Not strictly for the birds
 
                | 30:08N 15:52W "I 
prefer them cooked in red wine." this was Mauricio's response when asked 
how many different ways he knows to prepare rabbit. Mauricio and Ricardo 
are wardens -  Vigilante Da Natureza - of the Maderia Nature Reserve 
service and we met them on Sevalgem Grande, a 2.5 kilometer square island 
some one hundred and fifty miles south of Madeira. The rabbits he jokingly 
referred to were an invasive species, along with mice and some small 
bushes, which have been eradicated by poison over the past few 
years.  Nature conservancy isn’t always about preserving life. The 
rabbits were introduced hundreds of years ago during a Portuguese 
attempt to create a permanent settlement on the island. The settlement was 
doomed by an almost total lack of drinking water, only 
one natural spring drips no more than a leaky tap and annual rainfall 
is often close to zero. The only traces of these early settlers are 
some dry stone walls which Mauricio thinks were intended to slow down 
soil erosion during the occasional wet year.   Sevalgem Grande 
has been returned to its natural state and since the 1970's, together with the 
surrounding ocean, is now a nature reserve. It is home to a colony of 
Cory's Shearwaters, a beautiful sea bird which builds its nest among the 
rocks. We saw this year's plump fledglings waiting for their parents 
to return with regurgitated fish scraps from the open sea. In a few 
weeks they will have lost some weight and developed flying feathers, 
then presumably after a short spell in flight school they will be 
off. From data gathered by the wardens and numbered rings attached to 
the birds, it's known that these youngsters will be gone for seven years before 
returning to Sevalgem Grande. During their time away some will be observed in 
Madagascar, Mozambique and Brazil. No doubt their familiarity with Portuguese 
attracts them to the latter two destinations. They prefer to return to the same 
stony nests they were hatched in and will fight to the death if they find a 
squatter has moved in. Before the island was declared a nature reserve, 
fishermen took the birds for their meat and feathers and the colony was in 
danger of disappearing.   Mauricio 
and Ricardo are almost at the end of the three week stay, then it's back to 
Madeira and head office for a new assignment. They have shared the island with a 
lady scientist who is researching fish-borne parasites. The only truly permanent 
resident is a dog, also called Sevalgem, who likes to bark at airplanes 
which seem to follow a well used route passing directly over the island. I 
counted five at one time and they seemed to be flying between Europe 
and South America. The dog never bothers the young birds nesting on the ground, 
maybe she has learned from experience not to mess with them; they have fearsome 
beaks designed for ripping fish apart and prying open clams.   We 
were ten visitors on the island, all crew from yachts anchored 
precariously in the only bay. Mauricio and Ricardo arranged to meet us 
at nine-thirty in the morning at the small jetty below their house. They were 
smartly turned out in their uniforms and made us feel very 
welcome. They are both very knowledgeable about the island, the flora, 
fauna and history. They are also aware of the political importance of 
their presence there. As long as Sevalgem  Grande is inhabited by 
employees of the Natural Parks service, it has status as an island and not just 
a rock in the ocean, this extends Portugal's sovereignty by a radius of an extra 
forty miles out into the Atlantic. Both men are married and looking forward to 
being back home in Funchal. Their only link to the outside world is by a 
short-wave radio that an operator on Madeira can patch to a phone call. Each 
fresh team of wardens is dropped off by ship with three weeks supply 
of food, drinking water and other essentials. Just like most yacht crews they 
wash their dishes in sea water and shower with rain water collected in a tank. 
Electricity comes a bank of batteries topped up by solar panels. Amongst 
other things it powers a TV satellite receiver and the previous evening they had 
watched the Real Madrid 
game.          The 
two wardens took us on a walk over most of the island and up to its' highest 
point from where we could look down at our yachts bobbing around in the swell. 
Ricardo deftly found a scarab and a lizard to show us the only 
endemic species on Sevalgem Grande  apart from the 
Shearwaters.  All too soon it was time to go, the forecast was 
threatening 30 knots of wind and Ricardo had heard over the radio that 
several harbours on the mainland had been closed due to strong winds 
and high waves. They served us coffee while we tried on souvenir 
T-shirts and sent us on our way with a few loaves of surplus bread from their 
freezer. Thanks for showing us around the island, you guys are 
doing a terrific job.  Tel +870 773 156 537   Follow us at  http://blog.mailasail.com/psp2 |