So I am home and safe. Still really really out of it after a 5 hour transfer to OR Tambo Airport, a 17 hour flight to JFK with a 1 hour stop in Senegal, and a 3 hour drive home. But once I regain consciousness, I will be posting a plethora of pictures and posts that I've been saving.
Coming home was really bittersweet. The morning before I left Nsikazi was pretty sad. Saying goodbye is always sad. One of the worst goodbyes was to Big Boy... and he told me to promise I'd see him again, but I didn't want to promise in case it didn't happen. I know I can stay in touch with pretty much everyone else... the students and the guides... through facebook and e-mail, but the only contact I can really have with Big Boy is through a phone number that he wrote down for me. I tried it yesterday and it didn't go through, so I'm not sure if it will work. *sigh* But I learned a lot from him, like how to start a fire from scratch and from embers, how to light lanterns with paraffin, how to speak a little bit of Swazi...
In fact, I learned so so much from this whole expedition. I know more about the wildlife in South Africa, how to track game, how to ID any bird (by sight or sound) or any tree, than I know about any wildlife in my own backyard. I've learned survival skills... like how to orient yourself in the bush, find water, build solar stills and vegetation stills, what snakes and spiders to watch out for, how to react when confronting a dangerous animal. I've learned some Swazi and some Shangaan and some Zulu and some Afrikaans. I've learned how to walk loudly at night, so you don't surprise an unsuspecting leopard. I've learned about conservation management and how it isn't always as nice as it sounds (like with the elephant culling problem). I've learned how to pin insects for ID purposes, and I've learned how to interpret some major constellations in the Southern hemisphere, how to let the moon be my flashlight. I've learned how to assess habitats, how to determine the extent of fire and elephant damage to individual trees, how to use a GPS and a compass, how to use the sun to your advantage, how to lure out a mongoose, or how to attract predators. I'm beginning to see that in the month I lived at Nsikazi, I absorbed more information than I ever thought I would.
Despite the sickness, and the early on wide-awake nights of terror, the hard work, and the spiders... the knowledge and experience made it worth every minute. I can't wait to share my stories with you guys.
<3 B