Camp Has A New Look!
Category: Ewaso Lions Camp | Date: Oct 29 2009 | By: ewasolions
The Ewaso Lions camp has a new look! We’ve lived here now for 16 months and it was definitely time for some improvements. Click here to see what camp looked like in 2008 when we first moved here.
Sasaab Lodge generously donated and constructed a waterproof shade in camp. Before this, we had a canvas sheet but unfortunately this got torn and destroyed in the sun and strong winds (click here to see blog on this). This is what we had before:
Ricila trying to tie the torn fly sheet
The carpenters from Sasaab built the frame for the new structure and we had some iron sheets put on top of it, after which we painted it green. Our next plan is to put “makuti” (thatch) on top of the roof.
Building the frame
Painting the iron sheets green
The completed structure
Our kitchen also has been renovated! Joseph worked hard to make it bigger and higher so we don’t have to crouch any more.
Joseph working on the kitchen
The new and improved kitchen
The bathroom and loo were also renovated. The walls are more sturdy now thanks to the thatching, although I’ve had to battle with the camels recently as they were trying to eat the makuti thatching! To remind you what it used to look like:
Bush bathroom in 2008
New bathroom
Lastly, we now have an office in camp! This was my old tent and has now become a store/office. Our old store had fallen apart and thanks to donations from WildlifeDirect blog readers we were able to get newer, more sturdy tents. We will eventually get 2 desks and chairs put in. I have a new tent now - its smaller than my old one (now the office) but still very cool and as I recently discovered, it is waterproof!
New office tent and store
A view of camp
A huge thanks to Sasaab lodge management, Madeliene Todd, Stuart McCullum, Chip Owen, Sammy Leleseita and Brenton H for funds to help us make camp look so much better!
Tags: Ewaso Lions, Lions, Sasaab
Working With Renowned Human-Wildlife Conflict Expert From USA
Category: Other news | Date: May 25 2009 | By: ewasolions
I was thrilled to have Nina Fascione and her husband Steve Kendrot come and stay with us at the Ewaso Lions camp a while back. Nina is the Vice President for Field Conservation for Defenders of Wildlife and a renowned human-wildlife conflict expert. Today we have a special guest blog written by Nina!
After looking for her intently for so long that my eyes strained, I wasn’t actually expecting to see her when we did come upon her. Lekuraiyo, standing next to me with our heads sticking out of the top of the jeep (his head sticking out much farther than mine!), gently tapped me on the shoulder and said “lion.” And there she was, standing partially hidden in the brush and still as a statue, staring at us without moving a muscle, the better to remain unseen. In my excitement, I leaned down, punched Shivani on the arm and hissed “lion!” Shivani was thrilled to see Magilani, the lioness she had been monitoring for several weeks, but not as much as I was, as this was my first wild lion. Indeed, it was my first trip to Africa. Despite having worked with animals and in the conservation world since 1980, I had never before made this journey to the epitome of wildlife meccas. My husband Steve, also a wildlife biologist, and I traveled to Northern Kenya to visit Shivani and learn more about her work.
Nina with Francis (Ewaso Lions Scout) and Lekuraiyo (Ewaso Lions tracker) standing in Gypsy
I met Shivani when she became a student in the Emerging Wildlife Conservation Leaders (EWCL) class, a leadership training program that I co-founded and teach.
Shivani’s large carnivore conservation resonated with me because it parallels the work I oversee in North America as vice-president for field conservation for Defenders of Wildlife. Defenders has successfully worked to restore wolves, grizzly bears and other endangered species to parts of the United States, and the challenges we encounter while doing so are similar to the challenges Shivani faces in her work studying and protecting lions in Kenya: primarily, conflict with humans, including direct conflict as well as human-caused habitat loss and fragmentation.
Conflicts between humans and wildlife can seem like overwhelming obstacles to successful conservation programs. In the United States, some ranchers and hunters object to the restoration of large carnivores, as they view them as a threat to their livelihoods. Defenders has helped ameliorate these conflicts through several successful programs, such as our livestock compensation trust, in which we reimburse ranchers for verified livestock losses to wolves and grizzly bears.
We also maintain a proactive program, through which we work with ranchers to take steps to prevent livestock losses. Defenders will fund the purchase and implementation of tools to keep wolves and bears away from livestock. These methods include livestock guarding dogs, fencing, employing range riders to monitor livestock and so on.
These programs have gone a long way in preventing conflicts, as well as reducing the animosity some local residents feel toward large carnivores and, presumably, the legal or illegal killing of carnivores. Through the Ewaso Lion project, Shivani is similarly working with local people – the Samburu – to understand the causes of and find solutions to prevent conflict and animosity towards predators and other wildlife in Kenya. For example, Shivani is working with local villages to ensure that bomas, the pens made out of brush where the livestock are housed at night, are strong enough to deter predators.
Biological studies are increasingly demonstrating that predators are essential to a healthy ecosystem. In addition, they bring vital economic benefits to regions through ecotourism. And perhaps most importantly, carnivores provide us with deep-rooted cultural and aesthetic values. Whether working to protect wolves in Yellowstone National Park in the United States or lions in the Samburu ecosystem in Kenya, we should all care about their conservation.
Tags: Africa, Conservation, Ewaso Lions, Human-Wildlife Conflict, Kenya, Lions, Samburu, wildlife
Samburu Is Still Dry…
Category: Lions, Reserves | Date: May 19 2009 | By: ewasolions
Hello friends,
I am sorry for the long long silence! I was in Nairobi all of April, working on data and reports. I returned to Samburu about 2 weeks ago and have been busy setting up the Echo Lima Camp once again in West Gate Community Conservancy, trying to find the lions, catching up with the Ewaso Lions team and much more.
Sadly, things are not very good here. The rains have pretty much failed. Normally when I return to Samburu every May, it is green, the Ewaso Nyiro River is flowing fast, elephants are everywhere, cats are hard to find and all animals are happy and energetic in the lush green vegetation.
This time however, it is a different scene. When I arrived, the river was still dry, elephants were lethargic with numerous calves dying in large numbers, the lions were still in the reserve concentrated along the river and the ground still bare and very very dry.
The Ewaso Nyiro still dry when I returned in early May
The situation in West Gate is no better. The Samburu people are moving daily in search of rain (its raining around us - just not here), there has been cholera outbreaks in the region with people dying. Livestock are dying daily and sadly Grevy zebra too. I was also faced with 3 dead (1 dying) elephants the day we set up the Echo Lima camp.
Amidst this sad news, there is some good news and hope. It is raining around us and the river finally began to flow after being dry for 5 months!
The Ewaso Nyiro started flowing a few days ago in West Gate Community Conservancy
I had a fantastic sighting of all the lions from the Koitogor Pride in Samburu National Reserve a few days ago. Nashipai, Nabo and their 5 cubs are looking great and healthy. The cubs have grown and are almost full size now. Uni’s 4 cubs have all survived and are also looking healthy. It is always such a relief to see the lions after being away for a long time.
Nashipai and one of her cubs looking great during the persistent dry season in the reserve
Uni’s cubs looking healthy
There is much more to report on - some good and some bad. I will be posting many more blogs about everything soon, so stay tuned. Some really exciting news is also on the way….
But in the meantime, where is the rain? We keep hoping it is still on the way…
Tags: elephants, Ewaso Lions, Ewaso Nyiro, Lions, Samburu, West Gate Community Conservancy
Radio-Collaring of An Ewaso Lion
Category: Lions | Date: Feb 16 2009 | By: ewasolions
We have our first radio-collared Ewaso Lion! On Thursday the 28th of January, I managed to locate Lguret at 6:36 am. Lguret was one of the Real Lions – a maneless male who I first saw in July 2008 in West Gate Community Conservancy (WGCC) with 2 other males. The coalition of 3 moved to Samburu National Reserve (SNR) in September 2008 and have been resident in the reserve since then.
Lguret was spotted in the Ewaso Nyiro river with the other male – Loirish. I stayed with them until the Kenya Wildlife Service (KWS) vet arrived, Dr Stephen Chege. The two males did not move much from the dry river-bed and only stood to drink from a nearby elephant waterhole and to change position each time the sun was on them.

The two males prior to darting
After Dr Chege arrived, we made plans and decisions of how the lion will be darted and from what position. I drove into the Ewaso Nyiro and Lguret was darted a few minutes later. Both males jumped up after Lguret was darted and moved up the river-bank into the saltbush.

Driving into the Ewaso Nyiro finding the right position to dart from

Approaching the 2 males (lions are on the right of the photo)

Lguret darted (see dart near shoulder)
Lguret eventually sat down a few minutes later and we were able to come out of the vehicles. Dr Chege worked on the health of the lion and took necessary samples, Raphael (Ewaso Lions) and David from Save the Elephants worked on attaching the collar whilst I took all the required measurements. Lguret was down for a bit under an hour. Rangers from SNR kept an eye on Loirish, the other male and reinforced the security within the area.
Taking required measurements
Eventually the antidote was administered and Lguret came fully round under an hour. We stayed with him to make sure he was in good condition and not affected by the collar and the operation overall.
Lguret recovering well after the radio-collaring
The radio-collaring operation was a success and we now have the first Ewaso Lion collared! This is the first time that movement data from a lion in Samburu is being gathered and this information is crucial for lion conservation and the management of the ecosystem. I hope that he will move to WGCC and we will be able to learn this key movement between the reserves and the community area.
Many thanks to Paul Thomson for these great photos
Special thanks to the team from Save the Elephants and Paul Thomson from the African Wildlife Foundation for their assistance with the radio-collaring operation.
Tags: Conservation, Ewaso Lions, Iain Douglas-Hamilton, Kenya, Lions, Samburu, Save the Elephants, wildlife

















