Tuesday, June 23, 2009

Welcome to baby Bibi

The moment we have all been waiting for - Tosha finally gives birth!

For the last three months, all at Knysna Elephant Park have been eagerly awaiting the arrival of Tosha's calf. It is natural for pregnant humans to be a few days or a few weeks overdue, and in elephant terms (where the pregnancy period is more than twice as long), it is quite natural to be a few months overdue (so the vets say). Logical as this may be, the KEP team still fretted, carefully monitoring and watching Tosha every day since her due date, with guides taking shifts in the elephant's sleeping quarters every night ...
At 9pm Saturday night the time eventually came. Austin was doing night duty when the elephants started trumpeting unusually. He immediately knew and frantically radioed the rest of the team. The labour did not last very long - minutes after Tosha dropped her plug (the equivalent of a human's water breaking), Bibi emerged and landed with a thud (luckily onto a soft bed of sawdust, as 2m is quite a way for a little newboard to fall!)
The team and fellow elephants watched anxiously as Tosha seemed a bit rough with this strange new arrival, but she soon settled and protectively coddled her little one. Bibi shakily got to her feet only to fall down seconds later. After numerous attempts she successfully mananged to walk a few metres, rather unsteadily, but nevertheless improving with every step.

The next challenge for Bibi was to get that mother's milk (first intake of colostrum) she so desparately craved! With trembling legs that didn't want to let her stand straight, it was a rather daunting task. Add to that the fact that baby elephant's are inevitably 2cm shorter than where mom's teat is, the task seemed almost impossible! Bibi did not give up though and her resilience eventually paid off - the KEP team heaved a huge sigh of relief as she successfully latched and drank.

Bibi means 'Little Lady' in Swahili. She stands 90cm tall and weighs a healthy 100kg.

Interesting observations and what next ....


  • We saw Harry mating with Tosha. We noted this in her diary (every elephant has a diary in which we note any unusual, out of the ordinary or important information, every day).

  • We diarized 16 weeks forward and watched to see if she came back in to oestrus.

  • When she did not we assumed the pregnancy had taken and we noted 22 months from the date that Harry mated with Tosha.

  • Bibi is slightly small for an infant elephant - the average weight of an infant is 110kg.

  • The most critical part of a captive elephant birth is a) the mother not rejecting the birthb) the baby getting in the colostrum.- required from those first few sucks.

  • The mother is rather rough with the baby at birth (for the first 5 to 10 minutes) But soon after that things quieten down and she gets used to this new little life.

  • Tosha has allowed the handlers close to her to work with her.

  • Tosha and Bibi are moved between stalls during the day to ensure that they are both always in a clean stall.

  • From here we have to take baby steps with decisions being made day to day.

  • We are ready to let her out into the maternity camp, but will only do so when the (predicted) cold weather passes.

  • The moment we are happy the weather won't turn quickly, we will let them into the maternity camp.

  • The moment the team has confidence that little Lady is strong enough to be with the other elephants, they can join the herd.

  • This will be done systematically, to ensure both Tosha and the herd are relaxed.

Happy World Environment Day!

Yes, retailers exploit Valentine's Day, Father's Day, Mother's Day etc, but have you seen one reference to World Environment Day in a retail store?

World Environment Day seems to rise above that and delve deeper on a more meaningful level. Knysna Elephant Park (KEP) aims to add to this movement through Manzovo Theatre. The conclusion of the poem Manzovo challenges us as custodians of this ‘blue island’ to do something about its plight and care for it.

Mark Shuttleworth has made maths and science cool through his programme, it's 'Hip to be Square’, an incredible initiative and example of how we can strive to make it 'Cool to be Green’. Through Manzovo Theatre, youth all over South Africa will be celebrating our environment through song and dance. Our aim is to remain committed to the environment for 364 days a year and then celebrate the year's green achievements on World Environment Day.

Headaches and Heartaches, continued ...

“Mabitsi, Selati and Kiddibone are not problem elephants,” Lisette Withers confirms as we wait anxiously for the arrival of the vehicle carrying the three of them. “They are casualties of a system that uses a bullet as the solution.”
“Mabitsi was a break-out elephant - an elephant that breaks a fence and once having done so, is regarded as a threat and is usually dealt with by discharging a bullet between the eyes. Selati and Kiddibone were part of a management reduction programme at a private reserve and that meant that their choices were either the captive industry or a bullet,” Lisette explains using words that are simple and to the point.
Through the efforts of Lisette and Ian, KEP recently celebrated the release of these elephants into private game reserves, again highlighting the Park's efforts outside KEP boundaries.
Few people know that KEP enjoys the luxury of land that is not open to the public, but that serves elephants that prefer hands-off management; a facility that can be defined as a true rehabilitation centre. Whilst the NEMA act does not provide for a true elephant rehabilitation centre, the actions of KEP allow for the closest solution to the pitfalls of this act and the restrictions to a rehabilitation centre. The NEMA act requires that an animal, once rehabilitated, is returned to the wild. The only shortcoming of this act is that captive elephants can only really be returned to private game reserves.
The heartache to this dilemma is that the effort to regulate these few elephants is really not a priority to those tasked with the duty. Added to this heartache is the standpoint that many animal rightists have, i.e. that these animals should not be allowed to go into captive facilities at all and are better off dead.
Our challenge to all concerned is to see what we have achieved in the last two years. Four so called problem elephants now roam freely in private reserves; surely this is a small victory for conservation and for these elephants?
Description of photos, from top to bottom:
Bully the elephant is safely darted and the dart soon takes effect. Next is the anxious loading up so that he can be tranferred to his new home. Once he arrives, he is carefully off-loaded and administered a wake-up drug. The drug soon takes effect and Bully slowly gets onto his feet again. He meets his new friend Mabitsi and they are soon enjoying the new surroundings together.

Manzovo Theatre Update

Some of you will remember how excited we were at negotiating the rights to the Manzovo Theatre. Gary Albyn, author of the poem Manzovo, has allowed KEP to be home to Manzovo Theatre. It is the very place where the first theatrical version of Manzovo will be performed.

Musicians Sandi and Russel from Gauteng, spent 10 days at KEP getting inspiration to create the music for Manzovo which will be performed by the Lunchbox Theatre at Knysna Elephant Parks Lapa. It was a truly inspiring experience to ‘watch music being made’. The poem has twelve sections with each section representing a theme. The first theme is called “The Awakening”. The lyrics are beautiful and describe Africa waking up to a new dawn. To think that the birth of what could become a play performed to audiences all over the world has all begun here in the Garden Route. Even more exciting is the thought that people from this area have been given the opportunity to perform in this play, and they may even have the chance to perform it on stages abroad ... Watch this space!

The Lust for Ivory - A Deadly Necessity

In our previous newsletter we asked why there were no elephants in the Kruger area at the beginning of the 1900’s. It was also around the time of our last newsletter that I was asked to collect a pair of ivory opera glasses – an indicator of a once thriving trade in raw material derived from these animals. This trend saw the demand for worked goods made of ivory soar.
During the 1800’s people did not hunt because it was an enjoyable pastime and was therefore not controlled by conservation bodies as it is today. It was a means of survival in a country where there was no organized economy or political structure. It was also considered patriotic to rid the area of wildlife so that it could be settled responsibly and to make it a civilized place to live. According to Luxmoore (1991) the trade in ivory could have been a by-product of the conflict between humans and elephants for land. This trend continues in Africa even to this day and the number of elephants found in Southern Africa far outstrips those of any other region in the rest of Africa, with an approximate population of 297 718 elephants roaming here. The second largest area, East Africa, plays home to about 137 485 animals - according to a survey done in 2006 (Blanc et al., 2007).
The number of elephants found in pre-Colonial South Africa is very hard to determine, but the number that has been suggested for the period when Jan van Riebeek arrived at the Cape in 1652 could have been as many as 100 000 (Hall-Martin, 1992). The most densely populated areas were the Eastern Cape (with 6 000 elephant) and the area between the Orange and the Kei Rivers (8 000 elephant) (Kerley and Landman, 2006). Elephant would have favoured the more dense vegetation that these areas offered as well as meeting their need for groundwater.
The sad thing is that by about 1890 most of the elephants in South Afriica had been exterminated with only four distinct population groups remaining - those population groups could be found in the Lowveld, Knysna, Addo and Tembe. Hall-Martin (1992) suggests that there were possibly only as many as 120 elephants left in these populations by 1920. We know that P.J. Pretorius was approached by the Administrator of the Cape Province during this time to exterminate the elephants in the Addo bush and he was very successful – he shot out 120 of the remaining 131 elephant in the area.
We must go back to our original question: Why were there almost no elephant in the Kruger area at the beginning of the 20th Century? The answer lies in where priorities lay at the time. From the 1650’s laws against exterminating wildlife species were introduced at the Cape. This was done to discourage waste and sustainable yield. This did little to deter hunters and legislation had to be strengthened to restrict the hunting of certain species and no hunting was allowed on designated tracts of land called ‘game reserves’.
While the Cape Colony introduced legislation curtailing the hunting of elephant in the early 1800’s, with more and more stringent laws being laid down as time went on, the Soutpansberg (part of the Boer-governed Transvaal) only introduced legislation in 1846 to achieve sustainable yield. This legislation did not include elephant though, as they were seen as far too valuable a commodity and the ivory derived from them far too lucrative to forego. Between 1870 and 1882 the demand for ivory was enormous. Ivory became the plastic of the age due to its abundance and many luxury objects were made from it e.g. piano keys, billiard balls, binoculars, knife handles and so forth (Oliver and Atmore, 1967). It did not occur to these early settlers that the source of ivory was exhaustible. They simply thought that the elephant were moving out of reach, and they had to travel further and further northwards to find them (Carruthers, 1995a & b).
Even though stricter legislation was applied in the Transvaal (which mostly excluded Africans from hunting) this legislation proved useless in curbing the desire to accumulate wealth and stem the pioneering mentality which seemed hell-bent on milking the land for all it was worth – especially prior to the discovery of gold in the Transvaal. The desire to preserve wildlife in South Africa grew in direct proportion to the rate at which it was being wiped out and by the end of the 1800’s there were game farms in many parts of the country - in the Cape, the Transvaal and Zululand. However, the elephant population had been decimated to such an extent – except for a very few individuals between the Oliphants and Letaba Rivers (Stevenson-Hamilton, 1934) and in Northern Zululand - there were no elephant left to protect (Carruthers, 1995a; Cubbin, 1992; Roche, 1996).
In 1903 there was a total number of zero elephant in the now Kruger National Park area. In 1923 (the year the Kruger National Park was founded) there was a population of 100 elephants that had migrated from Mozambique (Stevenson-Hamilton, 1934). By 1967 their number had increased to 6 586 individuals (Whyte, 2001). At present there are as many as 12 000 elephant in the Kruger National Park. This dramatic increase in numbers is a tribute to great work and foresight of men like Stevenson-Hamilton and those who have followed in his footsteps.
It seems ironic that in May 2008 it was decided to lift the moratorium on culling and begin using this method as a last resort to reduce the now burgeoning population of elephant in the Kruger National Park.
The photo directly above was possibly taken during the last legal Knysna elephant hunt in the year 1920. Major PJ Pretorius was given permission to shoot one elephant "in the interests of science". Five Knysna elephants died as a result of this hunt.

Acknowledgement goes to: Jane Carruthers, André Boshoff Rob Slotow, Harry C. Biggs, Graham Avery, and Wayne Matthews.http://www.elephantassessment.co.za/files/03_ch1_Elephant%20Management.pdf (Accessed on 22 April 2009).

We'll collect your guests!

KEP has introduced a service to assist those who may not be able to, or want to, travel out to the Park to be touched by an elephant. Our shuttle will be visiting key points in Knysna and Plett to save you the hassle of driving. Call our reception to find out the details.
Telephone: +27 (0) 44 532 7732
Email:
info@knysnaelephantpark.co.za

Monday, June 15, 2009

Elephants in South Africa

We have decided to dedicate this closing chapter to sharing with you some valuable elephant info. Collect this info from each newsletter and you will slowly gather together what may be some interesting elephant info to share with others.

To understand our elephant situation today, let us take a step back in time to before the advent of firearms in Africa. What is known about elephant populations on our continent during those times? Well, not too much!

By the time the Kruger Park was proclaimed in 1898 most of the elephant populations had been decimated by hunters. Their writings focused on the thrill of hunting rather than the ecology of the area. Addo elephant populations at the same time (1931) had been reduced to eleven elephants. But what were the elephant numbers prior to gunpowder in the Kruger area?

I. J.Whyte, senior scientist at the Kruger Park, took three indicators of measuring elephant activity:

1. The San (Bushmen) Paintings in the Kruger Park
2. Markings on Baobab trees
3. Records of early traders

The San, whose rock art in the Kruger has been dated to the latter part of the Late Stone Age (7000BC and 300AD), recorded a group of five elephants in a painting in one of the 109 shelters identified in Kruger. Surely such a large and dramatic animal would have been recorded more frequently as it was in other parts of the country, such as the Eastern Cape? Here they even recorded the methods of how they caught them by ‘hamstringing’, a technique of demobilising them.

Evidence of their utilisation of Baobab trees is also lacking in the Kruger area. Whyte records that one Baobab in Kruger still has the very clear inscription, “BRISCOE 1890” carved in the bark. This marking is 110 years old and will probably remain on the tree for another 100 years. Elephant markings on Baobabs are lacking in certain areas where elephant traffic has been restricted, suggesting that elephant activity was minimal, if not non-existent in the area.

Records of early traders made little mention of elephants in what is known today as Kruger. Whyte confirms the records of Francois de Cuiper and his party, the first to visit the area in 1752. His mission was to establish trade in gold, copper and ivory. They saw few elephants and indigenous people informed them that they would have to go further north to get ivory. Louis Trichardt makes no mention of elephants in his diaries, although he does make mention of an elephant hunt in the Lorenco Marques area.

Records of serious hunters who hunted in the Kruger area make no mention of elephant hunts, but definitely make mention of hunts for other game. In 1903 James Stevenson-Hamilton, the park's first warden, reported that there were no elephants. Why? More to follow in the next issue ...

How many elephants are there in the forest?

Garden Route residents can be proud to have the only elephants in South Africa that are not ‘kept in’ by a fence! If the elephants in Knysna's forest wanted to walk in and join the town’s festivities, then they could simply head towards town! Every other elephant in South Africa is bound within a fenced area of some sort, either small or very large. The elephants in our forest are Loxodonta Africana (African elephants) and not Loxodonta Cyclotis (Forest elephants), as some have been led to believe. These African elephants have learnt to live in the forest, and learnt to keep shy of human activity. National Parks representatives are not denying that there could be more than one elephant in the forest, although they consistently reiterate that they have only identified one elephant by photograph. Researchers collected DNA from dung samples (2006) and claim to have identified five individual females. Reliable sources have identified spoor of more than one elephant. So for now we can argue that there is more than one elephant in the forest.

Very interestingly, every year runners doing the Oyster Festival 21km and 42km marathons report seeing dung along the side of the road. Surely that is enough proof for us ... (or is that a result of too much pre-race carbo-loading??)

Manzovo Theatre

Author and renowned poet Gary Albyn has given our area an amazing opportunity. The Elephant Park will be home to the Manzovo Theatre. This is great news for everyone from tour operators bringing people to the area to accommodation establishments in the area who are working to keep groups here an extra night.

The rights to perform the 110 verse poem, Manzovo (place of the elephants), has been offered to the Elephant Park. Lunchbox Theatre have been included in the mix and will be working with musicians from Gauteng to produce what could become an international touring show. This means local talent will have a window of opportunity to enter the world of showbiz through the Manzovo Theatre project.

Recently guests to a Bitou Meet and Greet witnessed the recital. It is an extremely moving experience and audiences were spellbound by Gary reciting the journey of a matriarch's herd through southern Africa. If you have already experienced the recital you will need no further invitation to revisit the Theatre and if you have not experienced it, make sure you join us on the next journey.


The Manzovo project has been approached by Disney Wildlife to do a documentary on the poem. There is talk of this being done as a documentary as well as an animated story. This will definitely enhance the Theatre in gaining international exposure.

More than just a commercial venture

Our friendly family of pachyderms are the easiest part of what we do when it comes to elephants. When we hear people coming out of the field ‘blown away’ by their experience, it is invigorating and inspiring, and reassuring to know they will always view elephants in a new light. But other than the most fun part of being with the elephants, life at the Elephant Park includes:

1.Working with the Department of Environmental Affairs and Tourism on captive elephant management.
2.
Working with the Department of Agriculture on Elephant Management issues.
3.Contributing to the development of animal care education courses for all animals in South Africa.
Talking to thousands of guests about the headaches and heartaches involved in elephant management in South Africa.
4.Ensuring the youth who visit our Park leave understanding more about critical conservation issues we as a country are facing.
5.Delivering on our Corporate Social Investment promises. This includes our adoption of the Harkerville Primary School as a project by providing a source of international teachers to the school and raising funds for critical projects at the school.
6.Contributing to the tourism mix in the area by participating in broader marketing strategies that draw people to the area. This extends as far as assisting in the organisation of events like the Pennypinchers Plett Easter Challenge.
7.Development projects like Manzovo Theatre@Knysna Elephant Park that will be a drawcard to the area and it will create jobs for developing artists in the area.

In November 2008, we placed four elephants that were in need of a good home at two private game reserves in the Garden Route. In January of this year, two elephants (ex-zoo) were offered a new home at our other farm in the Eastern Cape. Few people know it, but our Eastern Cape farm is a retreat for elephants. No tourists visit this farm and the staff there are trained to ensure that elephants arriving at this farm stabilise from wherever they have come from, whilst we prepare to find them new homes if need be.

The headaches and heartaches when it comes to elephant management in South Africa

The client looked up and asked, “Why go to so much effort in keeping these elephants?” Good question! Harry eats round 5% of his bodyweight per day (4 metric tons), so he and his extended family costs the Elephant Park tens of thousands of rands per month in providing food alone. But this special extended family is worth every cent, and we believe that these elephants can help us convey a very important conservation message.

With the general elephant population in South Africa growing at 6,25% per annum, culling being targeted by certain sectors of society as ‘verboten’ and conservationists having to defend other species at the expense of further elephant population explosion, what role does Knysna Elephant Park play in the elephant management game?That is a question that we would like you to answer once you have digested the content of this newsletter; which is another challenge we have set ourselves - to provide you with enlightening and useful information about conservation and the elephants!