop off. But she said that Laragin had said the engine needed cleaning.
I’ll have to call him tomorrow. I was only a few hundred meters from camp, on
the road above camp, if I cut through the woods that would get me straight to
camp, but the road loops around a bit to stay in the grass. I called Philimon
and Moses to see if they could walk out and walk me back so that I could get
the cruiser and pull the maruti back. I hear a few hippo noises in the woods
and then a hyena comes loping out of the woods in the direction of camp!
Finally Moses and Philimon show up from the direction of the road. Turns out
there are buffalo in the woods so we have to stick the road and skirt them.
They tell me this as I climb out of the car and turn on on a maglight. Part of
me was terrifed and part of me was completely calm. Just a few hundred meters
through the African bush after darkness- with buffalo. No biggie. Carefully,
quietly, and quickly we make the walk back to camp. When we finally are within
a few steps of the cruiser I heave
a sigh of relief. It does not take long to tug the maruti back to camp.
TREX is still very lame
on her front left leg. Sometime back in December we first saw her all gimpy,
when she was at JFab den. Usually hyenas stop limping within a week or two so
it worries me to see her still lame. Maybe it’s broken? However both Clever and
Shooter are doing well it seems. Though Clever is a little small, Shooter
wouldn’t let Clever nurse this morning, but if Clever is clever at all she
would have nursed if she was hungry earlier when Shooter was not nursing
instead of waiting until her sibling started to nurse.
Ema is officially missing
and Dave thinks she’s dead. Her collar has died and Dave always thinks a hyena
is dead if its collar has died. But we regularly don’t see hyenas for over two
months when they are perfectly healthy. In Ema’s favor she had just started
whammin’ so we might not see her until her cubs are around 2 months old or
until she brings them to the communal den. Also in her favor is that all of her
latest points in December are from waaay up north almost past the northern
boundary of north’s territory. This is an area we rarely drive, actually never
drive, so if she’s hanging out there and has her cubs in a den up there we
definitely would not see her. I drove through that area this morning but it’s a
huge space and there aren’t many tracks. Additionally I didn’t get there until
8 since I spent a lot of time at the den this morning. If she was in a hole I
wouldn’t have seen her head above the grass and thicket. So I’m not giving up
on her yet. The best I can do is try and hit up that area now and then but I
can’t drive there every time I do north obs because it takes the entire morning
just to drive over there, drive around, and then drive back to camp and doesn’t
leave time to check out the usual hyena haunts.
On a good note the dead subadult
that Emily found by the den is not Rama. I took DNA tissue samples from the jaw
my first day back and then with Philimon’s help we took off the skin and most
of the flesh from the skull before putting it in a bucket high up in a tree for
the bugs to clean off. Malo’s skull is up there too and it’s clean enough to
take dental measurements on now. This sub was completely eaten by the time
Emily found it so all we have is the head. There are a ridiculous number of lions
in the area, seen them two days in a row now so it’s not too surprising to find
a dead sub. In fact, I’m almost positive this is not the only sub that has or
will die. Alll the cubs that were at Schiphol Den when I first arrived are over
a year old now and graduated from the den. This is their most vulnerable time,
too small and inexperienced to be smart about lions and too young to even get
their own food and yet they are out there wandering around. Just last night I
saw a TINY sub walking on the road, it looked smaller than even Slim or Dalt to
me but it must have been one of them out and about all alone in the great big
mara. It’ll be another 6 months though before we can take stock and declare
anyone missing however.
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