The Milgis Trust

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We feel that this project will help the future of wildlife in arid areas???

Category: Conservation Awareness, Education, Errosion, Grevy's Zebra, Livestock, Northern Frontier District, Overgrazing, Rendille, Samburu, Turkana, Water holes, elephants | Date: Nov 11 2008 | By: milgistrust

A REQUEST FOR

FINANCIAL SUPPORT FOR A WILDLIFE WATER DEVELOPMENT PROJECT….

Project description

Following efforts from the scouts and the entire community within the Milgis ecosystem, we have observed a significant and rapid change in the behaviour and distribution of wildlife populations over the last few years. Overall, both wildlife and local communities appear to have become more relaxed and wildlife, especially elephants have been opening up old movement routes into the Matthews-Ndoto Ranges which they used historically. This has benefited local communities living near the mountains, providing them and their livestock access along these new elephant routes to areas in the mountains. Also the elephants are now feeling safe enough to probe the areas north of the Ndoto mountains, in the hope to go back to mounts Nyiru and Kulal.. where they were almost completely wiped out of during the tragic poaching of the 1970s and 80s..Those that were lucky enough to escape south, are the ones probing to go back… What they don’t know is that things have changed and human populations have increased dramatically, and the water sources are not where they were when they had to run for their lives…

As a result of the increasing presence and movement of wildlife under the protection of the community scouts within the area, the opportunity for conflict with people and livestock over water and pasture during the dry season presents itself. Conservation efforts now have to strike a critical balance: Wildlife and habitat conservation needs to be clearly understood, and the benefits need to be recognised.by the communities.. Our conservation efforts need now to be even more vigilant as a result of our success, which leads to an increase in demand for resources. One of the major sources of conflict in northern Kenya is over water, the resource is scarce in this region and the little that exists is needed by all.

In the northern frontier district, there are huge tracts of land that are unoccupied because of lack of water. Opening up such areas would ease the population in those currently occupied as the wildlife and even nomads would spread out and reduce the damage to the environment that is caused by over crowding. This will also ease over stretching of the available resources. Opportunities for accessing water to the communities living in the drier parts are enormous, there are numerous pans and dams that are no good, because of silting, while there are plenty of dry streams where flood waters during the rainy season can be harvested by developing new dams or Haffir tanks.

We are therefore requesting for support… A water project that will involve accessing water to communities and wildlife in northern Kenya… Some wildlife species like the Grevys’ zebra that are endemic to this region, are threatened by lack of water. The Trust will continue its security and monitoring operations which have been responsible for the encouraging change in the behaviour and distribution of wildlife in this region and in gradually building positive attitudes towards wildlife. This stability provides the platform from which the Trust can implement its other conservation activities which will ensure that for wildlife and natural resource protection to be sustainable there needs to be real development opportunities made available.This includes education, security, health care, livestock marketing and water development.

The specific objectives of this project are; De-silting pans and dams that are dry, and opening up new dams in arid areas. Creating water resource conservation, use and management awareness among the communities…

Benefits…

  • Mitigating human wildlife conflict within the Milgis Trust area

    The Trust is dedicated to conserving the environment and wildlife in the long-term through the provision of real economic benefits to the communities…, To this end, the Trust is taking steps to make water accessible to the people to try and reduce situations that cause conflict with wildlife. By making water available to both the nomads and wildlife, opportunities for conflict will be reduced, and the communities will start to see wildlife as bringing benefits to them. This will strengthen our conservation efforts and the people will start to be more accommodating to the wildlife..

  • Easing the elephants water problems, as the Umbrella species for all wildlife..

    ‘The Elephant’ is under pressure from fences and human populations to the south, so they are probing routes to go to places with less pressure.. The presence and movement of elephants within the area naturally increases the opportunity for conflict between people and livestock over water during the dry season..

  • Especially easing the endangered Grevy Zebras plight of travelling huge distances to water …
  • Accessing to water to communities, and solving overgrazing, and erosion …

    Through the Milgis Trust community scouts and the Manager, continued awareness creation on the importance of conserving the available water and other resources in sustaining human livelihoods is undertaken. Meetings are arranged… discussions take place on local conservation concerns with particular focus on water resource use issues especially during the dry season. The communities will be trained on catchments area protection, the relationship between the environmental destruction and water shortage among other conservation issues.

    Methods:

The Milgis Trust would do this by purchasing equipment to undertake this activity. Purchasing our own equipment will ensure sustainability of this project.

Project Impact:

As an established field presence, the Milgis Trust scouts have made a significant impact on improving security for wildlife and natural resources within the Milgis Ecosystem, in the three year time frame they have been operating… The role of the scouts has therefore been instrumental in maintaining the momentum of conservation and awareness activities across the region. Once this program is under way the following benefits are anticipated;

ü Reduced erosion due to congestion in areas where water is available, once water is made available to other areas the community will spread out.

ü Reduced human wildlife conflict over water resource use.

ü Improved human wildlife relationship and co-existence.

BELOW IS THE FINANCIAL NEEDS….

Tractor, ripper and Dam Scoop, and Back up pickup…

1 x SAME LASER TRACTOR 125 4wd ..

· assembled in Italy using European components… meets all current European specifications · 125hp DIN, 140hp SAE
· 6 cylinder, 6000cc turbo charged engine
· rear tyres 18.4 R 34
· front tyres 16.9 R 24

1 x 3.5 cubic meter Dam Scoop

1 x Ripper

offer 7 free services to our customers however depending on where this tractor will be located we will negotiate what we are willing to do for you as soon as we have further details.

Training: We offer full operator training for your operators and service maintenance training for your mechanics. The training is offered free of charge with only incidental costs of transport, food and accommodation etc being charged.

1 x 4wd pickup backup vehicle..

Extras… camping equipment…

Total costs to set up the Dam unit… …………………………………………….aprox Ksh 10,750,000/-

aprox….. US $ 150,000.

Operating costs per month… Fuel, maintenance, wages, and food… aprox Ksh 200,000/-

per year x 12 = Ksh 2,400000/= US $ 32000.

I am putting this on the Blog, because especially after this last drought, we have decided this is one way we can hopefully ease many of the problems… I am not expecting just any one to come up with this sort of cash!, but if anyone knows of any organisation that may beable to help…We really want to get this project going…As a independent mobile unit… Run By Pete Ilsley.. a Milgis Trust Trustee….

4 Responses to “We feel that this project will help the future of wildlife in arid areas???”

Anna M, on 12 Nov 2008

Just the kind of local project that the local population can be involved in making a real long term impact not just to the benefits of themselves but the environment and it’s wildlife, there must be trusts and funds around the world whereby you can make your case heard and seek grants to further develop your ideas.

Aid should be there for people to help themselves on a local level and not on massive scales that normally never reaches the grassroots levels,
Once again I think your ongoing work in and around Milgis is something just on the right level for everyone to feel involved and able to benefit from not just the short term but long term rewards.
Water being the natural resource many believe will be most critical (and fought over) in the not so distant future.
I remember reading about some similar about the work the late David Sheldrick did in Tsavo back in the 1950’s & 60’s during the prolonged droughts and in the process try and prevent what many then saw as the destructive impact the elephants had on the environment, even if in reality this was far from the truth and just part of the normal circle of events in that had for centuries being part of life there. Today the complexity is even greater and the demand upon mother earth stretch to it’s limits..
Good luck with the funding activities and will let you know if I stumble upon something that could be to your interest,

The Milgis Trust » ‘NO’ water is the talk of the last scouts meeting…, on 11 Jan 2009

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The Milgis Trust » Hard times for the wildlife… So dry.., on 31 Mar 2009

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The Milgis Trust » Back to bird song in Africa… long may it last!?, on 26 Aug 2009

[…] What happened to all the birds in Europe?? Or were they never there?? .. Is a question I have been asking for the last five weeks!!.. I have just got back from my first holiday abroad for many years.. France, Norway, Spain and Portugal… living the high life, I’m afraid… It has been incredibly good for me, to see how the rest of the world lives, and to know how the people who come on safari live, and where!…We have been completely spoilt, and seen some lovely country.. My first problem was to get a visa… They wanted to know all my personal details, who, how, when and what!, and all I wanted to do was go on holiday!..We are not so used to that in Kenya!.. But I got one and off we went… My next problem was how to turn the tap on in the airport on arrival.. I pushed and pulled every thing I could, until somebody came in and I watched with interest that she put her hands under the tap and out came the water… Actually I thought that the water had run out, like our Kenya taps are doing all too often now!! But thats one thing Europe won’t do as quickly as us out here in Africa…Every where we went there was incredible amounts of trees, enormous rivers, and dams, and still snow on the mountains, feeding these rivers… No snow left on our Mt Kenya.. or very little I’m afraid, but thats because we are busy cutting our trees down, if we are not cutting we are burning them…..But thats another story, that I won’t get into now, over population of people.. In Norway they have over population of trees, if they don’t cut them down, they fear they will become over run !! …. BUT where have the birds gone…now I know why people make comments on safari, about how noisy the birds are! and even more disappointing was how few wild animals we saw… We covered many many miles on ‘remote’ roads, and spent most of our time in isolated places, but saw very little…Except 16 real mountain goats in the Pyrenees!, which our hosts were so chuffed about, but it was that African eye that saw them..! ANYWAY it made me feel proud of our wildlife, and birds, and makes me even more determined to give them a safe haven to live in… My thoughts go back to how we can catch the flood water.. […]

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