We welcomed new Australian Volunteer Program (AVP) arrivals Woody and Alex from Warrnambool and put them up in our compound's guesthouse for a few days. A nice young couple. Woody is an ambulance paramedic and Alex is a high school English teacher. They will both be very useful here. It turns out Woody knows our son David from when they were both working in Port Fairy a decade ago. We took them to Arusha NP for their first safari and it was fun seeing their reactions to Giraffe, Warthogs, Baboons and an Elephant.
I submitted another project funding application to begin working on the degraded rangelands to our south and west. Fingers crossed everyone please although we won't know if we are successful until early 2020.
I went birding to Lark Plains to the north of Arusha with the Attraction Birding Club.
We saw several Beesley's Larks including a pair attending this fledgling. |
Singing Bush Lark |
Fischer's Starlings are common in the woodland adjacent to Lark Plains. |
We went to a baptism of the sister of our birder friend James Nasary. We were the only white folk among the 200 or so guests. An interesting experience with lots of colour and music.
We were in the cheap seats. No room inside. |
This little chap was amused by me so I couldn't resist... |
We had the AVP annual conference in a very swish lodge up on the Ngorongoro Crater rim. Lots of sunbirds in the garden for me to photograph before and after the sessions each day. Interesting to see three closely related species that have increasingly curved bills all sharing the flower beds. The Golden-winged Sunbird males seemed to dominate all others though.
I went with colleagues to the 3rd ECHO East Africa Highlands Symposium in Kigali, Rwanda. This involved two 10-12 hours days of driving to get there and three slightly shorter days to get home. An addition to the normal challenges driving here is the requirement to switch to the right side of the road in Rwanda and our car being right-hand drive. My colleague did this in the dark when we headed in to Kigali (3 hours from the border). I did it in daylight on the way out.
I got to meet people working in conservation farming from Burundi, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Uganda and Ethiopia as well as many from Rwanda and Tanzania. The talks were all well presented and we had great questions after each. Hats off to the ECHO team for the effort they put on to make this happen so successfully. A special shout-out to the excellent translator who dealt with French, English, Swahili and probably other languages. When I got up to get ready for my talk she asked "Am I going to have trouble with you?". I explained 'endophyte' and 'symbiosis' to her and the rest was fine.
I also got to see large areas of Tanzania I'd never been to before including southern parts of Kagera Region. Bukoba, where we lived in 2010-11 is the main city in Kagera Region so it felt like a homecoming.
On the way we mainly drove on high quality sealed roads and traffic was mostly calm and light. As we approached the Rwanda border however the road was severely potholed and had an increasing number of trucks. Along this section a large truck had rolled and lost its shipping container. The road was blocked to trucks in both directions and there was just room for cars to pass. The last 30-40 km to the border took about two hours as we crept though the snarl of trucks. Many trucks elsewhere along the way there and back were upside down in ditches or just broken down in inconvenient places. Unroadworthy trucks are major contributors to the road toll of East Africa (see my theory on this in Uganda. Nothing I have seen in Tanzania has changed my mind).
Birding highlights were few as we really couldn't stop along the way except for fuel for the car and ourselves. In Rwanda I managed just 35 species but there was a Bat Hawk over the hotel on a couple of evenings so I can't complain. The hotel gardens were sparse but did pull in a nice Scarlet-chested Sunbird on the last morning.
Next up is the run to Christmas and the arrival of friends from Hamilton for a two week safari to Serengeti NP etc.
Tacazze Sunbird with the straightest bill. |
Next is Bronzy Sunbird. |
The bill of the Golden-winged Sunbird is the most curved. |
Checking emails by the pool after breakfast on setting-up day for the conference. |
The ECHO team getting ready for delegate registration. |
Morning tea on the first day of the conference. Going well so far. |
Before lunch all presentations were in the main hall. |
After lunch there were three concurrent sessions in the main hall and smaller rooms nearby - hard to choose which to attend. |
During breaks the ECHO publications were on sale. |
On the way we mainly drove on high quality sealed roads and traffic was mostly calm and light. As we approached the Rwanda border however the road was severely potholed and had an increasing number of trucks. Along this section a large truck had rolled and lost its shipping container. The road was blocked to trucks in both directions and there was just room for cars to pass. The last 30-40 km to the border took about two hours as we crept though the snarl of trucks. Many trucks elsewhere along the way there and back were upside down in ditches or just broken down in inconvenient places. Unroadworthy trucks are major contributors to the road toll of East Africa (see my theory on this in Uganda. Nothing I have seen in Tanzania has changed my mind).
Birding highlights were few as we really couldn't stop along the way except for fuel for the car and ourselves. In Rwanda I managed just 35 species but there was a Bat Hawk over the hotel on a couple of evenings so I can't complain. The hotel gardens were sparse but did pull in a nice Scarlet-chested Sunbird on the last morning.
Scarlet-chested Sunbird. |
A field visit to a site where local farmers get to try new ideas. Here were potatoes and maize with various fertiliser and mulch combinations. |
Some heavy rain preceded us in the Babati district on the last day of travelling home. |
Beautiful sunbird. Well done for your presentation (and surviving the roads and trucks) Rx
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