Through fog and thick bush, a group of mountain gorillas
appears. The giant silverback male beats
his chest in a gesture of intimidation before settling into the ground to munch
on leaves. A baby tentatively descends a
tree, then stares, with deep emotion, into my eyes…
And then, I wake up.
I am surrounded by misty volcanoes and the air is as crisp as a Canadian
fall day. I am close to the gorillas –
for they are at the base of the volcanoes a few kilometers away – but not that close.
My favorite peak of the Virunga Mountains. |
Almost every tourist to Rwanda comes with one goal in mind – to have a close encounter with the country’s infamous mountain gorillas. Last year, over 25,000 foreign tourists
trekked in the Volcanoes National Park to see one of the dozen or so gorilla
groups up-close.
And each of them paid $750US.
***
It wasn’t always possible to visit the mountain gorillas of
the Virungas. They were once so
endangered that all believed it was inevitable that they would soon disappear from
the face of the earth.
Enter Dian Fossey.
Though she was trained as an occupational therapist,
Fossey’s love of animals, stubbornness, and persuasive skills led Richard Leaky
to invite her to Central Africa to study the few remaining mountain gorillas. They'd been pushed further and
further up the mountains by poaching and human encroachment, thereby developing the fur and larger size than their lowland cousins.
For the next eighteen years, Fossey rarely left the dark and damp Virunga Mountains. She developed an incredible kinship with the gorillas she studied, approaching them more closely than anyone ever had, and even developing some of their physical habits and vocalizations in order to be seen as “just another gorilla.”
For the next eighteen years, Fossey rarely left the dark and damp Virunga Mountains. She developed an incredible kinship with the gorillas she studied, approaching them more closely than anyone ever had, and even developing some of their physical habits and vocalizations in order to be seen as “just another gorilla.”
Snapshot from the Nat Geo article: Fossey approaching her gorillas to within a few feet. |
Snapshot from the Nat Geo article: Fossey cuddling and playing with Coco and Pucker Puss, the two infant gorillas she agreed to nurse back to health before they were sent off to international zoos. |
Gorillas in the Mist
portrays Dian Fossey as a bit of an eccentric woman. It is true that she donned a Halloween mask
to frighten poachers away from her gorilla groups, and it is true that she was
incredibly difficult to work for and that she had trouble keeping local staff.
But it is also true that without her dedication, the mountain gorilla would
probably now be extinct.
In January 1970, a National Geographic photographer captured
Fossey cuddling and playing with two baby gorillas that she had agreed to nurse
back to health before they were taken away by zoo collectors. Fossey wrote a 20-page article for the
magazine about her studies (I’m holding the original Nat Geo issue in my hands
right now – Bruno is a die-hard Fossey-fan), and woke the world up to the
gentility and plight of these giant beasts. Her
subsequent fame led to greater conservation efforts, and ultimately mass
gorilla tourism.
***
We arrived in Kinigi, the town outside the headquarters for
the Volcanoes National Park, in the middle of a massive celebration – The
Gorilla-Naming Ceremony. Theoretically,
this yearly ceremony is conducted to name all the baby gorillas born in the
previous year. The prime minister
delivers a speech, names are given, and that’s that.
What we saw was a massive party – a giant stage with booming
speakers, thousands of people on a large grass field eating and laughing and
drinking. When the revelers finally
left, there were so many plastic cups and paper plates strewn upon the grass
that the field looked like a landfill site.
I couldn’t help but think about the gorillas. They were only a few kilometers away, and
could undoubtedly hear the thumping of the bass. I doubt this was what Dian Fossey had in mind
when she set out to save them.
The Gorilla-Naming Ceremony, just outside the headquarters of the Volcanoes National Park. |
Ironically, Dian Fossey was against mass tourism as a method
of saving her precious gorillas. Because
they are such close relatives to humans, gorillas are very susceptible to a
variety of human diseases. Tourists
bring flu and colds, which can actually kill a gorilla. Fossey protected her gorillas like a mother
protects her newborn child.
That hasn’t stopped the Rwandan government from using
Fossey’s gorillas to make major bucks.
***
I think by now, dear reader, you are probably fairly sure
that I didn’t trek out for a one-hour visit with the gorillas I’ve been talking
about for the past 600 words. I don’t
think I could have kept such an awe-inspiring experience secret from you for so
long, right?
As lifestyle travelers rather than tourists, forking over
$1500US – a sum that carries us through at least a month of travel – for us to spend an
hour with the gorillas is not something we can even consider. One “drawback” of lifestyle travel is that,
sometimes, you have to forego the expensive tourist experiences that everyone
around you seems to be indulging in.
I admit that, for a moment, I was jealous of the
gorilla-trekkers coming and going at our lodge.
As an animal-lover, I would love nothing more than to be within reach of
a gorilla. In my daydreams, I’ve cuddled
with a baby gorilla at night in his leafy bed, been kissed on the cheek by the leathery
lips of an old female, and been accepted by the dominant silverback of the
group. I guess in my daydreams I’ve been
Dian Fossey.
In truth, though, I think I’m more jealous of Bruno than I
am of the one-hour-gorilla-trekkers.
Some eighteen years ago, Bruno spent over a month with BaAka pygmies
in Central African Republic. They
trekked for over two weeks, following tracks and locating nests, before Bruno
spotted his first gorillas. The dominant
male reached out and touched Bruno’s shoulder before pushing over his pygmy
guide.
You have to stand 7 meters away from the mountain gorillas when you visit them. At the front is the gorilla, and at the end of the yellow ruler is me. It's really far away. |
In comparison, modern-day gorilla trekking is pretty
tame. My friends from Kampala recently
went to see the mountain gorillas of Uganda, and I heard their stories and saw
their pictures. The fact that there were
more local guides and trackers than tourists, the fact that they were limited
to a single hour with the gorillas, the fact that you have to stay at least
seven meters away from the gorillas at all times, and the fact that anyone who
has the money can see the gorillas – all that takes away from the satisfaction of
the experience.
The fact that I just read an angry article about a woman whose gorilla-trekking experience was marred by a rude woman with an Ipad assures me my money is better left in my pocket.
The fact that I just read an angry article about a woman whose gorilla-trekking experience was marred by a rude woman with an Ipad assures me my money is better left in my pocket.
***
Since we weren’t going to be gorilla-trekking, we decided to
try to feel as close to the gorillas as possible. We visited Rosamond Carr’s farm, where Dian
Fossey often stayed when recuperating from the many colds she had as a result
of living on those misty mountains.
Several scenes from the film, Gorillas
in the Mist, were filmed here – one in the bright flower garden behind
Carr’s ivy-walled home, and one inside the spare bedroom.
A deleted dance scene from Gorillas in the Mist that was filmed on Roz Carr's farm. |
The gate that Sigourney Weaver waves from when she is forced to leave the DRC. |
The actual room that Dian Fossey stayed in on her visits to Roz Carr's farm. This is Graham, our tour guide, re-enacting Sigourney's scene from the desk in the room. |
We came for the Fossey-connection, but it turns out that
Madame Carr was a pretty interesting woman herself. She’d been living on this farm – growing
flowers and pyrethrum, a natural insecticide – for decades before the 1994
Rwandan Genocide. When she returned
from the U.S. later that year, she opened up a children’s home, called Imbabazi
(“care of a mother” in Kinyarwanda) for the newly-orphaned children in the
area. She passed away in 2006, and was
buried in the vast gardens near her house, but the orphanage continued to run
under her foundation until last year.
Now that the children are all grown up, the Imbabazi Foundation plans
to open up a preschool and to teach adults in the region diversified farming.
From our campsite beside Carr’s carefully tended garden, we
spotted three distant volcanoes for the first time. One glowed red in the dark that night. Dian Fossey’s gorillas were beckoning us
closer.
Rosamond Carr's ivy-covered home and garden. |
Where Madame Carr was buried, mere meters from her home. |
View of two volcanoes from the Virunga Range from Mrs. Carr's farm. |
The morning after the loud Gorilla-Naming Ceremony in Kinigi,
we walked to the headquarters of the park.
At least eighty tourists were packed into safari cars ready to take them
out to the various starting points for their gorilla treks. That’s $60,000 in a single day!
Since this is Africa, Bruno and I were a bit skeptical as to
where this money goes. We scoured fact
sheets and graphs posted on the bulletin boards outside the headquarters in vain before
approaching a park ranger with our questions.
“Some of the money goes to paying the trackers – two to each
group – and an on-call veterinarian. The
trackers follow the groups 24/7, not only to locate them for the tourists, but
to protect them from poachers. The vet
is there, among other things, to cure them of human illnesses.”
Rwanda's gorilla group names and locations. |
On the bulletin board I had read that if someone is sick,
they should not go gorilla-trekking.
With a doctor’s note, they can get a full refund on their gorilla pass. But who, really, is likely to give up this
once-in-a-lifetime opportunity over a cold?
“Most of the money goes toward conservation efforts within
the park. And we think we’re doing a pretty
good job – there are now 880 mountain gorillas, and over half of them live in the
Virunga Mountains!”
Indeed, the numbers were more than neither Bruno nor I
expected, and we were slightly encouraged.
Maybe Dian Fossey was wrong about gorilla tourism?
***
I’m happy we walked in the footsteps of Dian Fossey. Waking up every morning at the base of
gorgeous volcanoes, and feeling in proximity of her gentle mountain gorillas
was special. My breath was taken away
each morning as I stared at the outline of a Mordor-esque volcano, as it was
taken away when we were surrounded by the colors of Rosamond Carr’s farm.
That’s when I realized that the “downside” of lifestyle
travel – not being able to gorilla trek – wasn’t a downside at all. It had forced us to dig deeper and to visit
the region in another way. I may not
have gotten to stare into the eyes of a mountain gorilla, but I felt as
connected to their past, present, and future as if I had.
I recommend
reading the online version of Dian Fossey’s 1970 National Geographic article, Making
Friends with Mountain Gorillas. For more facts on mountain gorillas, and to
learn how you can help protect them, click
here.
No comments:
Post a Comment