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Ben Forbes: Notes from the Field
please contact Ben at Northern Exposure
Newsletter 4
Eeny,
Meeny, Miney and Mo, were rescued from a game farm in eastern
Namibia and were the second group of cheetah to be
released
into the TUSK TRUST Cheetah Rehabilitation Park. At the time
this group of siblings was about a year old, just a little too
young to be without their mother. Eeny, Meeny, Miney and Mo were
fitted with radio-collars when they were nearly 4 years of age
to facilitate tracking, which takes place on a regular basis.
Their physical condition, movements, behaviour and hunting successes
are monitored. Almost from the beginning they separated into
two pairs. The cheetahs adapted well to their new environment
and caught their first prey (a warthog) on the second day. After
more than a year, they proved that they could cope on their own
and maintain their self-sufficiency.
In
late August 2002, an opportunity arose for one of the pairs to
be relocated to a 25000-hectare private game reserve in the south
of Namibia. Eeny and Meeny were anaesthetised and transported
via road and air and put into a boma to recover from the anaesthetic.
They remained there for 2 weeks to become acquainted with their
new surroundings and ingest enough food to prepare them for the
release into their new home. After their release their condition
was monitored on a regular basis and the game reserve managers
report they have adapted well.
Miney
and Mo had stayed together since their introduction into the
TUSK TRUST Cheetah Rehabilitation Park. Between them they had
achieved some unexpected and remarkable hunts, bringing down
large, adult antelope and working together to prey on Oryx and
Zebra calves that were protected by a herd of adults. Sadly,
on the 24th of February this year, it was one of these dramatic
encounters that ended Miney’s life, with an Oryx horn piercing
his heart. Four days passed before Mo left the spot where his
brother had died. Mo seems not to have learnt any lessons from
the experience resulting in his brother’s death and has
continued to hunt Oryx on his own. He has not bonded with any
of the other cheetah in the park but chooses to pass his days
hunting in splendid isolation or relaxing at his favourite play
tree.
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