Memoir of a South African Adventure

Memoir of a South African Adventure
By Kathryn Reis and Kim Shumate
Photos provided by Kim Shumate

When we saw the South African Ecosystems Services flier hanging on the bulletin board in Jordan Hall, we knew that this was the study abroad trip for us.  This transcontinental adventure offered us a chance to experience natural resource issues that are unlike those in the United States.  Of course, we were not the only students who felt the excitement of this study abroad trip.  Kathy Spears, Marta Pongor, Davis Murphy, and Derek Dussek also leaped at this experience of a lifetime.  So, on May 11, 2009, we boarded our Delta plane and set out for Africa.  After a twenty-three hour plane ride, we arrived in Capetown, South Africa.  It was not until we saw the panoramic photo of zebras hanging above the booths of international customs that reality set in … “We’re in Africa!”

Drs. McHale, Shear, and Nichols in jeep with CheetahDr. Elizabeth Nichols in the Department of Forestry and Environmental Resources, in partnership with Drs. Melissa McHale and Ted Shear, spent nearly a full year planning the South Africa excursion.  Focusing specifically on ecosystem services, the trio of professors organized a three-week session that had us all working side by side with South African professionals.  The trip was divided into four topics:  urban ecology (Capetown), forestry management (Mpumalanga), forest research and subsistence use of natural resources (Kruger National Park and Hamakuya Village), and ecotourism (Loskop Dam Game Nature Reserve).   

During the urban ecology practicum, the NCSU troop divided into groups to tour various conservation areas of Cape Flats in the Western Cape Province.  Kathryn and I visited the Kogelberg Biosphere Reserve.  We acquired information about so many different things that day:  penguin conservation at a former whaling station, fire management in the fynbos plant community, integration of vineyards and orchards into land conservation and ecotourism practices, and, of course, the ramifications of economic disparities in a post-apartheid South Africa.  

On the next day, the entire NCSU troop worked with the residents of Casablanca, a small community located within Cape Flats.  These residents may have little money in their pockets, but they have a love for their land and an impassioned desire to protect it.  Harmony Flats Nature Preserve is a 9-hectare plot of land that once supported the critically endangered geometric tortoise; that is, when the land stretched untouched to the Indian Ocean.  Significant changes to the land area have altered the preserve, but remnants of the rare Lourensford alluvium fynbos community still exist.  This endangered ecosystem exists among a community of people that rely on the land for survival.  Hence, the individuals use the plants within the reserve for reasons that remain unknown to the manager of Harmony Flat.  The manager, however, suspects that plant extraction for traditional medicine and broom making is highly likely.  Operating under this assumption, the preserve manager faces the difficult challenge of balancing cultural tradition and plant preservation.

students at Harmony Flats Nature Preserve
Photo (above): Derek Dussek, Dr. Melissa McHale, Davis Murphy, Kathryn Reis, Kathy Spears, and Harmony Flats Researchers collecting data in Harmony Flats Nature Preserve.

In addition to plant harvesting, the Cape Flats region has a tremendous problem with trash and theft.  To us, the outsiders, Harmony Flats Nature Preserve looked like a soccer field covered in trash.  However, as we listened to the elders of Casablanca talk, we recognized that Harmony Flats serves as the glue that holds this community together.  The lack of materials to build dwellings causes locals to become resourceful and use any material that can be found.  For instance, we learned that some residents are quick to steal signs, barbed wire, and wooden planks immediately upon installation.  Faced with the challenges of plant harvesting, trash accumulation, and theft, as well as human ignited fire and plant trampling, Harmony Flats Nature Preserve has become a difficult place to manage.  Therefore, it was our duty to help the Casablanca residents and preserve manager map the location of social trails, illegal plant harvesting, boundary lines of fires, rubbish piles, and sand removal.  We also prepared a list of management recommendations for the community.

The forestry management practicum was short but informative.  During our one full day in Mpumalanga Province, we toured the Ngodwana Paper Mill, nurseries, and research plantations of Sappi (South African Pulp and Paper Industries).  According to Jacob Crous, forestry production began in South Africa in 1876.  Sappi emerged between 1965 and 1975.  Today 68% of South African lands are used for various purposes, and forestry production represents only 1% of that land use breakdown.  Economically, forestry yields 2% of South Africa’s Gross Domestic Product and is a major employer in the rural communities.  Within the Ngodwana area, Sappi focuses on softwood production, mostly pines and eucalyptus.  To conserve water, Sappi uses an effluent pond to recycle its dirty water during the milling process for paper production.  In these storage ponds, the dirt particles settle to the ground.  Sappi pumps water out of the effluent pond to conduct activities in the mill and extract the sludge for disposal at a designated dump.  This is just one example of water use that makes the Ngodwana Paper Mill one of the most water efficient mills in the world.  Sappi also strives for efficiency in its wood use.  All wood waste created at the mill is converted to soil that Sappi uses when planting seedlings at its nurseries.

students and SAEON researchers in Kruger National ParkNext, the NCSU crew established camp at the University of Witwatersrand’s Rural Facility outside of Kruger National Park (KNP) in the Limpopo Province.  We helped Dr. Tony Swemmer at the South African Environmental Observation Network identify sampling strategies for mopane tree/shrub density estimation and fuel wood collection.  For reasons unknown to scientists, mopane dominates the shrub-savanna landscape of central KNP where the soil consists of basalt.  Dr. Swemmer is monitoring the distribution of mopane trees/shrubs to learn if the plant moves southward in response to global climate change and out competes other native species.  Our task was to determine which plot size yields the least variation in mopane density counts.  For at least half a day, we set up many 20 x 20 nested plots in Kruger National Park and busied ourselves with tree/shrub identification and stem counting.  It was quite thrilling knowing that Godfrey, an armed game warden for Kruger, was strolling the woods making sure all of the park’s spectacular but dangerous animals maintained a safe distance from us.  As for the fuel wood collection study, we mostly helped Dr. Swemmer establish long-term monitoring plots.  For each plot we collected baseline information (diversity of tree/shrub species represented, number of individuals per species, and stem density).  Photo (left): Davis Murphy and Marta Pongor assisting SAEON researchers with plant sampling in Kruger National Park.

Bushbuckridge villager carrying a head-load of fuelwoodThe fuel wood collection study was the most intellectually challenging.  Many villagers of Bushbuckridge harvest tree limbs to heat their homes, cook food, and sell at street side markets.  Dr. Swemmer wants to learn how such activity is impacting the growth and regeneration of the harvested trees/shrubs.  Ideally, Dr. Swemmer would like to know how much fuel wood is collected for an individual household and for what purposes.  Additionally, Dr. Swemmer wants to collect certain measurements so it can assess how much biomass is removed from an individual tree/shrub.  However, the villagers wander a vast area in search of fuel wood and rarely at the same time from one day to the next.  How can Dr. Swemmer’s scientists and volunteers monitor the activity of each household?  We believe the answer lies in participatory research; get the villagers involved in the project.  For instance, Dr. Swemmer already employs a few villagers to assist with data collection projects.  Dr. Swemmer could expand that model to train more villagers on specific fuel wood data collection needs.  Each volunteer could be assigned to a certain number of households, always accompanying the household members on their fuel wood collection treks. Photo (right):  Bushbuckridge villager carrying a head-load of fuelwood

For our third practicum, the NCSU crew relocated to Tshulu Camp in Hamakuya, Limpopo Province.  What a fascinating experience this was!  Hamakuya is a village of the matriarchal Venda tribe.  Dr. David Bunn from the University of Witwatersrand works with other individuals to employ the services of local villages in the creation, maintenance, and research activities of Tshulu Camp.  Our task was to collect information about individual baobab trees.  How tall and wide is the tree?  Does it show signs of historical elephant damage?  Are there any animal nests in the tree?  How many fruits are hanging from the trees?  With the information we collected, Dr. Bunn will visit with local villagers to learn how they use the trees.  Collectively this information will help Dr. Bunn and others learn why the majestic baobab (a.k.a., tree of life) is struggling to regenerate in this elephant free area.  As we went from one 1,000 plus year-old tree to the next, the village children followed our every movement.  Some wanted to carry our backpacks.  Others wanted to help us measure tree diameter, and some simply wanted to watch and sneak a touch of our hair.
students in front of Baobab tree in Hamakuya
Photo (above):  Derek Dussek, Marta Pongor, Kathryn Reis, and Kathy Spears measuring Baobab trees in Hamakuya.

Davis interacting with Venda childrenOn the next day, we initiated our 24-hour home stay with a Venda family.  We got to interact with several of the same children, learning their games and dances and teaching them some of America’s games and dances.  The adults of the village were eager to spend a large part of the day and night dancing to the music of drum beating and an accordion player.  Part of the home stay also incorporated daily homecare activities:  cooking pap (cornmeal bread), mopane worms (a spiny caterpillar and main source of protein for the villagers), collecting water, washing dishes, and sweeping the patio. Photo (left): Davis Murphy interacting with Venda children during our home stay in the Venda Village, Hamakuya.

The final practicum was much more relaxing than the previous ones.  We completed our study abroad trip camping at the Loskop Dam Game Nature Reserve along the Olifants River in Mpumulanga Province.  Joining a group of students from Canada, we learned how to track various animals using our five senses.  On one night, Hannes Botha, a doctoral student from the University of Pretoria, visited the reserve.  Botha lectured on the mystifying decline of the Nile crocodile population.  Afterwards, we joined Botha as he patrolled the Olifants River in search of crocodiles.  Botha successfully caught one croc and allowed many of us to hold the prehistoric animal that measured roughly 1.5 meters.
Kim holds a 3 to 5-year-old Nile crocodile
Photo (above): Kim Shumate holds a 3 to 5-year-old Nile crocodile, collected from the Olifants River in Mpumulanga Province.

On the last day of May, we bid farewell to South Africa and headed back to the States with a suite of memories and learning experiences that will last a lifetime.  May our reflections inspire you to follow in our footsteps and explore the cultural and natural glories of South Africa!

Learn more: Ecosystem Services in South Africa Study Abroad Website

NCSU SAF Student Chapter takes unconventional way to National Convention

SAF Wilderness Leadership Trip and National Convention
   – by Cormac O’Doherty (Senior in Forest Management)

Saturday morning was an unusually early start for most of the Society of American Foresters members traveling to White Springs, Florida, for the annual Wilderness Leadership Trip and SAF National Convention. The Society of American Foresters Student Chapter at North Carolina State University goes on a leadership trip every year before the national convention. This year the National Convention was in Orlando, Florida, at the beautiful Disney Coronado Springs Resort.  The obvious location for the wilderness and leadership event was a canoe trip down one of the many rivers of the southeast, which led the group to an adventure on the Suwannee River.
Suwanee River
In White Springs on Saturday evening,  we met with American Canoe Adventures who were generous enough to let us camp on their personal property our first night.  After a hot and muggy night in northern Florida, American Canoe Adventures shuttled us to Fargo, Georgia, just south of the Okeefenokee Swamp to start our 50 mile adventure down the Suwannee River.  As we paddled down the black water of the Suwannee, we had to weave in and out of magnificent pond cypress and swamp tupelo.  Our dendrology knowledge was quickly put to the test as most of us were not very familiar with plants of a black water river system.  Digging through the material we remembered from Summer Camp and the few days we spent in Croatan National Forest, we were able to identify most of the species we saw.

Cormac in canoeAfter exhausting our knowledge of plants, as well as our shoulder muscles, we would stop every few hours to take a break and enjoy one of the many rope swings that were alongside the river.  Once we had cooled down, it was back to the grind, as the river did not have much current and the black water felt heavy to draw a paddle through. Camping alongside the river was a great experience, minus the excessive number of mosquitoes.  Group dinners and fire side chats lead to great camaraderie and gave us a chance to practice our leadership skills. The three days we spent on the river went incredibly fast and the next thing we knew we were headed to Ocala National Park for our last night in the wild.  In Ocala we rested our bodies and enjoyed the warm waters of Fore Lake.

From Ocala it was on to Disney World and the convention.  Staying at a hotel just across the street from Downtown Disney allowed us great access to the complex and the sometimes slow Disney transportation system.  Once we rode the complementary shuttle to Coronado Springs Convention Center, we were able to wander through a plethora of exhibits learning about different institutions, private companies, and public organizations.

NCSU SAF Quiz Bowl Team with Mickey and MinnieAs soon as seven o’clock struck on the first night of the convention, crowds gathered in one of the convention rooms to watch and participate in the SAF Quiz Bowl.  NC State’s Quiz Bowl team consisted of Graham Ford, Brian Kolokowsky, Adam Marlowe, and Cormac O’Doherty, who did well, reaching the semi-finals.  After a disappointingly early exit from the Quiz Bowl, Downtown Disney was calling for a night of fun and socializing.

The rest of the convention consisted of lectures given by industry and academic professionals from all over the country.  The lectures covered a wide range of subjects, from the biological control of hemlock wooly adelgid to the use of prescribed fire in longleaf pine stands.
 
Editor’s Note: Due to the economic downturn and tight budgets, the NC State Department of Forestry and Environmental Resources made the hard decision to save funds by not exhibiting or holding our traditional alumni luncheon during the 2009 National SAF Convention. We are very pleased, however, that we were able to subsidize the NC State SAF Student Chapter's convention attendance and Wilderness Leadership Trip. A big Thank You to Dr. Joe Roise for his organization, guidance, and, I’m sure, comic relief during the trip.

 See more photos from the trip HERE!

Trees help clean up polluted sites – research featured on News 14: Your Green Earth

trees used in phytoremediation researchRachel Cook, graduate student in the Department of Forestry and
Environmental Resources is interviewed about research she is conducting
with Dr. Elizabeth Nichols that is helping to clean up a contaminated site
using phytoremediation.
See the News 14 Carolina video  •  Read the NCSU News story

Partnership with Habitat for Humanity Lays Solid Foundation for New Sustainable Wood Products Course

NC State students salvage wood from home deconstructionWorking with Habitat for Humanity deconstructing homes is just the first step for students in a new interdisciplinary course offered this Fall by the Department of Wood and Paper Science at NC State. The main objective of WPS491/"Wood as A Sustainable Material" is to introduce the ideas and concepts of sustainability as it relates to wood and wood products manufacturing, including using waste wood for value added products and energy.

As part of their coursework the students tour historic homes and green buildings and collaborate with Habitat for Humanity to deconstruct homes. The deconstructed wood (lumber) is brought to the Hodges Wood Products Lab at NC State where the students develop value-added products, like mouldings, from the wood. Once produced to Habitat's specifications, the value-added projects will be used on Habitat homes under construction. 

NC State wood products students salvage roofing boards from a home being deconstructed by Habitat for HumanityAccording to course professor Sudipta Dasmohapatra, the students will gain a broad perspective of sustainability and green principles; become familar with various applications of wood as a sustainable and renewable material; learn about wood construction and deconstruction concepts like moisture retention, drying, nailing and finishing; and develop an understanding of life cycle analysis and certification – all while providing a service to the community.

An On-Course Education

 NC State University Web Feature – July 2009

by D'Lyn Ford, NC State News Services / photo by Roger W. Winstead, NC State Creative Services

The view from hole #3 at the Lonnie Poole Golf Course which will also serve as an outdoor classroom and "living lab" for NC State University students and faculty.

Ask golfers about NC State’s new Lonnie Poole Golf Course and they’ll share these stats: It’s an 18-hole, 7,358-yard, par 71 Arnold Palmer-designed course on Centennial Campus.

But faculty and students, including those who don’t play golf, also have designs on the golf course. They’re eager for it to grow into its role as a 250-acre outdoor classroom and living laboratory.

While the men’s and women’s golf teams practice at their long-awaited home course, more than 200 undergraduates in the turfgrass program will come here for field labs and about 20 graduate students will tend research projects. Professional Golf Management majors in one of only 20 PGA-accredited programs will gain real-world experience in the $76 billion business of golf.

NC State’s Friday Institute, a Centennial Campus neighbor, plans to bring science teachers and students to the Audubon-certified golf course to learn about wildlife management and environmental issues. And parks and recreation students may coax Centennial Middle School students into taking their first golf swings here.

Green Design

NC State faculty helped golf course designers transform kudzu-covered land into a championship course that fits into the natural environment. The course’s design and management are intended to be at the forefront of the move toward sustainability, says Tom Rufty, crop science professor and co-director of the Center for Turfgrass Environmental Research and Education.

“It is designed to require lower inputs of fertilizer, pesticides and water,” Rufty says. “We’ve added over 2,500 native and adapted plants. That helps establish a more sustainable system that has lower resource use and minimizes impacts on the surrounding environment.”

The bunkers and rough look different. Instead of pristine white, smooth-sided traps found on other courses, bunkers here have natural jagged edges and sand stained by erosion – normal with the Piedmont’s clay soils.

Errant shots fall into a low-maintenance mix of fine fescue and wild grasses. When fully grown in, the rough will need minimal care while accenting the course’s beauty and challenging golfers.

“You don’t want any part of the rough,” Nick Dillman, an NC State alum working at the course, tells a golfer who’s about to play his first round.

Dillman knows. To earn his degree in the Professional Golf Management program, he had to pass a PGA playing test and complete 16-months of co-op work at golf courses.

In his new job at Lonnie Poole, his duties include working with golfers and helping NC State students plan golf sessions for middle school students from Centennial Campus. In high school, Dillman realized how much he enjoyed golf and decided to parlay it into a career.

“I play where I work,” he says.

After his shift, he’ll probably squeeze in a round.

Going for the Green

Having a golf course will help NC State attract PGM students like Dillman as well as top collegiate players, says Robb Wade, head of the NC State’s eight-year-old program, which has 90 students.

“For the last year and a half, we’ve started taking students out to show them the progress on the golf course,” Wade says. “As good as the local courses were to us, it wasn’t the same as having one right on campus.”

While a love of golf brings PGM students to NC State, Wade encourages them to learn about the array of related careers.

“I don’t see our role in PGM as helping them get better at golf but better aware of the things they need to know to succeed in the business of golf,” Wade says.

PGM majors can pursue jobs as tournament coordinators, demo reps for high-tech golf equipment like handheld GPS units or marketers of golf apparel to the growing number of women taking up the sport. At a PGA show in Orlando this March, more than half of the million feet of floor space were devoted to apparel, most of it for women, Wade says.

“People used to venture out onto the links wearing plaid shorts, striped shirts and golf shoes with a flap on top. Now you have to have the proper clothing, sunglasses, gloves, hat and belt.”

Fueled by the appeal of players like Tiger Woods, the golf industry is looking for ways to attract new players. Some courses set up areas for beginning players, show movies on the clubhouse walls during family night, host nature hikes or handing out kid-friendly plastic golf clubs and tennis balls to elementary PE teachers.

NC State intern Sarah Hunt is working with golf’s next generation. Since May, she’s put 9,000 miles on her car, traveling with the Peggy Kirk Bell Junior Golf Tour and U.S. Kids tours of the Triad and the Triangle.

“I’ve loved every second,” says Hunt, a former junior golf competitor who working with young players. “The more experience you get, the more opportunities there are to advance in your career path.”

“Sarah’s phenomenal with kids,” Wade says. “The career prospects have shifted from 15 years ago when being a golf professional at a green grass facility was the primary career.”

Hometown Welcome

In its first few weeks of operation, the course with panoramic views of the Raleigh skyline has welcomed college golfers, alumni, retirees and family groups who’ve explored the links, honed their putting on the practice green and peppered the driving range with golf balls bearing red and white stripes.

On Friday, July 31, Arnold Palmer will preside over the invitation-only ribbon cutting for his only university course and give a private golf clinic, and on Aug. 15-16, the V Foundation will hold its Golf Classic for Cancer Research at Lonnie Poole Golf Course, a fitting host site for fans and friends of Jim Valvano.

The weekend tournament, which is open to the public on Sunday, Aug. 16, features celebrity golfers like NBA star Charles Barkley, 16-year-old prodigy Dakoda Dowd, recording artist Meat Loaf and ESPN SportsCenter host Stuart Scott. Admission is $5, and the gates open at 8:30 a.m. with a 9:30 shotgun start.

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