Friday 30 August 2013

Monkey Attacks & Zebula Part 1!

Hello hello hello, I'm sorry I'm sorry I'm sorry! I've been neglecting this blog at a time when I really shouldn't be! The days just go by so quickly here and I can never type fast enough to keep up with what happens. If I had some servant following me around writing down everything that happened or recording things (via the voice of David Attenborough of course) it would be so much easier. However all I have following me around is the occasional monkey looking for food... Anyway, i shall crack on with things!

So, I left you all the last time with the knowledge of a monkey attack I was victim to last
Monday! On the right here you can see some of the battle scars! ...Ok, it really sounds much worse than it actually was, but at the time I thought I had just escaped an attempt on my life. :P Basically I was in the Pink Faces room with Emily and Chantelle. Chantelle is currently looking after the baby baboon, Claas, who likes to give out and throw tantrums now and again. When Chantelle tried to put him down he screamed and then about 5 monkeys that were in the room (apart from Claas and Mango who hid) all decided to jump on me and attack me! Now I’m quite low down in the monkey ranks, vervet monkey politics can get quite confusing. So, whenever something goes wrong, they’ll attack the lowest ranker. . .just because. There’s more to monkey politics but I am not going to bore you with all that now. The monkeys were attacking me and Chantelle and Emily were trying to pull them all off me. Adele was outside and heard the ruckus so she also came to the rescue to pull the rest off me. Once they were all being held back I decided it would be best to leave, which I did. Then the shock of what just happened sunk in and I began crying like a baby when Katie was putting Aloe Vera on my wounds. To worsen everything, Emily then had to leave which made me even more emotional! (Miss you Emily, my wine drinking buddy!)

                I calmed down after a while though. Every few minutes I’d notice a different cut from a bite or scratch until eventually I think I had about 8 big scratches and bruises on me! I went back into pink faces later that evening anyway as I knew once Katie left I’d have more shifts in there so they were going to have to get used to me one way or another. That evening went fine. Thankfully vervets don’t hold grudges; their anger is short lived. The following day though, I was in there again with the monkeys and baboon and everything was going fine and all of a sudden for no apparent reason they all went ballistic again! I was standing up this time though so they just went for my legs as Minette pulled them off me. I left after that to let them calm down. These attacks have given me more confidence though. Being attacked by so many at one time makes me wonder if it could get any worse than this, I don’t think so! So now whenever the monkeys have a fit or try to bite me I’m much more calm and am learning how to deal with each one individually as they are all completely different personality wise! If Ninkynoo starts throwing a tantrum, I wrap her in a blanket and  if it’s Mango you either shove a blanket in front of her to bite instead of you (thank you for that advice Emily :P ) or lock her in the other side of the room until she calms down. And a week later, I’m comfortable to be falling asleep with them in the room during my shifts! : )

So asides from that last tantrum the monkeys had, last Tuesday went by pretty smoothly from what I remember! Wednesday was another smooth day, followed by another bonfire which we sang and drank at, embarrassing myself as always. I’m really fulfilling the stereotypical Irish image here guys. I’m the palest person in the country, have ginger hair, freckles, always eat my potatoes, wear factor 30 sunscreen in the middle of the day, get drunk at almost every bonfire, grab the guitar at these bonfires and belt out songs at the top of my voice despite not being able to sing and I say ‘for the craic’ every now again. I have yet to explain to people craic means fun and not drugs…

Thursday was my first day off and we went to Zebula Game Reserve – ‘we’ being myself, Benedikt, his two kids Leona and Adrian, and Bonnie and Matthew, a mother and son from Seattle who joined us on Monday. Silke (the woman behind Bambelela) drove us there as we ate nutella sandwiches in the car. The first activity planned was a 3 hour game drive through the bush. This was pretty damn cool. We learned so much about the trees and the purposes they each have. One tree’s leaves are really rough so people use them to rub against their skin to exfoliate! Another tree has twigs people use to brush their teeth. There’s a bush named Hack En Steek that some people believe can contain the soul of a person that died, so if people were to die away from home for example, their soul would go into the branch that was placed beside them, the branch would be taken home and then buried with the exact same ceremony if there was a body. Then we came across another tree that’s so poisonous, if you burn it, inhaling the smoke could make you very very sick. When you squeeze the leaves, this white sap-like stuff oozes out. The tiniest dot of this would be enough to put onto your gum if you had a toothache as it would numb the whole nerve for a good while. Imagine what ingesting more could do!

Amongst the trees and bushes we saw loads of antelope and warthogs and some zebra and giraffes. The highlight of the drive by far was seeing a white rhino and her calf grazing. That made me emotional. These are so endangered it’s scary. I had to hold back tears while watching them. After that beautiful scene we continued on our way. Then Rodney, our guide, pulled up beside a nice fresh pile of rhino poo. He explained about the nutrients it contains and how people often use it for medicinal reasons as it seems to boost your immune system. Rodney said if you have a flu and drink some rhino poo juice, your symptoms should be gone within a few hours! All this he said wile handling a nice sized roll of rhino poo. He then proceeded to squeeze the poo into his hand, said ‘cheers’ and drank the poo juice from his hand! We were shocked. So then he asked if any of us wanted to try it. I thought to myself, ‘When am I ever going to get the chance to drink the magic poo juice of a beautiful, endangered animal again?’ and with that piped up ‘I’ll try it!’. I felt slightly worried then as Rodney picked up a piece of poo and handed it to me. I tried squeezing it into my hand but apparently I was doing it wrong and a lump of grassy poo fell into my hand instead. So I wiped it off and he squeezed some juice into my hand for me. It smelled like poo. But I took a deep breath and slurped it up anyway!

Ew.

This tastes like shite. Quite literally.

I was told it would have a nice ‘grass-like herby’ taste. Frankly, all I got was poo. At least it was only mostly digested grass and stuff. Can’t imagine what it would have been like if it was the faeces of a carnivore O_o . Heck. I’m glad I did it! Even if I looked like a fool afterwards with rhino poo dribbling down my chin and couldn’t get the smell from my hand for a whole day.


We went back to the reception of the reserve afterwards. Zebula is part of a breeding programme for several mammals including lions and tigers. The others took part in a lion cub interaction while I sat outside and watched (I put my money towards cheetahs instead!). The cubs were so cute! While I was watching Benedikt, Bonnie and the rest pet and play with them, a member of staff came up to me saying they also have tiger cubs but they’re too young to be allowed interact with humans yet for fear of them getting sick. I was kind of thinking ‘That’s cool, but why am I being told this exactly?’. THEN he says “…Do you want to see them?” Eh, duh! So I follow him to a door, he opens it, I look inside, and there are two tiger cubs only going on 4 weeks old lying down at the back of this room and my heart just melts LOOK AT THEM! They’re so cute and beautiful and precious. I literally just took one photo and then left because I could see that little guy looking towards the camera was trying to sleep. In my moment of distraction by the upmost beauty of the cubs, I never asked where the mother was…I really wish I had!
Just look at them... :3















After the guys were finished with their lion interaction we went for something to eat while waiting for our cheetah interaction session...

The day at Zebula isn't even half over yet and there's still loads to write so I'm gonna go type that up, and leave you guys with what I've written so far. I think this is a better way than just giving you one super long blog piece! And maaaan have I got so much more to tell. There's laughter, heartbreak, tragedy, 'goodbye's and 'hello's to come...

So...

...to be continued...


Tuesday 20 August 2013

Zebra! And Sunsets! And Monkey Attacks!

Hello my friends, I hope you are all doing well wherever you may be in the world! Things are going well here in the southern hemisphere. I tried to watch and see if the toilet flushes the opposite way around today but got very confused as I can’t remember what way it goes in the northern hemisphere plus the water didn’t swirl going into the toilet, it just kind of all poured in! So, there’s some random knowledge for you for the day to get us started.

Wednesday morning came and the novelty of being up early already wore off as I rolled out of bed with 7 minutes to get ready. I did it though! I’m in the same cage every morning to clean this week; the Handicap cage. There seemed to be extra poo today and this time, I had to climb all different platforms to reach and clean it, I blended right in with the monkeys really! There is also something wonderful about balancing on two logs 4 feet off the ground while you scrub a whole lot of poo from a shelter house while 2 monkeys are sitting on your back trying to see what’s down your pants, before it’s even 8:30am.

I know the routine slightly better today and where to get any materials I need like mops, brushes, buckets, hot water, soap and the likes. Today, one of the tasks I picked was baboon feed. Basically, the leftover food the monkeys don’t eat gets thrown out on platforms built for the wild monkey troops to eat from. A lot of monkeys, including vervets, have digestive systems so close to ours that if we were to try live in the wild, we could eat whatever they eat and (most likely) not die. Baboons have a much stronger digestive system though. So they can eat fruit and veg that’s gone rotten, or semi-decomposed food or peels of oranges and things like that without it doing them any harm. So all these leftover leftovers are wheeled out in wheelbarrows to the land where the zebra roam. There is a pit there this food is dumped into and baboons and warthogs come feast at will. A bale of grass is also brought out for the zebra. Baboon feed involves wheeling quite heavy wheelbarrows about 800meters across sandy ground when it is unbelievably hot and there is no shade around and some of the track is uphill! I most certainly questioned my health when I felt I was dying inside along with non-stop panting after dumping the contents of the wheelbarrow. I really need to exercise more…

When you go into this clearing, the zebra all move away to let you put the food down and wait for you to leave so they can start eating it. There was about 12 zebra, standing with 10 feet of me and they are so amazing to look at. I have to try remember to bring my camera out to take a picture of them if I get baboon feed again! It was just another reminder that I was in Africa.
< And here is a picture I got to take! :D

Like I said in the last post, a baby baboon was rescued! He has been named Claas (Africanish for Claus) and is the cutest, weirdest thing ever!! This is a picture of him here. I think he looks like a little old man, I was reminded of Benjamin Button looking at him. We were told by the people that found him that his mother was killed by a leopard but anything could have happened really. People often tell fibs at times like this to cover up the fact that they may have shot the mother and couldn’t kill the baby or ran over her or something. This is the youngest orphan baboon anyone has seen on the farm for a lot of people; he’s only between 2 and 3 weeks old. Monkeys this young get fed baby formula as it’s much better for them than cow’s milk and gets them all their nutrition.

The hot water supply for the volunteer house broke on Wednesday so if we didn’t want a cold shower, we were given the option to shower at Sue’s house (all building I mention are on the farm) in her outdoor shower. So of course, I did! In broad daylight, I showered outside with nothing but a bamboo fence between me and everyone one the farm. I felt so at one with nature! :P

Wednesday is now bonfire night!! :D  We collected loads of firewood during the day so we brought this to the bonfire for 7. Sue was selling hot chocolate with cream and marshmallows and Amarula, a drink that tastes just like baileys and tastes so good in hot chocolate! I decided to go for a swim in the pool despite the fact that it was pitch black and pretty cold. Some people thought this was a crazy idea but I really had to enforce how cold Ireland is and how we never have warm water outdoors. I jumped in and it actually wasn’t that cold, especially compared to the likes of Mullinavat waterfall or any beach in Ireland. And of course afterwards I could dry off by the fire so it wasn’t too bad at all at all. Swimming under the southern hemisphere stars was also a bonus. They’re so bright!
I also found out I have been pronouncing ‘Bambelela’ wrong and am also having much difficulty pronouncing other names and places much to everyone else’s amusement :/ I pronounced it Bam-beel-eela before, but it’s actually pronounced Bam-bell-ella. Everyone has a great laugh when I say it wrong!
A lot more has happened since Wednesday, that was a week ago...



Right so, Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday and Monday I'll try summarize for you really quick! Scouts from Johannesburg came on Saturday to help build a new cage (they get sponsored with free cement!). They were staying the night so it was decided we'd have another bonfire and it just so happened myself and Emily decided to have a wine night seeing as she was leaving on Monday. We ended up buying lots of wine and getting very drunk. I played guitar of course and shattered everyone's eardrums with a rendition of What's Up by The Four Non Blondes at the top of my lungs. Total embarrassing flashback to wake up to this next morning! I chatted to the scouts though and they're all so cool, pity they were only staying one night. :( 

Sunday is genuinely a chilled day; we still have to clean cages, do the feedings, do tasks, any chores and shifts we're assigned, we just don't have to do project work! There was also the option to go to a crocodile farm on Sunday but I decided not too as it would only depress me seeing 22,000 crocodiles crammed into an open enclosure that are all going to be killed and eaten. So I worked instead!

Aaaaand Monday...basically I was attacked by monkeys today for no particular reason. About 5 young monkeys jumping on me and trying to KILL...ok...harm me. I will most likely take pictures of the damage they did and show you, but it's dark so I'll refrain for now! I'm not angry with them really, they're wild animals after all, I just hope in the next 3 weeks they can accept me as one of their own :O

Apart that, everything has been awesome so far. The people I'm working with are great too, it breaks my heart that I've already had to say goodbye to some people (I MISS YOU EMILY!) and I'll have to say goodbye to so many people this weekend :( 

That's all for now, my laptop is gonna die! :O 

Love love love
Ceara
(:

Here is an South African sunset for you! ^_^

Thursday 15 August 2013

I'm in AFRICA!!

Monday 12th August, 2am 

 I’m only in Dubai and I’ve already learned so many things, it’s crazy! I know this is probably just because I’ve only been on a proper foreign holiday twice (Not counting England!) and both times was to Italy so a lot of what I’m saying you luckier more travelled people might already know. Or maybe I’m just overly exciteable about everything…but who cares?! If you do, then why are you reading this blog??

So here are a few tips and things I’ve learned so far…

·         **Don’t purchase excess amounts of liquids after security in Dublin if you have a stopover in Dubai.
~ Ceara thought: I’m a genius!! 3 for 2 on soft drinks!! These will last me both flights and maybe even longer, ha!
~ Fact: You have to go through security again and unless you’re a beast that will drink all 3 bottles of whatever on the plane, they just get binned. . . besides, Emirates have an endless supply of FREE drink on board! THIS INCLUDES ALCOHOL :D
·         **Don’t purchase lots of food before an Emirates flight.
~ Ceara thoughts: 20 chilli cheese bites and a veggie bean burger should keep me going for a while considering it’s a 7 hour flight and Emirates give me just one meal, and I love food… and chilli cheese bites.
~ Emirates give you a HUGE meal and free biscuits and stuff, unless you’re trying to bloat yourself on purpose (why would you do that?), no need to buy food for the flight.
·        ** No need to bring your own neck pillow on an Emirates flight.
~ Ceara thought: I’ll just roll up my scarf and cardigan if needed, or sleep on my neighbour’s shoulder…
~ Fact: Emirates provide you with a pillow AND blanket!!
·         **You can get from Dublin to Dubai quicker on a plane than you can get from Donegal to Wexford via public buses…5 hours quicker…
·         **Dubai is HOT.
~ Ceara thought: Can’t wait to get off the plane and get some fresh air *steps out of plane* Jesus there’s some heat coming from the engine! No…wait…that’s just the air. Oh my god I’m going to collapse. Yeah that little ‘heatwave’ Ireland had there? Feckin’ NOTHING compared to this!
~ Fact: It was 37 degrees when we landed at Dubai. It was 00:22 and dark.  
·         Their toilet bowl water is even hot! (No, I didn’t touch it with my hand, it was that hot my bottom could feel it!).
·         **The taps in bathrooms are the perfect temperature to wash your hands in. WHY CAN’T IRELAND BE LIKE THAT??! Where one tap scalds and the other tap freezes, who’s the genius that thought that balanced things out?!
·         **There is no muck in Dubai, there just seems to be sand. . .Everywhere.
·        ** Duty free is non exsistent in Dublin. DUBAI do duty free. And they do it good.
·         **Gingers get stared at.
·       **  RyanAir do everything wrong. And we pay them ridiculous amounts of money while they do so.
·         **Dublin airport could do so much better.
·         **Emirates are fricken AWESOME.

And now…

That’s it for travel tips, as I type this sentence on the 13th of August, 8:11pm local time (7:11pm Ireland), I’m sitting outside the volunteer house wrapped in a sleeping bag with a kitten sitting under my legs, wild monkeys all around me and the brightest stars I have ever seen over head. The moon though, the moon looks the same so that’s my window to home.

This place, is UNBELIEVEABLE. The amount of things I’ve seen already is crazy! I arrived at the sanctuary yesterday along with a German/African man and his two kids who were also volunteering for a couple of weeks. The drive here was surreal, I was trying to get it to sink in that I’m actually in Africa, I think now it has though! During the 2 hour drive from Johannesburg (everyone here calls it J-Burg by the way, I’m already getting hip and cool with local slang :P ) the landscape is so different. It goes on forever all around you, there aren’t rolling hills, or trees and hedges lining the roads like there is in Ireland. And the land is significantly less green. And the motorways are FIVE lanes across! And people just walk in the middle of them or stand on the side and try hitch, the german guy (Benedikt) laughed when I said you’d probably get arrested or something for doing that in Ireland…

Anyway, we arrived at the sanctuary around 3pm on Monday and were greeted by Sue, the project manager. Straight away I could see loads of monkeys running around the place. Turns out they are part of a wild troop that were released by the area and just hang around the grounds socializing with the monkeys in the sanctuary and waiting for the leftover food from feedings to be placed out for them. They also try to steal our food when they can, they’re fast and cunning little feckers!

There are other volunteers here as well, I’m sharing a room with 3 girls, 2 from England and one from Africa. ( I know it’s a big place but I can’t for the life of me spell or repeat where she said she came from O_o ). They’re all lovely! There are permanent workers here too, they’re the ones that have been putting up with my hundreds of questions and pleas for help when I have 7 baby monkeys hanging off me… One of the South African guys that is a permanent worker has to concentrate really hard when I talk as he can’t understand my accent! He understands the English though, what’s with that?? Imagine his pain if I had a cork or northern accent??!

We were given a tour around the grounds by Sue. I’m pretty sure they have over 100 vervet monkeys divided up into different cages depending on their age, how they came to the sanctuary, how sick or physically challenged they are, if they will eventually be released back into the wild and then the troops who are in huuuuuuuuuuuge cages preparing to be released into the wild. They have one baboon who is absolutely stunning but can’t be released back into the wild sadly. Then there are 3 meerkats (SO CUTE) who can’t be released unless more meerkats join them, they won’t survive with only 3. A  new baby baboon was just rescued today from people who rescued her saying they think her mother what shot. I haven’t seen him yet but will tomorrow! Then you have the wild animals that living in the surrounding area. There’s a small herd of Zebra always in sight, a wild male Nyala that wanders around – he is absolutely magnificent to look at, but step too close and he’ll buck at you, hence his name is Buck Buck! – there’s a few peacocks around, I’ve seen an ostrich, a porcupine, oh! Did I forget to mention the wild baboon troop that lives a little away from the sanctuary and likes to visit quite frequently, running amuck and being very very loud? Well there’s them too!

I collapsed into bed around 8:30pm seeing as I hadn’t slept at all on the plane from Dubai and had to be up and ready to work for 7:45am. Here is a rough schedule of the day for everyone and how my first day went:

Tuesday 13th August

7:45am
 – Meet outside the main entrance. Decide who’s doing what tasks after feeding by pulling a piece of paper out from a bucket. Whatever task is written on the paper is yours!
I wasn’t that tired but felt somewhat naked as I had to take out ALL my piercings for work, otherwise the monkeys would take them out for me and I’d never see them again. The task I got was clinic cleaning. So when the time came, I was to clean the kitchen after both monkey feedings.
8:00am
– Go to your designated enclosure with a bucket of hot water and scrubbing brush and clean all the poo and food from all the surfaces.
-          Gather all leftover food together.
-          Clean the crates that were holding the food.
So I’m in the Handicap enclosure this morning. This is such a lovely cage to work in but really sad when you see the blind monkeys, brain-damaged ones or ones with arms, legs and/or tails missing and it’s all because of humans treating them badly by beating them if they misbehave as ‘pets’ [THEY’RE WILD ANIMALS FOR GOD’S SAKE ! THEY’RE NOT SUPPOSED TO BE PETS!] or shooting them, or doing absolutely disgusting things like feeding a monkey a banana with a firecracker inside it. This happened to one of the monkeys, called Kingsley. Part of his face was blown off and he was blinded completely by the cruelty. The skin around his mouth is similar to what it looks like when a human has a cleft lip. He has to be fed directly by us, otherwise we can’t be sure he can find the food in the cage or if other monkeys steal it from him. To see him try feel his way around the cage is so sad. Then you have Obstat, a monkey with epilepsy that tries mating with your head when you first meet him. Once you turn him down though he gives up and happily sits and chills on your lap while you groom him.

As soon as I stepped into the cage to clean I had about 3 monkeys on top of me, all trying to take the clips out of my hair, some succeeded! Since then, I’ve decided clips here are obviously a waste of time so I won’t be wearing them again… The AMOUNT of poo is crazy. I was covered instantly, there was wee in my hair, poo under my nails, monkeys on my back. This is the life!
9:30am - Feeding time for animals.
10:00am - Breakfast for people!
10:30am - Task duty & Project work.
I went to the clinic kitchen to clean but most of the work was done already by the permanent staff so I went on baboon watch instead. This involved me standing by the wild vervet monkeys where they were feeding and chasing away any baboons that came near with a rake!
1:00pm - Lunch
2/2:30pm – 2nd feeding time for monkeys.
3:00pm – Tasks & project work
We will be having a bonfire tomorrow (Wednesday) so we had to go around collecting firewood for that. Once that was done I had some free time to go in with the baby vervets in the Pink Faces room. There’s a new monkey there that used to be someone’s pet and has trouble getting along with other monkeys. His name is Mango and he stays in this room with a few other monkeys so he can get used to being around them. These babies are so hyper and love to bite. I have bruises on my legs from when I wouldn’t let them take my camera and they went crazy! You see, vervet monkeys don’t like having things taken from them, it drives them nuts so to avoid that you should just let them take your things or just not have anything in your pockets!
5:30pm – Dinner.

And the rest of the day is up to us! Although we’re not allowed wander around the grounds in the dark as there are leopards around and if we walk too far people could prosecute us for trespassing! It gets dark quite early though, it’s usually dark by 6:15pm! And then it gets cold. It gets



really cold. It’s like the African winter has the hottest days and coldest nights! And I didn’t bring enough warm clothes :/ But I’ve solved this by wrapping myself in a sleeping bag whenever I’m sitting outside, simples!

I don’t get a whole lot of free time because I go to sleep quite early, monkeys just take it out of you. It’s taken me 3 days just to type this blog!! But I’ll try keep it short and simple and just include the best parts of the day but to me they’re all great, I love it here and the work I’m doing and I have all you to thank for getting me here, I can’t express my gratitude in enough in words. I love you all.

And I'll try keep this blog updated as much as I can, as I upload it now, two more days have gone by which I also have to write about, so bear with me people !! 

Ceara 
(: <3