Ethiopia Photos

Pollyanna with Claudio, Founder of the Ethiopian
Wolf Conservation project.
Click
Here to learn more about their work

Ethiopian Wolf Cubs

Out on the field with the EWCP
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Expedition
into Ethiopia

Study of Ethiopian Wolves
completed on location
In the Spring of 2009 Pollyanna undertook one of her most challenging
expeditions to date – to sketch and paint the rarest wolf
in the world. Accompanied by her daughter and business partner
Anna-Louise she travelled to the remote and inhospitable Bale
mountain regions, where she stayed and worked with the Ethiopian
Wolf Conservation Project.
Pollyanna has travelled throughout the world to study endangered
species – but this is the first time she has traveled
back in time! She left her Derbyshire studio in April 2009,
and landed in Ethiopia halfway through 2001. “Ethiopians
use a 13-month Coptic calendar that began its third millennium
the September before last” Pollyanna explained “So
when they claim to enjoy 13 months of sunshine they are not
exaggerating!”.
For many people Ethiopia may be most associated nowadays with
the 1984 famine, but Pollyanna was drawn to the country by it’s
unique wildlife. Abyssinian wolves are an elegant, long-legged
species of wolf found only in a handful of scattered remote
mountains in Ethiopia. Around 500 survive today in small populations,
threatened by loss of highland habitats, disease and persecution.
“In 2004 Rabies took a deadly hold among the wolves of
the Bale Mountains National Park, which could have entirely
wiped out this fragile population and a state of emergency was
declared” Pollyanna told us “So through my charitable
Foundation I raised £5660.00 to support a vaccination
programme organised by the Ethiopian Wolf Conservation project.
The EWCP tranquillises, inoculates and re-releases the wolves.
To date the project has been a great success, with no known
problems or mortality amongst the vaccinated wolves.
At heights of almost 5,000m above sea level Pollyanna and Anna-Louise
had to contend with altitude sickness, thick cloud cover and
freezing conditions as they drove in 4 wheel drives or trekked
through the afro-alpine habitat. However they were rewarded
with over 20 sightings of the beautiful red-coated wolves. Pollyanna
also had the opportunity to observe and sketch lots of other
Ethiopian mammals and birds including black kites, lanner falcons,
and the striking pied kingfisher. Later in her journey Pollyanna
travelled to the Muslim walled city of Harar, where she visited
a child care centre. Here
she had one of the most unusual and nerve-wracking experiences
of her journeys round the world, when she found herself hand-feeding
a pack of wild hyenas.
Every night outside the walls of the ancient city, a pack of
hyenas circles a lone man as he crouches down holding out chunks
of bloody red meat, which they take from the end of a short
stick clamped between his teeth. These huge, slope-shouldered
animals have fearsome jaws that can easily crush human bone.
The hyena men of Harar have been performing this ritual every
night for hundreds of years, and Pollyanna became one of the
few European women ever to be invited to take part in the ceremony,
with the wild hyenas taking food from her hand.
The journey through Ethiopia will be featured in Pollyanna’s
forthcoming book ‘Way of the Wolf’.
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