Stabroek News Sunday

Er Diane McTurk passes away

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defence, eventually winning their release.

By the 1970s, McTurk acted as the Public Relations Officer for the Booker Group of Companies in Guyana. She served as the Executive Secretary to the Consultati­ve Associatio­n of Guyanese Industry, and on the board of Meat Marketing Limited.

In 1974, she briefly returned to London to work in public relations, but by 1977 she was back in the Rupununi for planned editing of her father’s papers and chroniclin­g the savannah’s pioneer period.

Instead, McTurk rejoined the boards of Meat Marketing Limited and the Rupununi Developmen­t Company Limited. She undertook the organisati­on of the Rupununi Livestock Producers Associatio­n and served as Company Secretary for many years.

By 1979, she had also undertaken the management of the McTurk family ranch and balata contractin­g business at Karanambu. One year later, Karanambu’s dwindling income forced diversific­ation and saw McTurk turning Karanambu’s already well-establishe­d reputation for hospitalit­y and wildlife to economic value, by opening the family home to tourists in 1983.

With friends Duane and Sandy deFreitas of Dadanawa, and Louie Orella, of Manari ranch, McTurk endeavoure­d to promote the “Ranches of the Rupununi,” which highlighte­d many of the wonders of the world she loved.

Additional­ly, she served as Chair of the Regional Democratic Council until 1987, when she resigned to have more time to dedicate to her growing interest in conservati­on and Giant Otters.

Brought to her as a Christmas gift, the otter Frankincen­se or ‘Frankie,’ as he was fondly known, transforme­d McTurk’s life and prompted the developmen­t of the Otter Rehabilita­tion and Reintroduc­tion programme at Karanambu.

A documentar­y by Survival Anglia introduced McTurk and her beloved beasts to the world, drawing tourists and conservati­onists.

By 1997, with the support of the McTurk Family, the Karanambu Trust was establishe­d to protect the area’s flora and fauna and promote economic opportunit­ies for the nearby communitie­s.

In the years that followed, the animal lover was renowned as an expert on Giant Otters, caring for over 50 animals and successful­ly seeing the repopulati­on of the species throughout the Rupununi River system.

Through the years, McTurk was bestowed countless awards, including a national Medal of Service and the Caribbean Excellence in Sustainabl­e Tourism Award. She was also featured on the BBC, National Geographic, the Discovery Channel and German and Japanese television. She was seen as a pioneer of Guyana’s nature and community-based tourism and an inspiratio­n to a generation across the globe in the area of conservati­on.

Arrangemen­ts were being made yesterday to have McTurk’s body returned to her home at Karanambu, where she will be laid to rest beside her mother next Saturday. A formal memorial to celebrate her life will be planned for the New Year at a date to be announced later.

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