Waterfalls and Sunrises, Giant snails and rain at Chilo Gorge Safari Lodge, Gonarezhou, in Zimbabwe….

The fabulous wet season at Chilo Gorge Safari Lodge, Gonarezhou, in Zimbabwe….

What a season…we have not seen the vast floods that have engulfed parts of Britain recently, but in our African context, we have had fabulous rains, enough to make the grass leap skywards, birds sing and build nests, rivers flow strongly, washing away the debris of last year’s season…

the flooding Save River at Chilo Gorge

the flooding Save River at Chilo Gorge

looking up the Save River, the baboon roost rocks are  dwarfed by the expanse of silty brown waters…

view upriver from Chilo deck

view upriver from Chilo deck

A lone baboon barks, and his voice echoes across the water and bounces back off the rocks, causing him great alarm, and he barks incessantly, challenging his ‘Ghost’ voice….

baboon sketches

baboon sketches

Chivalila Falls on the Save River upstream from Chilo Gorge Safari Lodge, are a raging torrent- a stunning tribute to nature in all her glory.

Chivalila Falls

Chivalila Falls

Watch this homemade video of Clive Stockil at the magnificent Chivalila falls….

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rfofg6brzYg

Bear Grylls, we need you here! This is an elemental survival challenge……

Clive Stockil at Chivalila Falls

Clive Stockil at Chivalila Falls

Tembweharta Pan is a gorgeous expanse of water, assorted fish and waterfowl and wallowing hippos who have trekked across for refuge from the raging river…

Hippopotamus-  sketch by Lin Barrie

Hippopotamus- sketch by Lin Barrie

The Chilo Brooke, a mere trickle in the dry season, is a full-fledged torrent among dripping tree trunks, and tumbling o’er steep rocks, rivalling Scottish burns in its beauty!

The Chilo Brooke and Clive Stockil

The Chilo Brooke and Clive Stockil

watch this video of the Chilo Brooke in full spate at Chilo Gorge Safari Lodge….

The Chilo Brooke runs under the bridge at Chilo Gorge

The Chilo Brooke runs under the bridge at Chilo Gorge

Giant Land snails, bigger than my hand, ooze along pathways, making the most of the wet vegetation, before the dry sets back in…..

Giant land snail feels its way around a twig..

Giant land snail feels its way around a twig..

These magnificent molluscs have to find refuges under rocks and in tree trunks during the dry winter months. Some will not last the dry season, dessicating in clumps in their hideaways…..

discarded shells of giant african land snail

discarded shells of giant african land snail

Looking downstream, sunrise lights the Save River through the balcony railing, from my  room at Chilo Gorge…

sunrise through the balcony railing , from a room at Chilo Gorge

sunrise through the balcony railing , from a room at Chilo Gorge

a hornbill visits the trees outside the  bedroom at dawn…..

a hornbill visits the bedroom at sunrise

a hornbill visits the bedroom at sunrise

view upriver from the Chilo bar lounge…

view upriver from the Chilo bar lounge

view upriver from the Chilo bar lounge

view of Strelitzia and Save River at Chilo Gorge…

view of Strelitzia and Save River at Chilo Gorge

view of Strelitzia and Save River at Chilo Gorge

Posted in Africa, African flora, african wildlife, art, Bear Grylls, beauty, birds, Chilo Gorge, conservation, eco-tourism, flowers, gardens and flowers, gonarezhou national park, great limpopo transfrontier conservation Area, landscape, Lin Barrie Art, photography, Rivers, safari, Scotland, Uncategorized, video, wilderness, zimbabwe | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Greenline Magazine -Clive Stockil, Prince William and Gonarezhou…..

Prince William and Clive Stockil

Prince William and Clive Stockil

What a fabulous Zimbabwean conservation magazine!… click here to get insightful articles on Gonarezhou, Tusk Trust, Clive Stockil  and the Prince William Award, (including Chilo Gorge Safari Lodge)….

Greenline Magazine – Greenline Magazine – Issue 3 2013.

greenline magazine

greenline magazine

Posted in Africa, African flora, African wild dogs, african wildlife, art, Chilo Gorge, chilojo cliffs, conservation, conservation news, conservation publication, crafts, culture, dogs, Duke of Cambridge, eco-tourism, education, elephants, gonarezhou national park, great limpopo transfrontier conservation Area, landscape, media, painted Dogs, painted wolves, Prince William, Prince William Award For Conservation, rhinos, Rivers, safari, Save Valley Conservancy, Tusk Trust, tusk trust conservation awards | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Flame lilies in Mutare to Fires at Chilo Gorge…..

The Zimbabwe Travel Authority has initiated a tour of media writers from Britain to visit Zimbabwe…and we travel from Harare to Mutare to meet them after they have stayed at Inn on the Ruparara. After spending a night with dear friend Bronwen, whose garden is adorned with flame lilies at this time of the year, we descend the road towards sea level and the Gonarezhou National Park.

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Brilliant Bauhinia galpinii adorn the road sides….

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Tumbled granite kopijies are etched against the Payne’s Grey skies….

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Gorgeous baobab fibre mats glow at the roadside….

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We travel through patches of sunlight and then plunge beneath great steel grey clouds and drifting sheets of rain and rainbows.

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Room 8 at Chilo Gorge is tucked into fabulous forest canopy, overhanging a tumbling waterfall that feeds the Save River. Here, monkeys’ antics in the canopy accompany early morning coffee…

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The view through the balcony railing of Room 7 is tropical, sparkling with the scarlet flowers of Erythrina livingstonii…..I sketch the scene on my IPad…

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Firelight in the evening is conducive to stories and tales around the fire…

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Posted in Africa, African flora, African wild dogs, african wildlife, african wildlife conservation fund, art, beauty, Chilo Gorge, conservation, dogs, eco-tourism, gardens and flowers, landscape, Lin Barrie Art, Painted Dogs, Save Valley Conservancy, Senuko, wilderness, zimbabwe | Tagged , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Portfolios, pedals, people and pop-ups-Painted Wolf Wines in 2013….

Read the link below and my further notes below that,  for a resume of the year 2013, an exciting and successful year in the life of Painted Wolf Wines and Zimbabwe’s wild dogs!

Portfolios, pedals, people and pop-ups – Painted Wolf Wines in 2013 | Painted Wolf Wines

In Zimbabwe, we shared the Taste of Africa event at the Mukuvisi Woodlands with Painted Wolf Wines..for which I painted a portrait of Claw and her pups…Paul Funston’s photo of Claw is gorgeous…

me in my studio....

me in my studio….

My  painting of Claw was acrylic on canvas…..and from that we created invitation flyers for Taste of Africa………

Taste of Africa 2013 -Poster

Taste of Africa 2013 -Poster

Thereafter we  enjoyed the Painted Wolf Pack’s  company on Pedals 4 Paws rides through Mana, Save Valley Conservancy, Chilo Gorge Safari Lodge and Gonarezhou.

Much delicious Painted Wolf Wine was drunk at Chilo Gorge Safari Lodge, who support the Painted Wolf Pack and regularly serve their wines to delighted guests!

This bicycle marathon raised awareness and funds for the two excellent Zimbabwean research, education and conservation programmes,  AWCF and PDC. The schools en route, adjacent to wild dog areas, contributed art and were empowered to better appreciate these gentle predators, and the role they have to play in the eco-system…

The Pedals 4 Paws team at the original chalkboard! The Mahenye School Tree...

The Pedals 4 Paws team at the original chalkboard! The Mahenye School Tree…

Mahenye School art, in support of Pedals 4 Paws…….

Mahenye primary school art

Mahenye primary school art

Later in the year, in London, when Clive Stockil received the Prince William Award for Conservation in Africa, we were honoured to meet and chat to Prince William and Princess Kate, and we also enjoyed Jeremy’s company at the Tusk Trust Conservation Awards. The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge were out first time since the birth of Prince George, and were engaging, questioning and committed to supporting real Conservation issues in Africa, all extremely heartwarming…

Prince William and Clive Stockil

Prince William and Clive Stockil

Prince William states:

To me, projects supported by Tusk — particularly those which combine the protection of endangered species with innovative initiatives for alleviating poverty in remote rural communities show a clear way forward”.


Later in the year, we relished Painted Wolf Wines at the Royal Geographic Talk that Clive gave…what a treat!
I was honoured to contribute a painting to Jeremy’s excellent Pop Up event in London -sad I could not be there in person…

'Deliberation" sketch by Lin Barrie

‘Deliberation” sketch by Lin Barrie

Well done for a full and successful year in 2013, Painted Wolf Wines!

Read my related blogs:

A Painted Wolf at Chilo Gorge Safari Lodge…..

Pedals 4 Paws 2014

Taste of Africa

Posted in Africa, African wild dogs, african wildlife, african wildlife conservation fund, art, art exhibition, bicycle rides, bush camps, childrens art, Chilo Gorge, chilojo cliffs, conservation, cooking, culture, dance, dogs, Duchess of Cambridge, Duke of Cambridge, eco-tourism, education, family, film, food, gonarezhou national park, great limpopo transfrontier conservation Area, home grown food, landscape, Lin Barrie Art, London, organic slow food, painted dog conservation, Painted Dogs, painted Dogs, Painted Wolf Wines, painted wolves, Pedal 4 Paws, predators, Prince George, Prince William, Prince William Award For Conservation, safari, Save Valley Conservancy, Senuko, sharing, slow food, taste, Taste of Africa, Tusk Trust, tusk trust conservation awards, wilderness, wine, zimbabwe | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

David Hockney creates IPad Art, Lin Barrie is inspired……..!

I am inspired!
Last year I created a wine bottle label for Painted Wolf Wines, a bottle to be auctioned at our Taste of Africa event in the Mukuvisi Woodlands, raising awareness and funds for African wild dogs…I created it on my new toy…my IPad!

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Intrigued by the possibilities, I have this year explored the work David Hockney is doing….creating with his finger on his IPad! Many are scenes from his rural English home…

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There are iPad drawings you look at on a screen, and there are iPad drawings printed on sheets of 3×6-foot paper and mounted on a giant wall.
Hang five such works together and you have “Bigger Yosemite,” a series of wonderfully vibrant drawings of Yosemite’s rocks, trees, and waterfalls that each measures 9 feet wide by 12 feet high. The piece now hangs in San Francisco’s De Young Museum as part of “David Hockney: A Bigger Exhibition,” a comprehensive survey of more than 300 works made since 2002 by the influential British painter, stage designer, and photographer.
In one wide open vista, scrubby, bright green pines sparkle in sunlight, backed by Bridalveil Falls tumbling lightly down a cliffside; the distinct granite crest of Half Dome looms in the background. In another, a heavy mist obscures stands of giant sequoias.

David Hockney, known as one of the most versatile artists of the 20th century, has embraced tablet technology for his latest exhibition.
The 76-year-old has always been interested in experimenting with new techniques, but the launch of the iPhone and iPad has taken his work to a new level.

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2514104/How-iPad-art-inspired-76-year-old-David-Hockney.html#ixzz2r6Uu5LZW

“You know sometimes I get so carried away, I wipe my fingers at the end thinking that I’ve got paint on them,” Hockney said in 2010, when more than 200 of his images of plants and cut flowers created on the iPhone and iPad went on display in “David Hockney: A Bigger Exhibition,”

Posted in Africa, African wild dogs, african wildlife, art, art exhibition, beauty, conservation, eco-tourism, Lin Barrie Art, Mukuvisi Woodland, Painted Dogs, Painted Wolf Wines, painted wolves, printmaking, Taste of Africa, Uncategorized, wilderness, wine, zimbabwe | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Theatre Dinner at Chilo Gorge Lodge, hyena chorus and lion opera……

14th January: A return to Chilo Gorge Safari Lodge for meetings, good company and plans for the future, finds us all sitting on the wooden deck overlooking the wilderness of the Gonarezhou National Park opposite us, enjoying a dinner under the stars and the nearly full moon. Sadly, we have to leave again tomorrow….
We have barely opened a bottle of Painted Wolf Wine, (a shiraz; rich, red and yummy…) and lifted our glasses, when the whoooooooo- ooop of a hyena floats across the water, from the densely vegetated far bank of the swollen Save River.
Is it at the den, where we heard cubs growing up and learning to whoop last year?…and if so, are there new cubs?…an exciting thought!

hyena and cub

hyena and cub

What a gorgeous, evocative African sound……..
But it does not end there…as if saving all the drama of the wilderness just for us on our one night in this special place, the serenity of the evening is replaced by a rising chorus of yodels, as more than four or five hyenas start calling, louder, louder, until the very air around us is filled with the voices of this unique, eerie choir! The shivering stars above us dance to the music, and the silt-brown, flooding river below us is lit by the buttery light of the rising moon.
Then….a low reverberating rumble rolls across the water…a lion has added his voice! The hyenas giggle with fear and anger, and we can hear that something serious is happening, a confrontation between these two arch enemies, the super predators….the choir has become an opera, a drama unfolding in the dark depths of the far bank, beyond reach of the gentle moonlight.

lion paw print

lion paw print

We all stare at each other, wide eyed in the moonlight. Has the lion found the hyena den and attacked the cubs? Or has the lion made a kill and been challenged by the hyenas?
Sitting on the high balcony, we can only guess and marvel at what story might be unfolding out there. This is a theatre dinner of a different order, a priceless and elemental experience.
Going to bed that night, I open the folding doors of the room. Perched as we are in the tree canopy on the steep cliff, we drift to sleep surrounded by the gentler sounds of Africa, hyenas now silent…. we know that birdsong, baboons and hippo grunts will wake us satisfyingly early. Wake up call is earlier than expected…at 3 am the lion suddenly roars, loud and explosive, only once. Wow. A baboon barks in fear from the baboon roost on steep rocks above the river.
After that, lion and hyena dreams fill my mind till morning.

lions and hyenas at Chilo Gorge

lions and hyenas at Chilo Gorge

Gardening and pruning the Mahogany tree on the deck occupies my morning. The fabulous cry of a fish eagle attracts me to the edge of the deck, and a glance upstream reveals a rising spiral of vultures above the rocks where the baboons roost. Have they just been down to a quiet backwater to drink and bathe, or does their presence signify a death…a sequel to last night’s opera?!

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Climbing to the top deck within the lodge, to write this blog, I get a different perspective of the silty Save, and the far bank whose deep vegetation hides the dramatic nocturnal story….what really happened there last night?!

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Posted in Africa, african wildlife, beauty, Chilo Gorge, eco-tourism, food, gonarezhou national park, Painted Wolf Wines, predators, Rivers, serenity, theatre, Uncategorized, wilderness, zimbabwe | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

Sustainable solution for Save Valley Conservancy…….

Clive Stockil and I have travelled from Senuko and are again in Harare, together with other Conservancy members, for meetings with Government and all interested parties, to gain resolution on final indigenisation from Government. Today is another step in the positive direction towards a sustainable Conservation solution, a way to get ‘back to business’ , a way to develop tourism, pay staff and field scouts, all towards the protection of our precious ecosystem which includes rhinos and African wild dogs. Save Valley Conservancy is recognized as a vital annexe to the Gonarezhou National Park and Malilangwe Wildlife reserve, within the Greater Limpopo Transfrontier Conservation Area, (GLTFCA).

“White rhino wandering” – oil on canvas by Lin Barrie

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Tusk Trust supports the Save Valley Conservancy, read some history here:
http://www.tusk.org/save-valley-conservancy.asp

Forty-nine black rhinoceros were translocated to what is now the Savé Valley Conservancy (SVC) in the south east lowveld of Zimbabwe. The rhino translocation …

Posted in Africa, African flora, African wild dogs, african wildlife, conservation, eco-tourism, gonarezhou national park, great limpopo transfrontier conservation Area, landscape, Painted Dogs, painted wolves, rhinos, Save Valley Conservancy, Senuko, Tusk Trust, tusk trust conservation awards, Uncategorized, zimbabwe | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

Running in front of a cyclone, diamonds and raindrops…..

8th January: On our way back to Senuko, we drive into the dusk with flashing stabs of lightening that illuminate a huge cloud front in the East, somewhere over Mozambique. Seems like the front of weather from the cyclone in the Indian Ocean. The extreme heat has broken, bringing cool conditions, and we wake today in our own bed to see drifts of misty rain slanting across our windows, obscuring the horizon, and getting heavier and heavier as the morning passes. I am packing for a trip to Harare, various important meetings at last coming up, one being a follow-up to the Minesterial meeting in December at Hakamela. Hope this will give us all a practical way forward for the Conservancy.
After the rain eases, a walk in the grassland below our house reveals a diamond studded wonderland of rain drops…..

Diamonds

Diamonds

……. diamond studded flowers are bright jewels…

scarlet diamonds...

scarlet diamonds…

each blade of grass is a tiara….

diamond tiara....

diamond tiara….

wet grass adorned by an elegant grasshopper….

grasshopper elegance

grasshopper elegance

sapphire drops , tiny jems……..

sapphire drops....

sapphire drops….

Posted in Africa, African flora, african wildlife, beauty, flowers, insects, landscape, predators, Senuko, Uncategorized, zimbabwe | Tagged , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Chilo hornbills in flight, cute spider and aloe spikes….

6th January: A visit to Chilo Gorge Safari Lodge, delivering radios for their communications, gives me a chance to dive into the gardens and catch up with the gardeners there.
A sundown visit to the Chivalula Falls is awe inspiring, churning chocolate water rushing through the narrow channels of rock.
Exquisite legume growing in grass at the cliff edge….

lilac legume

lilac legume

What a joy to wake to the landscape of golden sunlight in the swollen brown Save river and the summer green trees outside our room number 3, as brown headed parrots fly past, fast and high, then the larger grey headed parrots call their greeting to the day. I am delighted to hear, then see, four Ground hornbills take off from the high trees on the far side, within Gonarezhou National Park, and fly across the river towards us, huge white-edged wings flashing in the slanted light.
Flowers are framed by spectacular views in celebration of the growing season..
Barleria, looking downstream…..

Barleria and the Save River

Barleria and the Save River

Strelitzia regina….

strelitzia

strelitzia

Hollerina, from the gorgeous breakfast deck….

Holharina and Save River

Holharina and Save River

I meet with the gardeners and we discuss clearing the pathways, tidying the rock edgings, but leaving the delightful Streptocarpus plants which nestle between ricks in shaded areas….

streptocarpus

streptocarpus

The old wood and suculents in the rock gardens are endless abstract inspiration….

old wood...

old wood…

The lounge area is a visual delight as always, an inviting place to relax, especially as the day gets unbearably hot. …

Chilo lounge

Chilo lounge

framed by Dracena leaves…..

Dracaena at Chilo Gorge

Dracaena at Chilo Gorge

Too busy to swim in the cool pool, I resort to periodically wetting my shirt under the garden tap!
Some kind of weather is coming …..

Every plant hides some other life, hidden to the casual eye but busily going about business…
Spider and aloe spikes….

spider and spiky aloe

spider and spiky aloe

Bauhinia tomentosa flower and bug…

Bauhinia tomentosa

Bauhinia tomentosa

Corn cricket in lemon grass leaves…..

armoured corn cricket

armoured corn cricket

Posted in Africa, African flora, african wildlife, aloes, beauty, birds, Chilo Gorge, conservation, eco-tourism, flowers, gardens and flowers, gonarezhou national park, insects, landscape, photography, predators, Rivers, Uncategorized, zimbabwe | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Button quail sound like young African wild dogs, red wing starlings sound messy!….

4th January: heard a plaintive sound last night and again early this morning, almost like a young wild dog calling whoo whoo in the distance, but have suddenly realized it is the button quail, calling from thick grass cover….
Peering out of the window I spot the young rock hyrax who lives in the rocks below our bedroom……

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Chonge our male Jack Russell spots the rock hyrax as well, but restrains himself…

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The red wing starlings have two vociferous youngsters in the nest above our bed…

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this is heartwarming in that they so obviously trust us, despite the fact that Dzidzi, the Jack Russell, captured and killed one of their fluttering fledglings a year ago! However, I am weary of covering my head with the sheet every time they have visited the nest with offerings of chongololos, grubs and fat beetles for the overfed babies, and every time they fly away with fecal sacs in their beaks. They bring insects to the nest every 4 to 6 minutes early morning and mid afternoon, less frequently at other times. The fallout is copious and messy, falling in showers on the newaper below, and on my mosquito net over my head!…Hurry up and fledge you little blighters….

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The adult starlings are cocky birds who patrol the perimeter of our house, perching on window bars to peer upwards and then launch attacks on the poor Mauritian tomb bats which roost beneath our eaves in summer time. They dislodge the unassuming bats, causing them to bullet from their safe roosts into the harsh sunshine.
The male starling received a bit of his own medicine yesterday when he was chased, screaming, by a little rufous raptor, hot on his tail as he desperately dived for the ground in front of my verandah. He escaped by a tail feather, doubling back on himself and hauling upwards impressively from his dive, and leaving the raptor behind. Smart flying.
This close call did not seem to permanently ruffle his feathers…within the hour he was harassing the tomb bats again.
I have watched these starlings acting like ox-peckers by sitting on and preening the Klipspringers on the rocks below our bush house. Have also read reports in Africa Geographic of them being seen doing the same to a female bushbuck in South Africa.
They certainly are characters, seeming to relish chatting with Clive when they perch on the impala horns in his office as he works

Posted in Africa, African wild dogs, african wildlife, birds, conservation, dogs, food, insects, Painted Dogs, painted wolves, Uncategorized, zimbabwe | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment