Getaway (South Africa)

Dr Johan Marais steps up to save wild animals with serious injuries

WILDLIFE VET DR JOHAN MARAIS HAS SPENT HIS LIFE TRAVELLING ACROSS AFRICA SAVING THE “UNSAVEABLE”. PROTECTION IS HIS WATCHWORD

- Interview by Graeme Green

‘Ilike a challenge,ʼ says Dr Johan Marais, wildlife vet and founder of wildlife charity Saving The Survivors. His chosen career has been full of challenges. The organisati­on – which he founded – is dedicated to treating wild animals with serious injuries, such as facial wounds (from horns that have been hacked off by poachers), fractures and gunshot wounds. No one else was really doing this work before, so treating these injuries on such massive, powerful animals was uncharted water.

Marais trained as a veterinary surgeon in the early 1990s and has since travelled across southern, east and central Africa, not just helping animals, but also following his passion for wildlife photograph­y.

His lifeʼs mission is to make sure these animals are still around for the next generation of wildlife lovers and photograph­ers.

I grew up with wildlife. My father was a game ranger in Etosha National Park in Namibia. I have clear memories from very young of riding on a little white rhino, an orphan, and also giving bottles to lion cubs that my father found, when the mother was dead. Spending time with my father, and growing up in a little camp called Okaukuejo kickstarte­d my love for wildlife and for veterinary science. My fatherʼs work put in my mind the importance of protecting wildlife. I set up Saving The Survivors in 2012. Who else was going to do this work? We were losing hundreds of rhinos each year. There wasnʼt a lot being done to try to save animals that had been poached, where their horns were hacked off, or with fractures and gunshot wounds. I decided to treat them.

This type of work had never been done. We didnʼt walk in to treat a fracture and say: ʻLetʼs do A, Band C,ʼ and it worked. To treat fractures successful­ly took me eight to 12 months. I had to work out how to treat the wounds, or what sort of plaster works. We also had to see what painkiller­s or antibiotic­s to use. I was shocked to see how little informatio­n there was available. Iʼve always liked challenges. In a weird way, I quite enjoy this work, trying new things to see if I can get it right and to see what can be done for these animals.

Weʼre most active in South Africa but we do consultanc­y work in Mozambique, Botswana, Namibia, Zimbabwe and Kenya. The most

common injuries we see in

rhino are facial wounds, gunshot wounds and fractures. In other wildlife, such as lion, buffalo, cheetah and wild dogs, we also work on injuries such as snare wounds or wounds from other animals.

Some people might not see the value in the work we do, but it needs to be done. We canʼt wait for rhino numbers to get lower and lower. Look at Tundi, a white rhino we treated and saved. Sheʼs already had four calves. So we didnʼt save just one animal, we saved five. Thereʼs a knock-on effect.

The emotional effect of this work doesn’t get better with time. Itʼs a deeply emotional experience to see animals suffering. Itʼs something we underestim­ate and donʼt talk about enough. Iʼm talking about veterinari­ans, helicopter pilots, game rangers, antipoachi­ng people, and owners. I personally know at least two veterinari­ans, who treat a fair amount of rhino, who suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder. Most vets who do this work suffer from this. It doesnʼt get the attention it should.

I don’t think rhinos will become extinct. I expect private game reserves and private owners will protect them. But why do we want to see a species go from 23 000 to 12 000 animals? Weʼve already halved the white rhino population worldwide. People in Kruger say that 10 years ago, they saw rhino every day, but now they might see one in a week. Thatʼs criminal. You want our kids and their kids to see leopard and rhinos and ellies and antelope. You want to go out into wild open African plains and see rhino, and not just see them in fenced areas.

Photograph­y is my main hobby. I have such a passion for 100-pounder elephants. Iʼve mainly photograph­ed them from vehicles but to be on foot with these bulls – asIʼve done with Tim from Kenya, that recently died – is a life-changing experience. Theyʼre such an impressive animal to spend time with. I could do that for weeks on end, just taking photos.

Whatʼs upsetting is knowing thereʼsso much more we can do to conserve wildlife but we choose to spend our money on, for instance, going to Mars. Just imagine what that could do for nature conservati­on, or for people who are hungry or donʼt have water or donʼt have houses. We spend money destroying our own planet and spend money travelling to other planets. It doesnʼt make sense to me. savingthes­urvivors.org

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