September 8th
Hello everyone!
As I mentioned in my previous blog, much of Malawi is
currently suffering from rapid, human-driven deforestation. Malawi has lost 85%
of its trees in the last 20 years and at current rates of
population growth and deforestation, by 2030 it will no longer have enough
biofuel to sustain the population.
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Avoiding the trees on Zomba Plateau |
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Deforestation affects many areas of life, from the air we breathe to the water we drink |
There are many ways of trying to help with this problem. Previously we have planted trees in local villages.
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Running through the trees - hopefully other can do this in the future. |
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At this event they were giving away plants to take home - we took a guava plant amongst others to use in our house. |
One new method is to run through one of the very forests
which is suffering from deforestation: Zomba Nature Reserve.
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The Zomba Nature Reserve is around 130 sq km in size |
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The view at the halfway point of my 10km run |
More commonly known as Zomba plateau, the land above the old
capital of Malawi. It soars above the town, regularly towering over 1800m into the sky with a peak of almost 2100m.
The top has some incredible views of land and lakes, as you can see from a
previous visit.
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The drive up to the plateau offers some spectacular views |
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The new Mulunguzi Dam was finsihed in 2001 |
The dense woodland slightly below was our point of interest
for this weekend, however. Much of it consists of pine trees which are not
indigenous to the region.
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The tree types found in Malawi can be found here |
The remaining indigenous trees are the ones which are being
chopped down at an alarming rate, mainly due to the high demand for firewood.
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Some of the roads are quite wide due to deforestation |
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Possibly on purpose, our running route went through a logging area |
To help combat this, a variety of running events were
initiated, with all money raised being donated to The Reforestation of the
Environment and Ecosystem of Zomba: TREEZ.
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Many people came to the event, which was started and is managed by Zomba Forest Lodge |
The run started at a hotel on the plateau, veering off the
road after about 500 metres and into the greenery.
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As is customary in Malawian runs, the roads were not blocked off |
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Most of the route was on trails such as these |
The run was difficult at times due to the elevation and
hilly nature of the massif. I expected trees but was surprised at having to
cross streams and precarious bridges.
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Crossing the stream by using the rocks slowed most people down |
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A runner crossing the bridge - I was so busy taking a video that I misplaced my step and put my left foot through the crack |
There were of course some beautiful views. It was also very
tranquil running through the forest, save for the occasional hum of a motorised
saw which helped remind me of the reason for the race. I came quite close to
falling quite a few times as I was busy taking photos when running, rather than
looking at the slightly uneven terrain I was running on.
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Another obstacle in the forest |
The penultimate kilometre of my 10km jaunt took me over the
Mulunguzi Dam, which provides Zomba with its water supply.
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The new dam cost almost $29 million |
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Apparently the dam is much wider than it used to be |
After a tough final kilometre – uphill and without much
shade – I made it back in about 47 minutes. I wasn’t bothered about recording a
fast time as I wanted to appreciate the plateau.
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Running the painful final kilometre with a man called Gift - we encouraged each other to the line |
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One of the first half-marathon runners - the winning time was something like 1hr 21mins |
Another way of appreciating Zomba is to eat its fruit. It is
the best place in the country to get granadillas and a variety of berries,
including strawberry, raspberry and mulberry. We stocked up on these before
leaving the following day.
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I forgot to take photos of the fruit on the plateau - here are some delicious Zomba strawberries |
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Hannah used the mulberries to make an amazing crumble |
The following day we also played on one of the stranger golf
courses I have ever seen, which is based in the main town below the plateau.
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The first hole of Zomba's 9-hole golf course |
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Putting on the 'green' |
That isn’t a bunker. It’s the green. Being public land, people
can walk across the fairways with happy abandon. One consequence of this is
that the flags are not left in the holes; instead, one poor soul walks around
with you in the morning heat and puts the flag in each time.
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Our greenkeeper and his flag |
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Technique: woeful |
It is not lost on me that deforestation probably created
this golf course. I can’t do much about that but I would love to see Malawi
move away from chopping down such an important part of its landscape for
short-term firewood. Organisations like TREEZ have the potential, with the
right support, to protect and regenerate the plateau. I hope paying to run
through such a beautiful place has helped.
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You'll hear plenty more about this little one soon! |
Love you all,
Matt