By Jenni Trethowan | Founder Member
#Looking for a miracle
Our work with the CT2 has been filled with emotional highs and lows as we struggle to fund funding to keep our valiant monitors employed to safeguard this small troop.
It has been a heart wrenching few weeks as the teams on the ground dealt with the death of Millie, who was killed in a hit and run, and the incredible sadness as Millie’s young daughter Mo (just 10 months old) was crying for her mom and running to keep up with the troop on her own. The monitors, together with Sam and Bonita (Baboon Watch WC) have told me how some the younger baboons have carried Mo when she gets tired, Mzukisi expressed such concern when he related to me how some of the juvies can barely walk with Mo under their belly or clinging to their backs. Benson was so encouraged when his team noted that in the last few days Mo has been seen in a lot with Big Mamma who is looking after her own infant and now Mo too.
In addition to the loss of Mille, the troop are anxious as Charlie, a young dispersing male from a Constantia troop, attempts to join the troop and Quinton has been seen chasing Charlie off and keeping his group under close scrutiny. The teams have been working really hard to keep the troop in the Cecelia Forest, but when Charlie puts in an appearance they scatter and run… and also take advantage of the rich food rewards found in the many non-baboon proof bins.
The weather has been particularly cold in the past weeks and our guys have only rudimentary uniforms and wet weather gear, two of the radios needed repair and maintenance and so it has been tough going. But the teams are persistently positive, determined and hardworking, I am so very, very proud of them all.
We were so grateful to local resident David who has helped so much over the past few days keeping an eye on Charlie and then offering to loan the teams radios while ours are being repaired – what a fantastic help that was! Thank you David!
We have been super excited to have wonderful prizes donated for the raffle Sam is running to raise money, local businesses who have been grateful for our hard work stepped up with gorgeous prizes and we hope that the raffle will bring in much needed finances.
So after the roller coaster of emotional lows and lovely support, it just breaks my heart to tell you that we are just not raising enough money to cover the running costs of the project. We need to raise R43 000 per month, a big ask in these times of stress and financial strain. Most months we have managed to raised between half to two thirds of the required funds, and Baboon Matters has been able to cover the short fall.
We have approached organisations for emergency funding as well as the City of Cape and members of the Joint Task Team, but as I sit here we have had no success securing the funds we need and Baboon Matters has used every bit of money we had in our account to make up the shortfalls. We can pay the teams until 10 July 2023, but thereafter we cannot subsidize the project any more, we just don’t have the resources.
I have been so profoundly grateful to those who have supported the CT2 troop and teams, we have had incredible support from a handful of amazingly generous souls and we are all so very grateful to you. To those who donated boots, gear, R100 per month from some people I know are battling themselves; your support has been huge and we have been so thankful.
The project team of Sam, Bonita, Gerry and I have spent hours going back and forth, trying to find ways to get more money in – and we are still working hard; as mentioned Sam has had some incredible prizes donated for a raffle, Gerry is planning an event in August and Bonita is working hard finding organisations we can approach for funding as well as everything she does.
Lorraine from Baboons of the South has given us indomitable support and tried to secure funding by reaching out to contacts, but sadly most organisations have allocated funding for the year. Still, I am sending out proposals widely and we will have our SnapScan up and running as soon as possible.
This is an exceptionally hard post to write, all of us involved in this project have been so positive, worked so hard and really tried everything we can. We are all hoping for and praying for a miracle, we don’t want our decent, hardworking men to be without work, we don’t want the troop to revert to old habits and we certainly don’t want them wandering unmonitored in an area where we know there are residents using high caliber weapons to shoot at the baboons. But we are left with no option at this stage.
Urgent appeals will continue to go to as many organisations and agencies as we can find, the raffle will take place and we hope that the JTT will come forward with emergency funding we have requested. We hope that you will take advantage of the Fund Matching offered by GlobalGiving on 12 JUly, when donations of $100 will be matched by GlobalGiving, meaning that your donation goes even further.
Thank you for you on-going support, we will keep you all posted as the countdown for a miracle begins…
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