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professional guiding community in KZN North!


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on this page you'll find all information about it as well

as other info that is of relevance to professional field

guides in this area!


Saturday, July 21, 2012

Elephants drunk from marula fruit?



During assessment drives from Bhejane Nature Training's students last week, some of them mentioned correctly that elephants DO NOT get drunk from eating fermented marula fruit. However, some guides in KZN North might still believe this. Please see the text below on National Geographic's website that should debunk this myth forever.

Almost anyone who has read a travel brochure about Africa has heard of elephants getting drunk from the fruit of the marula tree.

The lore holds that elephants can get drunk by eating the fermented fruit rotting on the ground. Books have been written asserting the truth of the phenomenon, and eyewitness accounts of allegedly intoxicated pachyderms have even been made.

But a new study to be published in the March/April 2006 issue of the journal Physiological and Biochemical Zoology tells a very different story.

Steve Morris, a biologist at the University of Bristol in England and a co-author of the study, says anecdotes of elephants found drunk in the wild go back more than a century.

"There are travelers' tales from about 1839 reporting Zulu accounts that 'elephants gently warm their brains with fermented fruits,'" Morris said.

But there is nothing in the biology of either the African elephant or the marula fruit to support the stories, he asserts.

"People just want to believe in drunken elephants," Morris said.

Eating Rotten Fruit?

The marula tree, a member of the same family as the mango, grows widely in Africa. Its sweet, yellow fruit is used for making jam, wine, beer, and a liqueur called Amarula.

But the first flaw in the drunken-elephant theory is that it's unlikely that an elephant would eat the fruit if it were rotten, Morris says.

Elephants eat the fruit right off the tree, not when they're rotten on the ground, he explained.

"This a largely self-evident fact," he said, "since elephants will even push over trees to get the fruit off the tree, even when rotten fruit is on the ground."

Other experts add that if an elephant were to eat the fruit off the ground, it wouldn't wait for the fruit to ferment.

Michelle Gadd, an African wildlife specialist with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, says that elephants and many other animals—including birds and monkeys—are too fond of marula fruit to let it rot.

"Animals flock, fly, or run to ripe marulas to take part in the gorging, leaving few fruits lying around long enough to ferment," she said.

"Elephants regularly visit and revisit the same marula trees, checking the fruits and the bark for palatability and devour the fruits when they are ripe."

Internal Fermenting?

If fermented fruit on the ground is out of the question, so too is the notion that the fruit could ferment in the stomach of elephants, the study authors say.

Believers of the drunken-elephant lore have often supported this theory of internal fermentation.

But food takes between 12 and 46 hours to pass through an elephant's digestive system, the authors point out, which is not enough time for the fruit to ferment.

Moreover, the authors write, "sugars within the diet are metabolized … to volatile fatty acids, making them unavailable to fermentation."

In other words, the sugars are turned into fat before they can ferment into alcohol.

It is conceivable, the authors concede, that some small amount of ethanol—also known as grain alcohol—could be produced in an elephant's digestive system, if its diet were rich enough in both yeast, which is necessary for fermentation, and fruit.

Even in the unlikely event that these things happened, it's still highly improbable that the food would produce enough alcohol to make an elephant drunk.

How Much to Get an Elephant Drunk?

This raises another question: Even if, under very peculiar circumstances, an elephant were exposed to alcohol, how much would it take to get it drunk?

Through calculations of body weight, elephant digestion rates, and other factors, the study authors conclude that it would take about a half gallon (1.9 liters) of ethanol to make an elephant tipsy.

Assuming that fermenting marula fruit would have an alcohol content of 7 percent, it would require 7.1 gallons (27 liters) of marula juice to come up with that half-gallon of alcohol, the scientists say.

Producing a liter of marula wine requires 200 fruits. So an elephant would have to ingest more than 1,400 well-fermented fruits to start to get drunk.

Even then the elephant would have to ingest the alcohol all at once, the authors note. Otherwise its effects would wear off as quickly as the alcohol was metabolized.

Robert Dudley, a biologist at the University of California, Berkeley who was not involved in the study, believes the authors have put to rest the lore of elephants getting drunk from marula fruit.

The study, he said, "establishes that elephants are unlikely to be inebriated but also that chronic low-level consumption [of alcohol] without overt behavioral effects is likely."

It may make for a good story and a durable myth, but the science suggests you're not likely to see a drunken elephant sitting under a marula tree.

Source: http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2005/12/1219_051219_drunk_elephant.html

Tuesday, July 3, 2012

FGASA KZN North exam workshop




Dear FGASA members,

The KZN North Working Group wishes everyone writing the national exam the 7th of July good luck! For the people writing in Hluhluwe, we do offer an 'exam workshop' for learners writing the FGASA Level 1 exam, where you can come and ask questions about the topics you still might struggle with. The KZN North facilitators will then try to help you by answering your questions and explaining things where necessary, hopefully helping you passing your exam. This service is for free. These workshops will be held Bhejane Nature Training on the 5th of July from 6 PM till 9 PM.

Should you wish to make use of this service, please ensure that you make a reservation with the facilitators, to avoid finding them too busy with other students, and to avoid them sitting there for nothing. For the exam workshops, please text Christa Panos on 083-7263826 or email her on dpanos@tiscali.co.za. Make sure you mention your name, and the time you wish to meet. Also ensure that you actually go to the workshop on the specified time, and should you not be able to, make sure you cancel your appointment with your facilitator in time.

Once again: Make a reservation with your facilitator! No reservation might mean the facilitator has no time for you that evening. And: If you have a reservation, make sure you come: No show (without cancellation) is no more future exam workshops for you... And please come prepared with your questions. If you have no questions, your facilitator unfortunately cannot help you. 

We hope this free service will ensure a higher pass rate amongst learners in this region.

Sincerely yours,

The FGASA KZN North Working Group

Monday, July 2, 2012

New Tree Outings!



New tree outings planned for this month! Make sure you join in as it is probably the best way to get to know the trees in your area of operation. And it is for free!

14 July and/or 15 July

Tree Outing: Lake Sibaya Dune Forest outing - contact me directly to join from Hluhluwe on Saturday morning, or to arrange for the weekend, contact Denis Oscroft at Denis.Oscroft@icfr.ukzn.ac.za for more details regarding Sunday outing and/or camping at Mabibi. I will be joined by Hartwig von Durckheim and Naas Grove, the President of the Dendrological Society Head-Office in Pretoria, on Saturday morning to join the other Zululand Tree Society members at Lake Sibaya for an interesting outing to some rare dune forest trees. (We will also do a walk in the sand forest at False Bay Park on the Friday for those die-hard tree lovers!) The outing to Lake Sibaya and Mabibi is an official dendrological outing. Tel Cary Lang 035 562 2509

21 July

Sand Forest Dendrological Outing at Sand Forest Lodge and False Bay Park, in combination with Sand Forest Lodge and Richard Boon, the author of the Revised edition of Pooley's Trees of KZN tree book. He will be available to sign copies and will be able to bring copies up to buy. This book is highly recommended for all tree lovers. We will do some tree walks at Sand Forest Lodge and in False Bay Park. Accommodation is available at Sand Forest Lodge in chalets or camping facilities for this ‘Tree enthusiasts’ weekend. Tel Cary Lang 035 562 2509

Participate in the KZN North Top Shot Trails Guide Shoot Out Competition!


FGASA KZN North Feedback

On the 11th of June 2012, the most recent KZN North Regional Meeting took place at the Amorello Golf Lodge. There was very good attendance and we would like to take this opportunity to thank all those that attended and nominated members for the now growing regional working group.

New members of the KZN North working group are

Ivor van Rooyen –Zululand Rhino Reserve

Amon Ndlovu – Representing the local communities of the region

Khyle Pretorius – FGASA member

David Haveman – Thanda Private Game Reserve

Ashley Wormald – KwaZulu Private Game Reserve

A key discussion point during the meeting was around the FGASA Advanced Rifle Handling and Trails Guiding qualifications. For many guides, finding the time or opportunities to update or complete their Advanced Rifle Handling qualifications is proving to be very challenging and a suggestion was made by local ARH assessor Dylan Panos, to introduce an event that would enable guides to get together, practice their shooting skills, get their assessments up to date, and get to know each other better around a potjie at the end of the day.

Those present at the meeting supported this suggestion, and we have proceeded to organize the first KZN North Top Shot Trails Guide Shoot Out Competition. This is an exciting initiative that will allow guides to learn from each other and make best use of the facilities and resources available in the region. The day will consist of several exercises starting with a compulsory assessment Rifle and Ammunition inspection. All entrants will then compete in an ARH shootout which will be held under assessment conditions. Times and scores will be recorded to be able to determine the top shots of the region. The second half of the day will consist of 4 further exercises, to be completed in full trails kit, with specifications for pack weight and contents. The top shots of the day will be selected to represent the KZN North Top Shop Trails Team. We are hoping to gain enough support from other regions to implement similar initiatives so that our local team can then compete against the top shots of the other FGASA Regions.

Those that complete the FGASA ARH Assessment exercises will be able to use this as a valid assessment toward updating or gaining their ARH Certificates, provided off course that Level 1 and the necessary SASSETA competencies are also in place. No assessment fees are charged on the day, making this a great opportunity for guides to upgrade their qualifications.

Rifles and ammunition will be available for hire for guides that cannot supply their own. Competition is open to all registered FGASA guides with the necessary SASSETA Competencies in place.

Top shots will also be awarded prizes sponsored by Magnum Shooting Academy, Talon Gear and Bhejane Nature Training.

Guides in training are welcome to attend the day to observe and keep the potjies going.

Participants must be registered by the 15th of August. Registration forms and competition guidelines can be requested from dpanos@tiscali.co.za

For more on the FGASA KZN North Region, visit us on Facebook (FGASA KZN North) and the regional blog which can be accessed at http://fgasakznnorth.blogspot.com/