Today our biodiversity team leader, Matthew, took me one of
the project’s fauna transacts. This is where we monitor an area for evidence
and sightings of animals such as Bonobos and many other species of primate,
forest hogs, small forest antelope, and giant pangolin. He told me he’d picked
the closest one so we wouldn’t have too much difficulty getting there. We
headed directly across a glassy lake to the mouth of the Bosongo river. Our
wooden hulled boat nosed into a tunnel-like, foliaged-covered waterway that
brought back childhood memories of the Jungle Ride at Disney Land.
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Matthew (left front), Djems (right front), Thomas behind them and Stino navigating the boat. |
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Travelling along the Bosongo River |
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We carefully
meandered our way up the river and were helped by chest deep fisherman to lift our
boat’s heavy wooden hull through fishing weirs blocking our course. Nearly an
hour of obstacles into the interior of the project area we came upon women and
children washing on a beach which indicated we had arrived in the small village
of Bosongo. Excited children paraded us in to the centre of town with a chorus
of Mundele, mundele! Here, surrounded by rows of interested eyes, I sat in a
3-legged plastic chair while Matthew organized five pirogue drivers for the
next portion of our journey. I had no idea what I was in for.
The four of us: Matthew, Thomas the flora biodiversity lead,
Djems a forester and swamp forest expert and Anne Marie my translator and
personal assistant headed into a thick grove of trees and down to the muddy
banks of a stream that was hidden behind branches. I was directed to sit in the
floor of one of the pirogues (dug out canoe) and I did so while wedging my
backpack between my bent knees and chest. I noticed the 2 cm of freeboard and
worried about my camera.
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Me in my second, less leaky pirogues |
Once we were all seated in the bottoms of our respective pirogues
we began paddling through what was more a flooded and dense forest than any
river I had ever seen. Shortly it became apparent that my thigh high waders
were doing nothing to prevent me from becoming soaking wet. At one point I
noticed water gushing through the bottom of the boat and between my feet. A
well placed piece of plastic had come dislodged and the leak began to fill my
barely floating pirogue at a rather alarming rate. After a few failed attempts
to plug the hole with the same piece of plastic, some grasses and finally my
finger; the pirogue driver made a series of hand signals indicating that we
were going to need to switch boats. We pulled up along side a slightly more buoyant
wooden hull and carefully transferred over to a much better 3cm of freeboard
and no apparent leak. The paddles made rhythmic splashes as we floated slowly
around great tree trunks and twisting vines the size of my waist. I imagined
water snakes, but had one of my favorite moments where I thrill at my immediate
reality. I really am right here doing this right now!
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Anne Marie also doesn't have much freeboard |
Nearly an hour later we arrived at a place that was not obviously
different from the rest of dense flooded jungle. However, I was informed that a
metre under the dark water marked the edge between the river we had travelled
on and the swamp forest we were about to enter.
Walking, or shall we say trudging, through a swamp forest is
not like anything I have ever experienced before. As I tried to carefully
follow in the footsteps of the others (along sunken logs and other less deep
areas) images from movies I had seen as a child sprang to mind. Images such as
the quicksand in the Never Ending Story where the boy’s horse sinks, or the
swamp forest in the Princess Bride with “Rodents of unusual size”. At times the
mud was quite passable, just ankle or shin deep. But, at times, like when I
placed my foot a little to the side of where I was told, I was plunged up to my
waist in mud. Vines twisted over and around us and the thick forest blocked out
the sky. Sweat dripped from our foreheads as we helped to pry each other out of
various suction-like predicaments. Warnings of ‘fumi’ (ants) and ‘serpent’
(snake) were frequent and I was warned to touch as little of the overhanging
vines as possible for the same reasons and because many of them are covered in alarmingly
sized spines.
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Hiking in the Swamp Forest |
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Laughing while Djems tries to un-suction Anne Marie |
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Finally arriving at the biodiversity transact (those are the plot cards in my hand). |
An hour or so later we made it to terra firma and we were
able to, quite dryly, walk to the beginning of the biodiversity transect. We
learned about the footprints of giant pangolin, the last forest elephant sighting,
and the Bonobo nests high in the trees, and then shortly we returned back by
the same route. Trudging through the swamp forest, paddling along the forest
waterways, down the Bosongo river and across the sparkling lake.
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