Finally the Rains are here....
By Oria Douglas-Hamilton
My dear dear friends and family
Your letters and words, prayers and burning candles have been
such a comfort for us dealing with a real drought throughout these last
10 months - and now finally I can tell you The Rains Have Come, and
together we can rejoice, blessed by the precious water from
'Ngai'. And it is amazing what happened in just 24hours, then
48. Here is our story.
It was the 9th of October - we had
just closed down the camp - everything had been folded, packed away and
piled to the ceiling into the container. A huge yellow sheet of
plastic covered our big thatched mess-tent, standing empty and forlorn,
the furniture was stacked high - we had been told to expect floods - it
is so hot, the wind has dropped, hundreds of birds flock into my water
hole, impalas, baboons, monkeys, we are digging every day, now 7ft into
the sand - we are well prepared. The staff with pockets full of money
wave goodbye, going home, I too will fly away home, and leave my
trusted 'fundi' Peterson and 4 staff to watch over the camp - "with any
luck it might rain in a week or more, send me a message every day" I
tell them, as I board the plane. Flying south, I can count the
dead cows, the goats, buffaloes and elephants below flattened on the
dried earth like ghosts trying to run away. Atleast my
impalas are well, we are feeding them seed pods and they will survive.
For 10 months we have not seen green grass and the river barely
flowed. At times, it was so hard to smile, to keep everyones
spirits high with hope - we sang, we laughed, we gave out water and
food to people, we watched the sky, the clouds, the wind, the leaves
and waited, our hearts heavy with pain as everything was dieing.
Only the predators thrived, fat, silky fur, licking their blood stained
paws, every day, a fresh meal - an easy kill by the small water holes.
That
night our silent sand river came back to life - somewhere it had rained
and the sound of running water fills the air, fills our souls. It
is night and the dark sky is scattered with stars; my staff run
out to the motionless trees, eyes transfixed staring as the water
pounds down with its big rolling brown waves. My first message
10pm: "mama how did you know the river would run today? It is at the
kigelia - we are watching." Oh my God here it comes with such
force - we had forgotten what it was like. "Call me when it
reaches the mess tent"
Every morning the sun rose up into a blue
sky, piercing through the dry branches and onto the dried hardened
earth - my daily message - "no rain". I am in Naivasha on my family
estate. We have a lion who has suddenly appeared from nowhere, he walks
the lake shore and is hiding in our papyrus. He has killed 2 cows
and 2 eland. We have not seen a lion here for 40 years and now with the
drought he has come to us, to our little paradise filled with hundreds
of happy wild animals grazing green grass - what a beautiful
sight. My mind is on the lion, how to protect him from being
speared or poisoned.
It is October 14th in Samburu the river is
still running - it is so hot with a clear blue sky - then without
warning the blue turns to grey to steel black clouds, to rumbling
thunder, big round rain drops hit the earth with a splatter lifting
dust, one, ten, one hundred drops, a million threads of rain pour down
on that parched earth - it is 3:45 pm - my first message from Shivani
"Oria, it's raining! We are standing in it". Another
message: "In west gate. Totally pouring. It's amazing I
hope the Park is getting some too" - Oh my God it's raining, tears
stream my eyes, nothing from camp - no network, I try Shiv again, "yes
heavy in west gate, not sure whether Park is getting any but it looks
like its coming from there" - then my phone rings and it's Peterson
"mama it's raining, we are standing in it, heavy rain, lots rain" and I
say "watch that river, call me every hour" - then I send messages to
all the staff "ITS RAINING!!!" My heart is pounding as I think of
all the things - the new tanks in the school - I call Zac who has been
building there with me - "is the water in the tanks?" YES they
are half full - we had just completed the job, the roof was on and I
kept on telling Zac "get those gutters up - get the tanks up" - and now
we have water - then I thought of all the elephants rejoicing in the
rain - Toto Raj, his first bath since he was born on August 16th - same
birthday as Iain and it made me so happy.
October 15th - bad
telephone reception, am anxious, has the river flooded, have we lost
our top soil?? Daniel tells me it rained all night - they tried feeding
hay to the Royal Family, but would not take it, now it has rained, the
elephants have left the Park and Toto Raj has gone too. "Where
have they gone"?? But the elephants know.
October 16th -
Shivani: "you wont believe it Oria the first green shoots are sprouting
- there are tortoises everywhere, the lions are moving away from the
river, crocs are out, big ones - I counted 20 dead cows on the oryx
plains". Nature is so powerful. In the north, on the arid
zones, everything responds to rain - it's now, grow, reproduce.
And if you are weak and sick, old or too young, yes they will die
- too weak too cold and nothing to eat - they lie down for eternal
sleep.
October 17th - Shivani message - "pouring now
Oria! THE KIPSING HAS BURST am in tent still in west gate - green
grass in camp - I cant believe it". Everything had died way up
river where Shiv had her little tent - warthogs, waterbuck, impalas, so
much livestock and they pushed herds of cattle sheep and goats into the
park, dieing on the way. Now, green grass.
"Huge rain just over -
went to check kipsing - amazing to watch it flow into the Ewaso. Also
first time ever, lugga near camp flowing, watched it come down -
amazing!" Huge scorpions are out, snakes and gazillion bugs."
Such a sense of joy, of life, of disbelief - of survival - water
everywhere, big puddles small puddles - all are rejoicing up there in
the northern frontier district.
Everywhere people are crouched
under plastic sheets hugging baby lambs - today for the first time, the
survivors will taste green grass. "God is great - they say. He
has forgiven us - we will not die" For months we had taken food
and clean water to the people - to the school - famine relief
biscuits donated by Saba and I, maize and beans by EW friends, fat,
maize flour, milk, tea, sugar by friends - more beans and maize and
always more water and so it went on. No news from camp - but no
floods the water is sinking into the earth - what a blessing.
October
18th - fourth day of rain - from my camp 7am: "the little grass left
are turning green, but here no enough rain to make the new grow.
Kiltaman and west gate they are getting new grass growing. We are
still feeding impala". River is under control. All is well.
Shivani: "Watching lioness walking on green lawn. Most
beautiful thing ever. And no one here"
Here are some photos of various animals enjoying the grass in Samburu









