9/15/13
Last day in Gamba!
Friday was when the colleagues and I went to Mississippi, a
local restaurant in Gamba, for dinner. It was a very sweet affair: Tobi,
Franck, Axel, Lisa, David, and Clayth were all there. We were missing Michel, Gabriel,
Landry and Mireille, because they’re currently on vacation. There were also a
few people who’d I’d just met like Gauthier, who has done a lot for the
Smithsonian studies in Rabi but has been on break since I got here, and Matt
Shirley the crocodile researcher who works primarily in Loango National Park
trying to get ecotourism started up.
The food was really wonderful, especially the fish
brochettes and fried plantains. At the end we all said a few things, which was
really touching. I’d never really had a “going away” dinner before, and this
was a wonderful first. Tobi told a story of when we were driving past a car
full of boys and I took photos of them because it was ridiculous how many of
them were packed in there. Usually, he said, they would be mad at anybody
taking photos of them because they could potentially get in trouble. Instead
they were super stoked and yelled “Je t’aime! Je t’aime!” He said that that’s
how all of Gabon felt about me too, and that it can be my second home if I want
it to be.
View from Plaine Verra |
They gave me a few things to take back with me: traditional
fabric, a traditional woven basket, and four woven mats. Tobi, who is one of
the best storytellers I’ve ever met, explained the history and significance of
them. They’re all things that people give at weddings actually, and the basket
is given as a sort of dowry/gift. Women around here use them for carrying
things with them by fitting the strap around their forehead and letting it hang
down their back, often filling it with produce off of plantations. The mats
were traditionally used in a lot of different ways, one of them being that when
a person died, a person would put out mats on the beach to mourn and family,
friends etc. could come mourn with them on the mat. Also something about the
king walking only on mats because he wasn’t supposed to touch the ground. It
was all in French so apologies if I got any of it wrong. But I’m pretty sure
that was most of it! So we joked that it was like my wedding dinner and I was
getting married to Gabon.
Saturday I went in to finish up a few things at work. I
offered to keep working on the elephant database for Lisa, because they still
have a year of thousands of camera trap images from different sites that nobody
has gone through yet. I figured that since I’ve already been working on it and
can recognize as many elephants as I can, that it would be easiest for me to
keep doing it because they’re only going to keep having more images especially
with the new plantation photos and mango season coming up. So I’m going to see
how many images there are total and set a certain amount that I want to go
through each week. Even that plan is really up in the air though, because sometimes
entire files have images that are unusable, and then there are other days where
every image is good enough to look at, identify and enter. Here are a few from
the most recent batch. The elephants in the Yenzi area have been coming out
during the day a ton, so some of these daytime photos are from 10 AM and 5 PM,
which from my experience here isn’t exactly usual.
Mbouda, a male at production fifty camera. © Smithsonian Institution. |
Namba, a female at the production fifty camera. © Smithsonian Institution |
Mouaga, a female with three offspring, at the production fifty camera. © Smithsonian Institution |
Sidenote on the elephant images: the third photo, the front
view of Mouaga is a good example of how difficult identification can be. She
obviously has very unique tusks, and so when I saw her for the first time like
this and had never seen an elephant like her, I named her Yeyena. But
eventually I realized that she was the same elephant as Mouaga. The difference
was that we had tons of images of Mouaga from the side, but none from the
front. Usually when the walk past the cameras at different sites they walk
through the same way each time. So at the Golf Entrance we generally get side
views, the Production 50 camera gets a lot of images of them walking towards
the camera, and so on. For example we didn’t know that one of the females,
Sounga, who was first identified in 2012, had a giant notch on the top of her
left ear until just a month or so ago. That’s why it’s important not to just
add a new individual every time we see a specific characteristic that we’ve
never seen before, otherwise we have an inaccurate identified population count.
Often when I see the same characteristic on an elephant that I haven’t seen
before, I wait until I see it three or so times, then I draw it out and look at
the group it’s travelling with, and other clues. I guess that’s why I enjoy
working on this project so much, you have to investigate and use three or four
different tactics until you can figure out if you’ve seen it before, if it’s a
new individual, or if you have enough information or not to enter it into the
database as a new individual.
Speaking of all this database stuff, I’m going to really
miss seeing elephants on the daily. I don’t know if I mentioned this but the
other day at the lab an elephant came through at about 2:00 in the afternoon,
and I knew which one it was which was pretty neat. Then on Thursday, the
crocodile team and I saw a herd on the way to the lagoon, and on Friday Lisa,
David and I saw one right by Vembo lab.
From left: Matt Shirley, Tobi Eli, Axel Litona. |
Also on Saturday I went out with Tobi, Axel and Matt to look
for crocodiles. It was the same drill as on Thursday, we checked the live traps
we had set and added a few more in the water. On Thursday we had a little
face-off with a hippo who was in the lagoon at the same time that we were
trying to go in with out boat. Hippos can be incredibly dangerous if they feel
threatened, so we waited about half an hour to let it move on before going in.
Probably the first time that I’ve ever been creeped out by a hippo, since it
was sitting in the water staring at us and our lights were making its eyes
shine red.
We didn’t catch/tag crocodiles on either night, which was
really unfortunate because I was really excited to see the process. We did see
some, but they either weren’t the right age, size, or species that Matt was
looking for. He was specifically looking for Nile crocodiles that were at least
2 meters. But I got to see how they set up floating traps and hanging traps,
and we got lost in a flooded forest which was really beautiful and only a
little discouraging.
Crocodile team in the new boat! |
Sunday I had a goodbye breakfast with Hugo, and finished up
packing my stuff with Clayth. Lisa and David dropped me at the airport, and what
felt like just moments later I was picked up in Libreville be Gleen’s dad and brother.
It was so sweet of Gleen’s family/friends to take care of me again, picking me
up and letting me stay with them. I’m staying at Astrid’s just like when I
first arrived, and tonight she made a ridiculously good dinner with fried
chicken, prawns, green beans, fries, and rice. I don’t know what kind of sauce
she put on the prawns but it was delectable. I also got to meet her boyfriend
Alfred this time around, he’s a math teacher, and hang out more with her little
kids Merika who I think is 8 or so, and was pretty quiet the first time I met
her but after some hang-out French-speaking playtime she opened up. And then
there’s also Jonathan who is just 13 months. He loves grabbing keys, cell
phones, and remote controls. He’s also really affectionate, so I picked him up
and let him drool on me a little.
Me and Merika. Photo taken by Alfred. |
Jonathan and Merika. |
Tomorrow I’ll be going out and seeing a little bit of
Libreville and getting some gifts for people back home, since Gamba was pretty lacking in that
category. Then I leave at 10:30 PM for Frankurt. Onward!
White-backed night heron that we found while out at the lagoon. |