Archive for the ‘The Domestic Animals at Blue Gums Free’ Category

Blue Gums Gathers In Another Ghost

May 2, 2013

Our wonderful, brave and loyal friend and companion, Mischa, had to be put down today. Mischa is arguably the most famous dog to grace this unusual place that has been as much a home to dogs as it has been for people. Everyone knows Mischa. For 13 years he has been going walkabout from Smitswinkel Bay to Murdoch Valley.

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Mischa on his Mountain

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Mischa on Walkabout at Fisherman’s Beach

How often was he picked up by well meaning strangers  assuming he was lost or abandoned – often from just outside our own driveway and taken to the vet or the pound. Eventually we put a tag on his collar with Rozzie’s number and the words NOT LOST! in capitals. From then onwards we would get the occasional call from someone who had found him on the road to Cape Point. “Hello. We have your dog Not Lost with us.”

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The Leader of the Pack

Mischa, Rosalind’s shadow. Mischa, the dog who knew how to open sliding doors. Mischa, the stubborn Australian Cattle Dog with a mind of his own. Mischa, the brave and gallant defender of Blue Gums, keeping intruders and baboons at bay. Mischa, who taught five other dogs how to move the baboon troops away from our house without ever hurting them or being hurt themselves. Mischa, who had a pathological dislike for other male dogs and a ferocity to match. Mischa, the powerful and the brave with the bark of a consumptive.

Tomorrow we take Mischa home to Blue Gums to bury him alongside Jezzy and Sutika and Fronk. Not lost is lost to us forever more. But his ghost is already sitting at the top of the Blue Gums steps, looking out to the Cape Point Road, waiting faithfully for Rosalind, his beloved owner to come home.

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A Tired Old Man – Six Weeks Ago. As Always Waiting at the Foot of Rozzie’s Bed

The Land Mammals of BlueGumsFree

July 15, 2012

The Cape Peninsula has never supported large numbers of mammals, given the low carrying capacity of the fynbos biome. What it lacked in numbers though it made up for in diversity. The larger mammals have disappeared – from the blue buck that was shot to extinction, to the Cape Leopard that still clings tenuously to survival in the Cape Folded Mountains, a little over 50 kilometres away.

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When we first moved into the Stone Cottage at BlueGumsFree we were nevertheless surprised at how few mammals we saw, and like so many other natural imbalances in the area, we put it down to the invasive alien trees. While the return of the fynbos has seen an increase in insects, reptiles, rodents and birds there has been no noticeable increase in the number of mammals that use the property as part of their territory.

Of course most mammals that live on the mountain are either crepuscular or nocturnal, so about eighteen months ago I purchased a camera trap. I do not attract mammals by laying down bait, but I position the camera trap on small game trails or overlooking permanent sources of water. We have had some impressive sightings, but they remain rare and unusual.

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Leopards may have been eradicated from the Peninsula over 150 years ago, but the caracal still holds out. A sighting of a caracal remains an event that generates enormous excitement. In the 12 years that we have lived here, the residents of BlueGumsFree have had a total of 10 sightings. This has included 5 sightings of the same large male, and a single sighting of a female with two half-grown kittens.

Equally unusual and impressive are sightings of Cape Clawless Otters, although fellow members of the Castle Rock Conservancy, who live about a kilometre north of BlueGumsFree have a resident family in the watercourse that passes by their plots. In the twelve years there have been only three sightings of otters on  the actual Blue Gums land. Water Mongoose are perhaps even less abundant here and I have only seen one – in my first year here. Grey Mongoose are much more common and we pick them up regularly on the camera trap.

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Our most regular visitors are the porcupines and they have tangled with our dogs on more than one occasion, once fatally so, when a porcupine quill killed Jezzie our loyal fox-terrier cross.

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Another sad demise was the death of a Cape Grysbok that was a regular visit to our watercourse. We found one of our dogs chewing its skull, but are certain that she had simply scavanged the remains of a baboon or caracal kill.

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The large and small spotted genets are uncommon, but by no means rare, although I often wonder about the toll that roadkills have on their population. On more than one ocasion we have had them as night-visitors in our kitchen.

We have also had the odd unwelcome day visitor in our kitchen – members of the resident baboon troop. As Rosalind likes to point out, though, in the twelve years that we have been here, the baboons have taken over our home on only six occasions. I hasten to add that three of those occasions have been in the last two years when the baboon monitors in the area became a permanent feature. This is most certainly not coincidental, but more about our resident baboons and the group of humans they lead up and down Cape Point Rd. in my next blog post. For the moment I must end by saying that if it was not for one other species of mammals – our brave and baboon-savvy dogs (German Shepherd, Border Collie, Australian Cattle Dog all converted into South African baboon dogs) – the baboons would long have become a menace instead of being the opportunistic but charismatic neighbours that they are.

Feathered Friends

June 24, 2012

Yesterday when I went for a run I heard a Peregrine Falcon cry from the crags above Blue Gums Free. It reminded me of three exceptional sightings of this special bird in the immediate vicinity of the house. The first was in 2003 when a young adult alighted on a dead gum in the watercourse near the road. Second was in 2006 when a bird on the hunt came whistling past me in a stupendous stoop as I was climbing the rock face above the house. The third was in 2010 when a juvenile and its mother spent and afternoon in around the property screaming to one another as they raced from ledge to ledge. Every one of these sightings followed a day of burning stacks of felled invasive trees.

Peregrine Falcon

In all likelihood this was purely coincidental, but when I heard that distinctive call yesterday morning it got me thinking about the birds at Blue Gums Free, their movements and the effect that the regeneration of the fynbos has had on avian diversity and population size. Of course there is no direct correlation between the presence or absence of birds at Blue Gums Free and our efforts to remove the alien trees. Many other factors need to be taken into account.

For one thing bird distributions are changing. Hadadas for example are now common visitors, whereas ten years ago they were never seen. In recent years Pied Crows have made forays into the territory but thankfully have yet to take up residence for they will surely chase off the breeding pair of White-necked Ravens that have been breeding, even before we arrived here,  in the same nesting site about 500 metres south of the house. These wonderful birds deserve special mention for we know them individually now and have seen them successfully raise their young almost every year.

White-naped Raven

And then there is the male Malachite Sunbird who has been over-wintering at Blue Gums for the pst three years and uses the highest branches of the remaining gums to call out to females and display his iridescent plumage. Other individuals that we know personally are the speckled pigeons (rock pigeons for those of us who learnt birds names in a time when bird taxonomy was localized) who roost in the palm tree outside the house and regularly feed from the dogs bowls.

Another factor to consider when it comes to bird identification is the almost certain decline in their populations on the Peninsula, especially along the urban edge. In this regard a finger must be pointed at domestic cats who, according to one estimate, account for about 7 million birds and 3 to 5 million small animals every year. These figures have been pared down even further to estimate that cats on the urban edge account for about 100 killings every year. Our own pets, regretfully, confirm this statistic. While this has ensured a cordon sanitaire around our house, keeping all but the most stubborn puff adders away, and while we love our cats very dearly, we will certainly not be replacing them when their days are up.

 Vinny – the Coolest Cat on the Peninsula?

 So what is the status of birds at Blue Gums Free, and how has our clearing of the invasive trees impacted on their populations? One thing is absolutely certain. The number of terrestrial birds at Blue Gums (remember that many birds spotted here are seabirds) has increased tenfold, except in the immediate vicinity of the house where the cats wreak havoc,  and this is the direct result of the recovery of the fynbos.

Certain species have returned as well. Cape Sugarbids now descend regularly from the higher slopes to feast on the nectar of a wealth of indigenous flowers. Grassbirds perch on sturdier stems. Ground Woodpeckers have returned to the rocky crags just above the house and regularly make forays in the areas where the fynbos has returned. About two years ago we broke through the invasive alien forest that has over-ridden the lower slopes whose calcerous sandstone soils make them more prone to infestation. This major milestone resulted in a population of rock hyraxes taking up residence on a nearby rockface formerly strangulated by hakea. We now have the great privilege of being visited every once in a while by the sole surviving pair of Verreaux’s Eagles (Black Eagles for most of us) on the Peninsula, hunting for their favourite meal.

Cape Sugarbirds Outside Our Kitchen

It must be mentioned that some species have disappeared or become much less common as a result of the felling of the bigger trees in the water course. I am inclined to believe that they will return when the slower growing indigenous riverine trees reach maturity in another five to ten years, since the gums were clearly used for roosting and not for foraging. Sadly the Spotted Eagle Owls are no longer resident in the watercourse, although they visit infrequently and we are treated to their haunting calls descending from higher up the valley where the riverine trees are more established. The African-Olive (Rameron) Pigeons have gone and this is a great disappointment since they used to live in (and probaly feed off) the rooikrans in the ravine.

In conclusion here is a list of bird species that have been spotted at Blue Gums Free. It does not include any of the infamous “LBJs” since my dedication to ornithology is no longer what it used to be.

  1. Cape Spurfowl (Francolin)
  2. Helmeted Guinea Fowl
  3. Egyptian Goose
  4. Ground Woodpecker
  5. Speckled Mousebird
  6. Spotted Eagle Owl
  7. Speckled Pigeon (Rock Pigeon)
  8. African Olive Pigeon
  9. Cape Turtle Dove
  10. Black Oystercatcher
  11. Water Thick Knee (Dikkop)
  12. Blacksmith Lapwing (Plover)
  13. Kelp Gull
  14. Hartlaub’s Gull
  15. Grey Headed Gull
  16. Common Tern
  17. Rufous-Chested (Redbreasted) Sparrowhawk
  18. Little Sparrowhawk
  19. Jackal Buzzard
  20. Steppe Buzzard
  21. Verreaux’s (Black) Eagle
  22. Peregrine Falcon
  23. Cape Gannet
  24. White-Breasted Cormorant
  25. Bank Cormorant
  26. Cape Cormorant
  27. Hadeda Ibis
  28. Paradise Flycatcher
  29. Southern Boubou
  30. Cape Batis
  31. Pied Crow
  32. White-necked Raven
  33. European Swallow
  34. Greater Striped Swallow
  35. Rock Martin
  36. Cape Bulbul
  37. Sombre Greenbul (Bulbul)
  38. Cape Grassbird
  39. Cape Whiteye
  40. Cape Rock Thrush
  41. Olive Thrush
  42. Dusky Flycatcher
  43. Cape Robin-Chat
  44. Red-Wing Starling
  45. Malachite Sunbird
  46. Orange Breasted Sunbird
  47. Southern (Lesser) Double-collared Sunbird
  48. Cape Sugarbird
  49. Cape Wagtail
  50. Cape Canary
  51. Cape Siskin
  52. Cape Bunting