|
Meno A Kwena - A sanctuary
in the Kalahari.
By Kristina Gubic
|
Responsible Tour Operations
When we asked Kristina Gubic to write for this
"Great Deserts" issue we asked if she would underpin her story with a
slant toward ecotourism.
Kristina, of course, writes from experience and in doing so
for this piece she gave us more than we asked for, an example
of responsible tour operations that we believe serves a
broader purpose than just extolling one company's -
Kalahari Kavango Safari Company
- virtue.
There are many tour operators who actively work to preserve
our natural heritages. To locate them just use the Ecotourism
"Activity" choice in searching our
Tour Operator Directory.
|
“Dumela Ma (Greetings Madam),
How far are you driving today?” I’d just reached the Martin’s Drift Border
crossing between South Africa and Botswana and the custom official’s
question was more out of empathy for how far I still needed to travel in the
oppressive heat than out of legal necessity. It was breakfast time and
already the mercury was topping 30 degrees Celsius. I had another seven
hours ahead of me.
Botswana is one of Africa’s most sparsely populated countries, almost
entirely dominated by the formidable desert of the Kalahari. It is a land of
wide open spaces, dazzling wildlife and the legendary Bushmen who predate
all other civilization on the continent. The Bushmen are the true ancestral
people of the region - now a dwindling minority of hunter gatherers
scratching out an existence among the dominant pastoral Setswana people. It
is from the Setswana language that the desert’s original name became
contorted into what it is known as today. ‘Kgalagadi’ which literally means
‘great dry up’ in Setswana – gave way to ‘Kalahari’ – to English speakers it
is simply known as the Thirstlands.
Making my escape from the jarring urban chaos of Johannesburg, I couldn’t
think of a more contrasting and alluring destination. Among its natural
bounty, Botswana boasts two of the world’s largest inland deltas, Karen Ross
in her tribute book to the Okavango Delta aptly called it the ‘Jewel of the
Kalahari’. The Okavango Delta is a giant wetland fed by the headwaters of
the Kavango River that begins in Angola, and supports a vast array of
wildlife and birds through it labyrinthine water channels etched in papyrus
and succulent grasses. It is also the only permanent water source for
migratory animals seeking some respite from the long dry months in the
Kalahari. But it was not to this oasis that I was headed. I was travelling
to the western edge of the country’s other great inland delta – the
Makgadikgadi Pans. The Pans are the remnants of an inland sea that dried up
over two thousand years ago and left only a residue of hardened light blue
crust as testimony to its existence.
You may be wondering what appeal there lies in all that heat and dust, but
the Kalahari is a deceptive place of haunting imagery and hidden contrasts.
A myriad of seasonal miracles wait with baited breath to be unleashed by the
rains. Rain, rain, rain. The country’s most precious and elusive resource -
the Setswana word for rain is ‘Pula’, and ‘Pula’ is also the symbol of their
national currency! But it is when the country is at its most desperate,
denied of rain, during the agonizingly long dry season from April to
October, that the landscape produces its most dramatic scenery.
My only companions on the long hot journey had been a few anaemic looking
donkeys, some rather bored looking cows and the waltzing dust devils that
loom up from the desert floor like chalk-filled tornadoes. David Dugmore,
the owner of Meno A Kwena was waiting for me beside the tarred road. Despite
the growing interest in this authentic safari tented camp – there was still
no signpost alerting you of its presence, and I was secretly thrilled at
being privy to its existence.
Meno A Kwena is a collection of rustic Meru-style tents pitched along the
edge of a high calcrete cliff that stares down onto the empty scar of what
was once the Boteti River. The river once served as the natural western
boundary of the Makgadikgadi Pans National Park, but since it dried up over
a decade ago, the government has installed a rather controversial fence to
separate livestock from wildlife.
Taken from the Setswana phrase for ‘tooth of the crocodile’, Meno A Kwena
owes its namesake to the last remaining deep pools of water that harboured
the river’s most defiant crocodiles before it drained away into the dust and
left them stranded. But not all of nature has given up on the Boteti. The
largest migration of mass grazers in Southern Africa still returns every dry
season, including thousands of zebra, fewer wildebeest and kudu with
predators in tow, a mind-blowing variety of birds and a growing bachelor
herd of rambunctious elephants.
This spectacular congregation of wildlife all jostling for a meagre drink of
water - right under the noses of residents in the camp - is what makes this
camp an unmatchable unique safari experience. Were it not for the persistent
efforts of Dugmore to convince the local community to include the camp in
the fence line and have it aligned behind the camp – Meno A Kwena may not
have existed at all. Months of council meetings with the local community
leaders called ‘kgotlas’ and constant pleas to the wildlife authorities to
realise the strategic importance of the camp in being able to pump water for
the wildlife finally ended in victory. But the job of sustaining this
fascinating ecosystem is not without its stresses. Every day of the dry
season for the last four years since Meno A Kwena became established, has
meant that petrol pumps installed in the riverbed have to be fuelled and
monitored throughout the day in order to keep up the demand of 100,000 litres of water per day. The maintenance and fuel costs of such an
undertaking have proved financially taxing, and David Dugmore has succeeded
with the assistance and generosity of friends, family and visiting tourists
who experience this struggle firsthand and have offered their support.
Whilst Dugmore is praised for his efforts and has a full mandate from the
local wildlife authorities to manage the water supply for the area, the
under resourced authorities are unable to finance his endeavours. Dugmore’s
passion for the area and his commitment to the upliftment of the local
communities has lead to him setting up the Meno A Kwena Water for Life Fund
which seeks to replace the presently volatile system with a more stable
supply that will involve better quality pumps and more deep trenches dug
into the riverbed. There are also plans to build a community camp site near
the local village that will encourage tourists to engage with local culture
and gain an authentic insight into their lifestyle. The route on which the
camp lies is becoming increasingly popular as the more practical route for
those self drive tourists wanting to head northward into Africa.
As the heat of the day subsides and the horizon transforms into a bruised
palette of colours, the camp staff busy themselves with the task of bringing
a fresh bucket of hot water to each of the individually styled open air
ensuite bathrooms. With a bucket drawn up on a rope over the branch of a
tree, showering under the Kalahari sky is an experience steeped in pure
magic. By the time Kebofilwe – the master chef has readied dinner, the
dining and lounge tent has been illuminated by dozens of hurricane lamps and
Leeme, the star waiter, also recruited from the local village of Moreomaoto,
is standing by to pour your drink of choice. Now all that remains is for you
to watch your dinner being cooked over a campfire and watch the Kalahari
night sky come alive.
Sleep comes quickly among all that fresh air and space, and I had no
difficulty settling into the soft cotton and blanket bedroll in my tent,
were it not for the night- time serenade. Almost every night, I heard the
thunderous hooves of zebra scattering as they made way for elephants and the
deep throated moan of lions calling from the other side of the riverbed.
Meno A Kwena is unique in that it does not encourage a mad flurry of
scheduled activities to keep its guests busy. It is one of the few places
where you can feel as anonymous as you like and disappear into a good book
or some sketching. For those who can tear themselves away from the cooling
haven of the rock pool built into the edge of the cliff and overlooking the
waterhole there are other adventures awaiting on the Pans. Day trips to Nxai
Pans for a picnic or a few hours drive to Gweta, a small but quaint village
offers quad bike riding and kite sailing for the adventurous spirit. Quads
are an excellent way to sensitively explore the pans with their giant stands
of palm trees that appear completely out of place and instead of an azure
ocean as a backdrop, give way to grassy scrubland shielding meerkats, ground
squirrels and hyena. If not to seek out the wildlife then go just to
experience the eerie silence and sheer infinity of space. One of my most
surreal and memorable experiences from that trip was camping overnight on
the pans on what felt like a moonscape. Perhaps it was the wavering mirages
in the heat of the day that made it difficult to distinguish where the salt
pans ended and the sky began but I have never felt more free, more alone and
more exhilarated than I did there.
I’ve heard from David Dugmore since that this rainy season has brought the
highest level of rain to the area in decades and I can imagine the tangle of
riverine bush below his camp transformed into a luminescent green more
vibrant and thick than what I witnessed a couple of seasons ago. I can
imagine all the girls shuddering with the explosion of insects, beetles,
scorpions and solifugids hatching out of the sand. A solifugid is a sandy
coloured false spider that can span up to 12 centimetres and has been
clocked chasing its prey at speeds of up to 250km per hour! No wonder it’s
been nicknamed the Kalahari Ferrari.
It is still too early to tell whether the rains will be able to sustain the
zebra migration on their return trek eastwards to the pans with adequate
grazing and water to last them through the dry season. David is not one to
put his faith in hope. Already he has set about engaging researchers and
engineers in the planning and building of a more effective water supply.
The Kalahari is not a trip to be taken once in a lifetime. It is a place
that gets under your skin and makes you yearn for it when you are away. I
have made four trips to Botswana and am still mesmerised and spurred on by
what I have still not seen. I have never for instance witnessed the arrival
of the flamingos, pelicans and cranes onto the Pans when the rains have been
kind and the millions of shrimp and algae blooms lying dormant in the sand
spring to life to feed these migrant birds. Perhaps too, the generous rains
spell the end of a long drought cycle that has crippled the area for so long
and the Boteti may once gain flow and become the lifeblood of the Kalahari.
Kristina Gubic ©2006
Kristina Gubic is a
freelance environmental writer and former Editor of Progress Magazine - The
Sustainable Development Quarterly, published by Picasso Headline. Kristina
travels around Southern and East Africa continuously to research
development, cultural and environmental stories. You can email her at
africanscribe@yebo.co.za
|