Sunday, September 28, 2008

Duke has now lost both of his magnificent tusks and Hlanganini is the new King

Duke above early September 2008
Duke above on May 24, 2007
Duke in 2006

It is incredible that the Kruger folks are able to keep this kind of documentation on the elephants in their care, yet the folks in Nepal "lost" their famous bull Raja Gaj over a year ago, and haven't located him yet!!!!! Kruger found Dukes tusk, and Nepal can't find the the animal the tusks are still attached to!!!!

On Monday, September 1, 2008 Crocodile Bridge Section Ranger Neels van Wyk was alerted by the Shishangeni Concession that one of the game drives from this concession lodge had seen Duke without either tusk earlier that morning. He quickly drove out to the scene to find that it was true. “I am looking at Duke now,” he whispered over the telephone, “and Duke has definitely broken his right tusk.”
According to Van Wyk, he had received a report during the preceding week that Duke had been spotted by a visitor and that he still had his right tusk.“It would then be reasonable to assume that the tusk was nearby to where Duke was that morning,” surmised Van Wyk.
Van Wyk then back-tracked along Duke’s spoor and, thanks to an enormous slice of luck, found the tusk. Now this amazing achievement by Van Wyk and his field rangers brings something notable to the Kruger National Parks already impressive book of elephant ivory records.
They were part of the team to discover and recover not one but two tusks belonging to the same known and named “tusker” elephant.

The amazing story of tusk recovery begins just over a year ago. On Monday, August 20, 2007 two friends and Duke enthusiasts from Johannesburg, Matthew Harding and Dirk Human spotted Duke on the S-28, just south of Lower Sabie and took what are probably the last known photographs of Duke with both sets of tusks.
At around 16:00, the duo then drove back to camp where they had arranged to meet up with another Duke aficionado, Jonathan Heger. After unhooking Heger’s caravan, the trio made their way to the exact spot and spotted Duke again, but noticed something different. Duke seemed to only have one tusk. They then took plenty of photographs and ensured that they marked the exact spot from where they saw Duke with GPS readings, before heading back to camp.
Harding, Heger and Human then reported the sighting and their suspicions to KNP officials, which resulted in Crocodile Bridge Section Ranger Neels van Wyk going into the bush the very next day (Tuesday August 21, 2007). His mission: he had to try and find the missing piece of tusk, thus positively proving that Harding, Heger and Human’s assessment of the situation was accurate and, of course, to recover a rather valuable piece of ivory from the dense Bushveld.
Unfortunately, Van Wyk’s search proved fruitless: “It was a bit like searching for a needle in a haystack, so I called off the search with the idea of recruiting the KNP’s new Bantam Ultralight Aircraft to help,” explained Van Wyk at the time.

On Thursday, August 23, 2007 the Bantam took to the air with pilot (Tshokwane Section Ranger) Steven Whitfield and observer Van Wyk with the GPS coordinates provided by Harding, Heger and Human and flew to the spot. “We flew along the Mbyandzwuspruit and made one turn and Neels saw the ivory lying under a leadwood bush,” Whitfield explained at the time, “so we marked the spot and flew back to Crocodile Bridge and our vehicles.”

The two section rangers, plus various other interested parties, including Heger (Harding and Human unfortunately had to return home earlier that week), walked in to the GPS reading and found the tusk. This right tusk measured 175 centimetres in length, 49 centimetres in circumference and weighed 37.05 kg.

All in all, this incredible individual elephant has lost a whisper over 69 kg in just over a year. In both cases, it appears that digging up trees seems to be the cause of the breakages, but he still shows the temperament that has helped to make him one of the most popular tuskers in the 110 years of KNP history.

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