Sunday, 25 November 2007

The Road to Marrakech - Update

Patrick Sells, newly qualified from Liverpool Vet School, has started his 3,100 mile motorbike ride last week.

Before he left Leahurs, he handed over a cheque for an impressive £4,540 to our Chairman Prof Derek Knottenbelt. The grand total raised exceeds £9,500 if the value of a scanner from BCF Technologies and some £3,000 worth of equine dentistry equipment from VesVetVision are included. LUVS generously contributed £1,000.

Patrick is doing well so far, in spite of poor weather; snow in Herefordshire, torrential rain in the south of England and fog in France. Wet weather caused the engine to fail near Limoges and it took him an entire day to fix it.

Last night he was in the south of France, camping in sub-zero temperatures and will head for the Pyrenees today. With a fair wind he should reach Morocco hopefully around the end of the month.

Fingers crossed the weather gods take it easy on him for the rest of his journey and good luck from all of us here at SPANA!

Monday, 19 November 2007

Poppies in Tunisia

Writing this on the train back from Gatwick, and quite frankly it’s nice to be back in the warm. There are several myths about Tunisia – one of which is that it’s nice and warm and sunny. Well it might be on the coast in summer, but it certainly isn’t inland in November.

Yesterday we drove up into the north-west of the country, almost up to the border with Algeria – the tail end of the Atlas mountains. Cold and bleak at this time of the year, it was also drizzling with rain.

The hills themselves are either stripped bare by over-grazing and wood-cutting (who can blame them for trying to keep warm), but where given some kind of protection they are thickly forested with mostly cork-oak trees. Incidentally these are the only refuge for the Barbary Stag, the only species of deer in Africa and now very rare.

But one of the reasons SPANA is in the area is to help the mules that work in the woods, bringing down great loads of cork to the collecting points.


Amazingly, after a mere ten minutes, there are thirty or so owners and their animals standing round the mobile clinic getting wormed, or feet trimmed, even anti-biotics for an infection. And here there is time to talk to the owners and tell them what is going wrong, and how to look after their livestock better.

That’s another myth – most visitors only see the rich coastal strip of the country, with its hotels, shops and bars, and the money that comes from the tourists. But twenty miles inland, it’s quite another story - another world in fact – where poverty is still rife, and people and their animals struggle to wrest a living from a hard country.

By this time we are frozen stiff, and grateful to climb into the Landrover, say ‘Goodbye’ to the team, and start the long drive back to Tunis.

November is a particularly poignant time to drive along that road, as it was the same road that the First Army fought their way along in the winter and spring of 1942/43. All along the road there are the green signs of the Commonwealth War Graves Commission, marking the cemeteries that plot their route to the capital. In one, at Medjez-al-bab, there are nearly fifteen hundred graves, mostly of men killed in late April 1943, just a fortnight before the Germans finally surrendered in Tunis.

I say men, but most of them, as can be seen from the ages on their gravestones, are just boys. In the failing light and November drizzle, I put last week’s poppy on the grave of an unknown soldier of the Black Watch.

Perhaps it’s just that we were cold and tired, and working with another very basic sort of existence, but walking out of that tragic, lonely garden was a very sobering and humbling experience.

Jeremy Hulme

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Friday, 2 November 2007

In the company of wolves

Phew, we survived, but only just!

After ten years of working in Ethiopia, Diana and I kept saying we ought to take some time to see the rest of the country - we finally did it. We organised a trek with 'Walks Worldwide' through the Simien Moutains in the far north of the country, on foot (but with four hill mules to help us out).

It was wonderful, but I have to admit, it was so knackering that there were three or four days when I really thought I wasn't going to make it.

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