Saturday, 8 October 2011

Eco training - bush life at its best

So its week 4 of the bush life and all is going very well.

I met up with the Ecotraining group 5D at nelspruit over 3 weeks ago now and I can't quite believe how much we have achieved and more than that how much we have learnt in such a short space of time. Our first 3 days were spent in nelspruit filling in forms, registering with DEAT and FGASA (the governing bodies for field guiding) and also taking our rifle competency test which to pass we had to fire 10 rounds (bullets) into a square target on an A5 piece of paper 15 meters away with a .22 rifle. Easy some of you may say, well not when you haven't handled a rifle for a few years!! Luckily I and several others passed first time.

After the first 3 days we drove 4 hours north of nelspruit and entered Selati Game Reserve, which is a 33,000 hectare private game reserve in which no other lodges are present other than the Eco training camp and some lion researchers. The Eco training camp consists of 15 dome tents and an open air lecture/dining room. No electricity and hot water is sporadic, but this would be our home for the next 5 weeks and it was more than adequate. The biggest bonus is the cell phone reception which is only available at the top of a 5 meter termite mound!

Selati is home to the big 4 (Lion, Leopard, Elephant and Rhino, just missing the Buffalo from the big 5). It is a beautiful area full of undulating hills and flat open areas as well, although bush is pretty dense throughout the reserve. We have seen more giraffe than impala, which for those of you who know africa is pretty crazy! The Selati river runs through the reserve and right in front of our camp. Although it is dry at the moment so it is proving to be an excellent volleyball court on soft beachy sand. In just a few months it will be a free flowing river in which we can swim in. We return to selati at the end of november and hope it will be ready for us to cool off from the 40 + degrees it is going to get.

The last 3 weeks have been pretty hectic, on arrival we were told we had 5 days to learn 50 birds by sight and by call. Now I will openly admit that i was not the biggest birder (or more commonly known out here as a twitcher!) just over 3 weeks ago. I am now however pretty hot on the birds of southern africa! So we had 5 days of nothing but bird watching and listening, which when you have arrived straight off a plane from new york can be a little challenging for some people, but we all did very well and surprised ourselves. 5 days after starting the birds almost all of us past. I managed to get 49 out of 50 so pretty pleased with that!

So week 1 was 50 birds, and after we were sick of the sight of the fork tailed drongo, the orange breasted bush shrike and the african fish eagles we were told to crack on and learn 45 trees!! Its no rest for the wicked here!! week 2 We started our fgasa (field guides association of south africa) level 1 training which is the basic level you have to achieve to be able to operate as a guide in south africa. In 28 days we have to learn everything from geology, mammals, fish, arthropods, climate, insects, oh and of course how to be a guide itself!! Our daily structure is up at 5.30am every day quick coffee/hot chocolate and off out for a 3 hour walk or 3 hour drive. THe group is split into two so one group walks and one group drives. Then back for a huge breakfast at 10am before a lecture starts at 11 for a couple of hours, then lunch and back out for a 3 hour walk or 3 hour drive (opposite for what you did in the morning). Back for dinner at 7ish and study time if you have the energy. Most of us sit round the fire before going to bed at 8.30ish. so its a start early and finish early kinda day!

We have a test and presentation every week, so far i am averaging about 84% which is fine as pass mark is 75% lets hope i can keep it up!

Some of the best sightings we have had have been a male lion almost walking through camp in the night, naturally we all jumped on the landy to go find it! A heard of 70 elephants we came across and just sat for over an hour whilst they walked past us! Just 2 days ago i was leading a safari drive and we came across about 10 elephants, luckily i had byron (our assistant instructor) in the car with me so he could tell me where and how to drive around them!

The weather has been really mixed couple of scorching days when it has been 38% in the shade but also a couple of stormy days with hectic thunderstorms. The other night we had 17mm of rain in a couple of hours.

The people are awesome and one of the most diverse groups eco training have ever had. We range in age from 18 - 61 and are split 50:50 guys and girls. There is 17 of us here at the moment with one girl leaving in a cuple of weeks as she is just here for the 28 day course. We also have all nationalities from canadians, americans, aussies, french, south africans and of course the brits (6 in total!)

Today is our first day off in 22 days and a much needed day of not studying and a little bit of civilisation as we have headed in to hoedspruit to use internet, have a boozy lunch and buy the much needed essentials.

Apologies for any birthdays I have forgotten so far and also for the ones i am likely to forget in the coming weeks!!

Hope everyone is well, missing you all heaps

xx

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