Day 10: Sable Poop
This morning, we returned to Batiki to help with some routine herd health tasks. The original plan had been to do some more darting, but a cold front came through last night and the weather conditions were unfavorable for darting this morning. A nice late 7:30 departure left us feeling rested and ready.
Arriving at Batiki again, we piled into one bakkie and headed out to scout sable poop. In order to efficiently control intestinal parasites, it is necessary to know which parasites, and in what amounts, are present in a given herd and location. The best way to do this is to collect fresh feces from a number of animals and count the number of parasite eggs in a standard sample size. Now collecting a fresh sample from a pet is a fairly easy task. It becomes a bit more of a challenge in herds of animals in large enclosures. We followed the feed truck as it distributed supplemental hay and feed to keep the sable healthy through the dry winter months. They were used to this process, so came up to eat.
We waited nearby, several of us with binoculars, watching for individual animals to poop. Then a student would walk calmly in and find the fresh, warm sample and collect it in a plastic bag and label it, while someone with binolculars tried to read the ear tag identifying the individual animal that donated the sample. We had a target number of samples to take in each enclosure based upon the number of animals contained, so there was quite a lot of waiting around for physiology to be generous. Labelled samples were stored in a cooler with ice packs to prevent the samples deteriorating before they could be analysed.
We collected samples from 4 different camps (enclosures), which pretty well finished up the morning.
We did encounter some excitement at our final camp, which was a large group of young bulls. Somehow our presence disturbed them, and an aggressive scuffle broke out among several of them. There was chasing, horn clashing, more chasing, ganging up, and a quick return to the safety of the bakkie for the students on the ground!
We returned to the farmhouse to use the indoor plumbing and eat our packed lunches (after liberal use of disinfecting handwipes).
At this point, I caught a ride with Rita back to the lodge, where I performed the difficult duty of dogsitting for Carli.
I wonder which is harder the kids might think: pushing a groggy rhino into the back of truck or looking for and collecting fresh animal poop around the ground of wild reserve… :)
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