Monday, March 31, 2008

Giving myself a concusssion


One of my collars in the NG32 area (B78) does not appear to have moved more than approximately 20 m in the last two weeks. I took a little while to realise this as the collar is supposed to give a mortality signal in these circumstances but instead it has been giving me slightly different fixes every hour. The collar itself is on the edge of a large island, which I thought might be accessible from the south. I therefore tried to reach it from that direction at the beginning of last week. All the roads that I tried ended in swampy floodplains with quite a few mokoro stations. I asked for directions to NG17 (as the collar is just in that concession) and was told to go towards Stanley's and take a road east. So we tried that, and the road had been worked on, with small bridges and dirt piled up to make a road. However, this road stopped suddenly. We kept going off road but got stuck when we were still 10 km away from the collar. There was a lot of water, but we would have tried to continue if I hadn't had a slight mishap.

We got stuck in mud and while jacking to get out, I stupidly got too close to the high-lift jack and it pinged up and hit the side of my head. My ear was ripped, but I didn't pass out or vomit. We finished getting the car out and Laura sensibly told me that I had to go back to Maun. So we drove back. I felt a bit light headed and spaced out, but not too bad, but Laura correctly diagnosed me as having a concussion. We almost got back to the veterinary fence, but went through the last big stretch of water and stopped. I checked the wheels and realised that they were not buried, so my somewhat muddled mind came to the conclusion that the car was broken. My radio was not getting through for some reason, so I used my satellite phone and got in touch with Guy (the camp manager), who luckily had not yet left for camp. I explained that I thought my gears were broken as I was not moving when I accelerated. I somehow forgot to tell him about my concussion, but he very kindly said he would come out and rescue me.

I realised after about 40 minutes that it was very likely that my vehicle was merely stuck on the diffs, but by that time Guy was on his way and I thought my faculties wouldn't be up to much anyway. When Guy arrived, he found me swimming in the ruts in the road with a big smile on my face. He looked at my pupils and told me I was indeed concussed. He pulled me out and then changed my engine oil, which was full of water. The one positive thing about the concussion is that it made me very happy and stopped me from being stressed about being stuck. Laura drove my vehicle back to camp and Guy took me to town to get checked out. Brett, the paramedic, said that I couldn't go back to camp and had to be supervised, so Guy again helped me out and let me stay in his house, before we flew back to camp the next day.

As for my collar, Guy flew the next day to track and also had a good look at the GPS location of my collar. He said that there was a big channel between the road and the collar, but he was yet again willing to help me by swimming across, or walking with me. I got in touch with Stanley's Camp and explained the situation. They very kindly agreed to let me borrow a mokoro, a poler and a man with a rifle to walk to the collar and recover it, so I will not need to inconvenience Guy, even though he did not seem to mind. I should be able to go and get the collar tomorrow or the next day, and then continue on to do field work in the area - hopefully without hitting my head!!

My ear is mostly healed now and the lump on the side of my head is going down. I had a few days where I couldn't concentrate on much, but my mental faculties are coming back to me now too. I had to stay in camp for 4 days and not do anything too strenuous. A couple of the carnivore researchers took Laura and I out to a spotted hyaena den as they wanted to get photos of the cubs. We spent a few hours watching the cubs and adults playing and jumping around, which was lovely. There were 6 cubs of varying ages and several adults, and they managed to get photos of all of them.

Monday, March 24, 2008

Still too wet for fieldwork


I have been spending far too much time in front of my computer over the last couple of weeks, but I have developed a protocol that I hope will work. I have looked at the last two weeks of fixes for the three herds up at Stanley's and have tried to work out their activity patterns for each fix. I have also worked out the habitat that they were in from the vegetation map. I will be heading across there tomorrow for a few nights to check that this will work, and to take vegetation samples from the sites that I have identified.

I am still quite worried about the volumes of water over there, but I think that I just have to realise that I will get stuck, probably several times, but that is just something I have to deal with. Some of the buff have spent most of their time in what should be accessible places, but there are also plenty of fixes in floodplains and on islands, so I will definitely have to hire a boat and mokoro soon after this trip to go and collect the remaining data from those sites. Can't say I am very keen on that idea, but hopefully will avoid the hippos and not fall in to be eaten by crocs!

We had very little sleep in camp last night. Yesterday, some lions killed a zebra right next to the pan in front of HQ. I did not see them myself, but apparently it was a female and 3 cubs. They stuck around all day yesterday and last night the hyaenas came in. They were calling very loudly most of the night, until at 4.15 this morning one of the lions had enough of it and roared at them, in a way that I interpreted as telling them to shut the hell up! There was one whoop after that but then everything went quiet and we all got a couple of hours of sleep.

Monday, March 10, 2008

Getting stuck at Stanley's


I recently drove across into NG32 to try and get some data from the collared buff over there. I was planning on spending 6 nights there, to combine data collection from two individuals. I have not been back to that area since the end of January, when the ground was too wet for off road driving. I thought that things would have improved, as we have not had much rain on this side and most areas have started to dry up. Unfortunately, Stanley's have still been getting significant amounts of rain, with a 40 mm storm just a few days before I went across. Some of the flooded parts of the road had dried up, but most were at the same level and some were higher. There was one section that was completely dry in January and has now become a huge lake that the road goes straight through.

We managed to get almost all the way to Stanley's before getting stuck in a channel, thankfully with the bonnet out of the water, but the rear section of the vehicle was decidedly under water. We radio-ed Stanley's and they were very helpful and sent a car out. By that time, water had gotten into the fuel tank and we sputtered the rest of the way to Stanleys. They were very helpful there, and offered to drain the fuel tank for me, which is when we realised that my silly fuel tank does not have a drainage plug. Eventually, we realised that there was nothing for it except to just drive through until the water had been used up. Luckily there was not too much water in there, so it only took a couple of hours for the vehicle to behave almost normally. Needless to say, we avoided deep water while it was struggling, but that meant we ended up driving in circles for a while and interrupted a game drive 3 times!!

Anyway, having looked at the terrain, with full floodplains and a pan in almost every dip in the grassland areas, I decided that trying to follow buffalo for 3 days would not be possible, as they seem to have no problem with crossing channels. Around Stanley's, there is a network of roads, but further out there are no roads, and crossing floodplains and channels off road is not something that is recommended. So, feeling stressed and defeated, I came back to camp.

I will have a meeting with my supervisor tomorrow and discuss these difficulties. They are not likely to be resolved any time soon, as I doubt the ground will dry up enough before the flood comes through. Since the water levels are already high, the flood is likely just to pour through and cover everything, which will add to my problems. Everyone keeps joking about me using a mokoro (a dug-out canoe), but I am starting to consider it!

Sunday, March 2, 2008

Seven hours of overheating


I just got back from a few days of field work in the bush. We started out in NG34 and found all three of the buffalo on that side in the same herd. We followed them for the rest of that day and camped in a nice little spot. There were lions roaring in the distance and we saw three sets of tracks on top of the buff tracks later the next day. We had no signal from any of the collars the next morning, but the herd was quite large so we were able to follow their tracks for a while, and then we just kept heading south east as they had been going.

Eventually we got a signal and made our way to the main road towards Sankuyo, where we found the spot where they had crossed the road. I got in touch with the concession manager for NG43 and got permission to go in, then we bashed our way through the mopane till we found them.

There were buff tracks all over that area and we saw a couple of groups split off from the main herd. They seemed to join up for the 8 km walk over night, then split up when they reached their destination, although that might just be circumstantial. NG43 is filled with mopane and not much else, but they definitely chose to move into that area, and then move continuously to be able to graze in the small open areas.

We stayed with them for another night and then headed back to camp the following day, as we had managed to forget part of the disc pasture metre (used to sample grass). So we spent one night in camp then headed back out for the vegetation sampling. That went ok, though my car was starting to over heat a bit at the end of the first day of vegetation sampling. We had some fixes from the collars for overnight, so were able to work out what they had been doing from their tracks. Despite not looking for them, we still came across four herds or small groups, all quite relaxed with the vehicle, so presumably most of them are getting used to us following them, which is great, but unfortunately not always helpful, as we can be 20 m from them and still not be able to work out what they're doing because of the dense vegetation.

We finished the vegetation sampling and foolishly decided to bash through the bush for the 5 km to the main road instead of driving up the concession road that we knew went all the way up to Sankuyo. Unfortunately, that was a grave mistake. By that point, the car was overheating continually, so we had to stop every 10 minutes to let her cool down for 15 minutes, making for very slow progress. We also managed to choose the worst kind of mopane to go through, with all of the dangers associated with mopane - dense small bushes so we couldn't see the logs, stumps and sometimes the big trees, and quite frequently, large pans and sometimes just large expanses of mud cunningly disguised as grassland. We managed not to get stuck in the mud, but we did fall into a big hole or burrow, so we had to jack ourselves out of there. I discovered that my winch (whose solenoids sit at the front of my bull bar) was damaged beyond repair. Soon afterwards I hit a stump that bent my bullbar in such a way that I was unable to open my bonnet (which didn't help with the overheating). Eventually we made it to the road and the car was ok on the main road, but we had to stop 4 times between getting onto the flycamp road and reaching HQ. We spent 7 hours to get around 35 km, which should have taken under 3 hours.

The camp mechanic has helped me to clean my radiator thoroughly, and hopefully the overheating will be cured. We tied the bull bar to a tree and reversed until the bonnet could be opened again.

We will be heading to Maun tomorrow to try and get some extra bars put on the car to try and protect her a bit more and for a few other things. But at the moment, Laura and I are just glad to be back in camp and away from the mopane!!