Monday, May 16, 2011

Ol Lentille Conservancy Part 2: Creating Conservation

Part 2 of John's conservation story...




Under the agreement between Regenesis Ltd and the landowners (Kijabe and Nkiloriti Group Ranches), fees became payable immediately, even in the absence of a lodge or any guests. So the “economic engine” of the project started up early- the community gained financially just from Regenesis being there, and more so when the lodge was complete and guests began to arrive.

All the while, since 2000, the community had successfully excluded its own livestock from the conservation area and had eliminated poaching. Unfortunately neighbouring communities’ cattle were not so respectful, and the community had not enough resources and organisation to exclude them from the area. When John and Gill arrived in late 2005, it was obvious that the land was still being grazed on- ‘bomas’ were visible, you often saw Samburu herdsmen in the conservancy with their cattle and youngsters with sheep and goats. They knew they were not meant to be there and would run if you tried to talk to them, but always crept back in to the conservancy.

Cattle were a frequent sight in the conservancy in
2005-6 and still try to return if drought gets bad

With the help of the world-famous Lewa Conservancy, John and his Head Ranger, Sergeant Samal Kimorgo (more commonly known as ‘Kilo 1’, his radio call-sign), turned the volunteers into an organized, trained, disciplined, well-equipped, uniformed, and paid security force. Pretty soon all livestock were being properly excluded from what had now become the Ol Lentille Conservancy.

Ol Lentille Conservancy Ranger at an Outpost. Teams of Rangers
rotate on Outpost duty in various remote parts of the conservancy

You may be asking why it was necessary to drive livestock out of the area. After all, cattle are the prized possessions of the tribesmen. Well, it’s fairly simple. The land had to rest. It was almost exhausted. There was no grass-cover with resulting loss of top-soil and huge erosion gullies. The soil had become capped with a hardened crust so any rainfall just ran off it. Because the land was permanently hot, rainfall was less likely. Invasive plant species, unpalatable to either livestock or wildlife, which thrive in poor soils had started to take over.

Opuntia, an invasive species which thrives in degraded soil

Today, after 5 years of dedicated hard work, and even with 2 extreme drought years in that period (yes inter-drought frequency is decreasing – climate change is upon us here- it is also becoming more unpredictable, not like the El Niño/El Niña’s of old), the Ol Lentille Conservancy has abundant grass cover and the invasive species are dying out as soil quality improves, indigenous plant species thrive and smother, wildlife grazes and fertilizes the soil, and rainfall increases. Remarkably, since the water table has risen, a spring, long dead, has come back to life, and is a major magnet for wildlife.

Elephants in Ol Lentille Conservancy, 2010

Next week, we get into the science of conservation, showing how the Lentille conservation strategies can be extended and used to bring even more benefit to the communities here.
Greater Kudu in Ol Lentille Conservancy, 2009

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