8 August 2010

A Zulu Cultural Tour

Sawubona from KwaZulu Natal the province of St Lucia and the heartland of the Zulu people.  I thought I should share with you the little bits I have picked up about the Zulu culture and way of life.  We get an opportunity to spend time in the local village and attend a cultural evening mid week.   It also happens to be the birthday of one of our newest volunteers, Lisa.  She has just arrived from the Netherlands and she is turning 18. Wow!  I wonder if she realises how lucky she is to be turning 18 in Africa.

The Zulu and Xhosa are two of the most important ethnic groups here.  The word Zulu means heaven and has come down from the name of an ancient chief.

We have been invited to a reconstructed Zulu village to partake of a traditional meal and to witness some of their dancing.  One of the guys greets us and shows us around.  He is obviously out to impress us with a few tall tales and tells us stories about his 10 wives including the one Australian wife he has back in town.  We realise right away this is a very male dominated culture when he instructs us that the men must always enter the huts in the village first and the women follow after. Crocodile Centre

The reconstructed village comprises of a number of spherical huts built of tightly woven grasses.  There are special huts for the men, women and ancestors.  Men and women do live together after marriage but there are strict rules about their association prior to tying the knot.

The ancestors hut is decorated with numerous spears, animal skins, various belts and other accessories made of brightly coloured beads.  The women will weave different colours into their belts to send out certain messages as the colours of the beads all have symbolic meaning.   White for virginity, Red for an unmarried lady who was ready and available (I think) and yellow if you were jealous of a rival vying for the attention of your man :)!  On the ground spread out before us is a variety of Zulu outfits for us to try on.

The types of clothes you wear reflects your status.  The Zulu chief gets to wear a majestic leopard skin around his shoulders while the the women wear rather unattractive skirts made of thick animal hide.  The skirts are prettied up with the beaded belts and interesting head gear.  The women are usually expected to be topless and show off their bodies until they get married at which stage they are expected to cover up – cover up the property of their man so to speak!   Our guide keeps saying,”I love this culture”!  Well, I can see why.

We are invited to try on the skirts and other accessories.  This is definitely not my best look….

 Crocodile Centre Crocodile Centre

Explaining the customs takes rather a long time so we are happy when they finally invite us to dinner.  They have cooked us quite a feast.  Pap, a chicken curry, spinach, beetroot, mashed pumpkin and other side dishes.  The food is tasty and we are hungry, so we tuck in. 

After dinner we are invited to watch them dance.  Only the men folk are here and they are dressed in traditional gear.  (Sorry, the light was appalling so the pictures are not very good, even at my highest ISO setting) 

Crocodile Centre

The dancing is quite energetic and they stomp around the fire doing a few acrobatic moves.  We are then all invited to join them and we each take a turn in trying to emulate what we have just seen.  It is quite hilarious and a fitting end to a fun night.

Zulu Cultural Night-101 “I do not want my house to be walled in on all sides and my windows to be stuffed. I want the cultures of all the lands to be blown about my house as freely as possible. But I refuse to be blown off my feet by any.”  Mahatma Gandhi

Hluluwe-iMfolozi Park

We cross the iMflozi river in great anticipation of what this day might bring.  Dawn is breaking and we have come in search of the Big 5. 

The Big Crocodile Centre 5, elephant, rhino, cape buffalo, leopard, and lion so named back in the days when hunting was common here and they were the most dangerous animals to hunt.  This park was the old stomping grounds of the ancient Zulu Kings.  Today, armed with our Canons and Nikons we find these animals almost as elusive to shoot!  Along with St Lucia, this is the oldest conservation area in Africa and is famous as the park that helped save the white rhino from extinction.

Crocodile CentreAs big cats and other dangerous mammals roam this park you are required to stay in your vehicle except at designated spots. There are 2 hides from which you can observe water holes and hope they provide some excitement – a lion having lunch perhaps?  We don’t get that lucky but we did see a pride way off in the distance.  

We get lucky on this our first game drive during this visit to Africa.  We spot 4 of the Big 5, although the pride of lions we watched from the hide were a little too far away to capture on camera!JPEGS

We are also lucky with our bird sightings – one of the harder species to capture on camera because they are so twitchy and rarely stay still! Crocodile Centre

I even manage to shoot the bee eater having breakfast!Crocodile Centre We see lots of other mammals such as giraffe, impala, inyala, zebra, warthog, wildebeest,  and kudu. 

JPEGS2  JPEGS1 By late afternoon we head back.  Time to go home and edit the hundreds of photos we have shot and get ready for our show this evening.  We will pick our top 5 photos and present them to our fellow volunteers.  We have had a very enjoyable day and look forward to the next game drive where we hope to shoot close ups of the Big 5 with our Canons!JPEGS-1

“It is my intention to present - through the medium of photography - intuitive observations of the natural world which may have meaning to the spectators.” Ansel Adams

Hippos and Crocs at iSimangaliso Wetland Park

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The name iSimangaliso means miracle and wonder.  It is an apt name for a very special place.  A place that is both a Ramsar Wetland as well as South Africa’s first Natural World Heritage Site.  I feel incredibly privileged to be here for a month, discovering my passions and doing the things I absolutely love, bush walks, game drives, writing and photography!

The park has 8 interlinking eco-systems, Africa’s 2010 08 04 Hippo & Croc Tour-12largest estuarine system, over 500 bird species, fishing traditions that are over 700 years old and 25,000 year old coastal dune systems which are amongst the highest in the world.  

We spend Tuesday afternoon on a hippo and croc tour getting up close and personal with these magnificent beasts. 

The Nile Crocodiles live to be approximately 70 years old.  While it is the largest predator in St Lucia, their fat deposits enable them to  go without food for almost a year!  There are estimates that the croc population in the lake systems here could reach 1,500 but they are a vulnerable species.  Some of the main threats to the croc population here are the conflicts with humans and the loss of habitat.  A female will lay about 45 eggs every 2 to 3 year and this could increase if food is abundant.  However, only a couple of crocs will actually survive past a few years and become fully fledged adults.

We are captivated by the hippos and are fortunate that we are on the water during a time when they very active.  We pass by many pods some comprising of at least 20 hippos.  2010 08 04 Hippo & Croc Tour-35 Hippos have the dubious reputation of killing more humans in Africa than any other animal.  However they are an important part of the eco system here and at night you find them eating tonnes of grass from both the surrounding swamp lands as well as the neighbouring parks in the area.  2010 08 04 Hippo & Croc Tour-28It is not uncommon to encounter a hippo on the street if you are walking home late at night in St 2010 08 04 Hippo & Croc Tour-38Lucia and we have been briefed as to the appropriate behaviour in the event of a hippo encounter! In general, if you don’t get in the way of a hippo and the water or a hippo and her cub you will be safe :)   2010 08 02 Estuary Bush Walk-2

By day you can find a hippo wallowing in the water, digesting all of the food they have eaten.  The lakes here are full of their nutrient rich dung which in turn supports a huge food chain including invertebrates, fish, birds and crocs.  

2010 08 04 Hippo & Croc Tour-21It is late afternoon and the hippos are active at this time, which 2010 08 04 Hippo & Croc Tour-29makes it exciting for us.  As photographers we are all vying for those perfect yawn shots and I think we all managed to catch a few although making sure it is always in focus is quite a challenge. 

We are also fortunate to see many bird species such as sea eagles and the goliath heron.  2010 08 04 Hippo & Croc Tour-41 2010 08 04 Hippo & Croc Tour-40

We have had an amazing experience and even before we step off the the boat we are making plans to revisit the estuary by boat before we leave St Lucia.

The sun is setting when we return to the boat ramp.  The lake changes from beautiful shades of orange to amazing shades of pink.  The Miracle, Wonder, and Magic of iSimangaliso will always remain with me.

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It is only when we silent the blaring sounds of our daily existence that we can finally hear the whispers of truth that life reveals to us, as it stands knocking on the doorsteps of our hearts.  ~K.T. Jong

A Week in the Life of a Conservation & Photography Volunteer

I am excited to commence my first week as  conservation and photography volunteer in St Lucia. 

I and the rest of the photographers have now moved into the main house which we share with about 25 other people.  Megs and I still get to share a room which is great.  Our meals are cooked for us and our laundry is taken care of so we are quite spoilt.  We both have similar habits and early morning people so we make good room mates!

We have a variety of activities lined up, all of which involve some aspect of conservation and photography.  We will work closely with Sean, our project co-ordinator who is a Canadian volunteering with African Impact and Robyn a local eco tour guide here in St Lucia.

Crocodile CentreCrocodile Centre 

While I signed up for this position through Real Gap, the projects are run by their local partner African Impact.  The project managers and coordinators are all volunteers from the west but the staff who look after us are local South Africans.  They cook beautiful meals for us and keep the house and gardens well looked after.

At the end of our month we are required to submit a series of conservation and wild life photographs which will be sent to various organisations such as Green Vision to be used for promoting conservation.  We will obtain these photographs by participating in bush walks, game drives, and other activities, so yes this is a hard gig :)!

We spend Monday morning on a estuary bush walk at the iSimangaliso Wetland Park.   We walk down to the coast which has one of the world’s highest vegetated sand dunes and look for wild flowers, bugs and beetles to photograph.  These creatures are hard to capture but recording the bugs and beetles that are around at certain times of the year is an important aspect of conservation.

2010 08 02 Estuary Bush Walk-1

We spend the afternoon planning for our first teaching opportunity mid week at a Conservation Club in the local village school.  We plan to work with students who have elected to be in this club because of their interest in the environment.  The club has recently started a recycling program in the school but it has not taken off.  Our work will involve helping get this back on track as well as guiding them in crafting a Charter for the club and setting some goals for the future.

The planning session is very beneficial when we participate in our first club meeting on Wednesday afternoon.  The kids are in their early teens and get involved enthusiastically in the agenda we have put together.  Unfortunately, their goals are quite ambitious and we do have to bring them back to reality and encourage them to set more realistic goals that will actually be achievable in a year.

2010 08 04 Conservation Club

On Tuesday morning we spend half a day engaged in conservation activities at the local Crocodile Centre.  The centre has all of the African species of crocodiles including the Nile, Long-snouted and Dwarf crocodiles. 

2010 08 03 Croc Ctr & Hippo & Croc TourThe purpose of the centre is mainly for education but they rehabilitate ‘rogue’ crocodiles from around the country, breed a limited amount of crocs and  perform occasional releases of crocodiles in areas where they are endangered.  We are hopeful that we might be part of a release operation during our stay here as we have missed the time when the eggs hatch!

Working at the centre will be a weekly occurrence for us.  Our first task is to build a path that will take visitors away from the main crocodile enclosures and get them interacting with some of the wild ‘uncaged’ animals in the adjacent bushland.  I help the boys build the path while the rest of the gang  mulch the path we build.  We are quite pleased with our days work and head back to get ready for our Hippo and Crocodile tour, which I will talk about in a separate post.

Wednesday morning sees us back on another bush walk, this time in the forest of iGwala Gwala.  We are in search of birds but it is a windy morning and the birds are high up in the trees, so we don’t get any winners on this walk. 

Robyn our guide gives us a pep talk before we go in the forest.  She was walking alone here a few days ago when she heard the sounds of a leopard in the bush.  She gives us  strict instructions on what to do in the unlikely event we come across one - don’t panic, run or scream but back away slowly.  We are instructed to get each others attention by slapping our thighs and clicking our fingers!  Right, this sounds similar to the instructions we were given in California about the bears - curl up in to a little ball on the trail if a bear approaches.   Crocodile CentreNone of these instructions really work in real life because people panic but you can’t really out run a leopard..and there really isn’t any point in climbing a tree! 

My best photograph of the day is that of a vervet monkey on the way home.  They are found everywhere in our neighbourhood and love getting into the garbage early morning before the daily collection.  There were no leopard to be seen and we survive to photograph another day. 

Crocodile Centre “Photography is a way of feeling, of touching, of loving. What you have caught on film is captured forever... it remembers little things, long after you have forgotten everything.”  Aaron Siskind

2 August 2010

On Assignment

My first week spent working with Emil and the other photographers has been quite intense!  It is a mix of lessons and sessions spent out in the field practicing what we have learnt. 

Each day we are given an assignment that requires us to present 5 photos to a group of 25 people that includes volunteers from the other programs.  The group votes on the photos they like and the photo of the day is chosen from what Emil refers to as the ‘Peanut Gallery’.  After all it is the general public who will ultimately decide on the fate of your art.

On Day 1 we are taken to a really boring field, a hoola hoop is thrown and we are asked to present 4 photographs from within the hoop and one from outside the hoop.  This was the photograph I shot from outside the hoop.IMG_0112 We had an early morning rise on Day 2 and spent the morning photographing at iSimangaliso Park. Picture 348Picture 301Our assignment for that afternoon was to capture a portrait.  I love shooting portraits because it allows me to interact with my subject, something I truly enjoy.  I find that people often open up to me and allow me in to their world, which is useful when taking a portrait.  I wander into town because the locals are such wonderful subjects.  Many in the group loved my portrait which came in as the runner up that evening.  (I submitted the middle shot).   07-28Day 3 was when I felt the most inspired. We wake up early morning to shoot another sunrise at the beach.  All of my photos were well liked by the group and Emil and this one came in as the photo of the day!_MG_0660

Some of the other photos I took that day include the following: _MG_0625 _MG_0639

 

 

 

 

 

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We spent the morning of Day 5 at the Crocodile Centre.  We will visit this centre each week as part of our volunteer assignments and donate our photos to the centre.  Our assignment was to take 5 pictures that were connected by a theme and then present them to the group.  I chose the theme of education in conservation and did a presentation that linked the visiting school kids with the centre.  Yes, we got pretty close to the crocs!

Croc Centre

The week comes to an end and we are exhausted but exhilarated!  We celebrate with a typical South African brie (BBQ) and down a few drinks, glad that somehow we all got our assignments in on time and survived the week with our photography skills a little better than when we started!   Picture 241

 Your work is to discover your world and then with all your heart give yourself to it.  ~Buddha

1 August 2010

Settling in to St Lucia

I have arrived safely in St Lucia!  I am here to volunteer in the Conservation & Photography program run by African Impact, a group that runs many such worthwhile projects all over this continent.  There are 3 different projects being run here in St Lucia and this time they have so many volunteers that the main house is full and the photographers are put up in a separate house for the first week.

St Lucia is home to South Africa’s first natural World Heritage site, the iSimangaliso Park.  It is an amazing park, set right on the coast with great vistas and much biodiversity.  We will spend a fair amount of time here photographing the people,  landscapes and nature so I know I have an exciting month ahead.   

There are 6 of us in this program.  We are one male (Simon) and 5 females.  There are 2 girls from the UK -Hayley & Danni, two of us from Australia -Megan and myself, and Azu from Japan.  We get to know each other very quickly as our first week involves an intensive photography workshop.   Picture 152I have become good friends with Megs my roommate, a fellow Australian who is originally from New Zealand.  She is the closest in age to me as the rest of the group are all in their twenties. Our first week is  spent working with Emil von Maltitz, a well known professional photographer from Durban.   www.lime.photo.co.za

Amongst the many things he does are tailor made photographic tours of South Africa, so if you are coming to this part of the world and are interested in photography, I would definitely recommend you look up his website.  A number of us have already signed up to do a 4 day tour of the Drakensburg Mountains with him and I am looking forward to that already! 

On our first day we are given IMG_0089an extensive orientation to the area and shown around town.  As we live close to a local park we are advised to look out for the hippos who wander the roads at night in search of lush grasses.  We are given instructions on what to do and what not to do in the event we run into one on our way back from a night out! 

Picture 243

I also learn there is still a bit of tension between the black Zulu community and the white South African locals.  I am also quite disturbed to learn that even 16 years after Apartheid the answer to petty theft in the area is that the supermarket Picture 329here will ask a Zulu local to check their bags in a locker before entering the store.  No such requirements if you are white!  I ask if I may face any problems and I am told that the last black volunteer they had who was an African  IMG_0161 Englishwoman had also been asked to check her bags! 

Picture 337

 

 

 

 

Fortunately (for their sake?) I have not been asked to check my bags yet and I’ve found everyone in town really friendly and helpful. 

We were also informed that if the local white South Africans see the volunteers hanging out with the local Zulus in a bar, they may cause issues and the Zulus will be asked to leave the bar.  Integration between the communities is still frowned on here!

I find all this disturbing but I am quite aware from my previous visit to South Africa that the tension between the black and white communities certainly does exist in parts of this country. 

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“When you examine the lives of the most influential people who have ever walked among us, you discover one thread that winds through them all. They have been aligned first with their spiritual nature and only then with their physical selves.” Albert Einstein

A Postcard from Johannesburg

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I am so excited to be back in Africa!  Without a doubt this is my favourite continent. 

There is something in the air that really excites me about Africa.  Is it the smiles on the faces of the people here, the incredible wildlife that is just waiting to be discovered, the rhythm of this continent or the colours around me…I am not sure.  I am just happy to be back here. 

And what a difference a few years make.  When I first arrived in Jo’berg back in 2007 the airport was under construction and the place was a bit of a mess.  It looks fantastic now and still has reminders of the World Cup that has just finished.  The airport appears quite professional and I move through the customs and immigration quite swiftly.  

At the Jo’berg airport you have the option of taking either a regular metered taxi or an unmetered taxi run by private operators.  The unmetered taxis are cheaper over longer distances but I remember that on my first arrival I had been quite nervous about taking one of them and even more nervous when my driver had ushered me to the basement of the airport.  This time around I felt quite at home.  I knew the drill.  

As it turned around, the hotel I had booked online was almost an hours drive from the airport.  However, the time passed quickly as I found lots in common with Mduduzi, my driver that night!   He has given up his career in HR to chase his dreams and has started up his own business in the transport industry.  He does local tours and sometimes does the airport run.

Our conversation covers many topics from the recently concluded World Cup, to local ground water issues, politics and religion and our own personal lives.  I have made another one of those instant connections with a perfect stranger and I find it quite amazing. 

My hotel turns out to be in a really lovely part of town.  It is actually a lovely resort called Misty Hills in a lovely area called Muldersdrift and my room, with its thatched roof and sandstone floor is just my cup of tea. 

I am excited to spend a night here and more excited when I wake up to the sounds of Africa!  I leave that evening for my month of volunteering in St Lucia.  Mduduzi comes back to pick me up and we spend another hour chatting as we travel to the airport.  I think I may have just made my first new friend in Africa!

P7250336 The best and most beautiful things in the world cannot be seen or even touched. They must be felt with the heart". ~ Helen Keller