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Another Year of Generous Support from Jockey Club Sarah Roe School Community
We are so proud of the wonderful support from the School Community of the Jockey Club Sarah Roe School. The latest donation was a wonderful HK$7,195 from the recent Walkathon. The photographs below speak for themselves, but it never fails to make us very proud that JCSRS staff and students, as well as the school community as a whole, continue to support us.
Please note the wonderful photographs from the Walkathon below :-
The funds helped us raise the HKD 50,000 we needed to send as a Christmas surprise to the Tasikoki Wildlife Rescue and Education Centre in December. This donation enabled all the 500 + rescued animals to be fed for a month. It also allowed the wonderful volunteers, led by Sylvia Gan, to provide wonderful additional enrichment for the animals too!
Many students from HK and elsewhere visit the centre and they assist in the care as well as the preparation of enrichment for these animals. We hope that later this year one of the school groups that visit from HK will give a talk about their experience to the school community at the JCSRS.
Adrienne, from Masarang HK, gave a talk to staff and students recently. We wanted to thank the school community for their kind long-term support and to give an update on the projects. She talked about the sea turtle projects as well as the many rescued animals at the Tasikoki Wildlife Rescue and Education Centre, run by the Masarang Foundation. She also updated the JCSRS Community on the orangutans at the Sintang Orangutan Centre. Adrienne awarded an orangutan doll to the class that raised the most funds from sponsorship for the Walkathon. She also donated an orangutan doll to the school as a gesture of our grateful thanks for all the wonderful long-term support. The dolls are made by a women’s collective that partners with the Sintang Orangutan Centre. The project aims to help to empower the women in the group as well as raise funds for the orangutan project and was initiated and supported by Masarang HK.
Please find this link to the article in the school magazine about the talk: https://www.jcsrs.edu.hk/04-october-2019/
Thank you very much.
Please find some photos from the talk below:-
Kung Hei Fat Choy! We wish you a Healthy, Happy 2020
Link to Latest Masarang Foundation and Sintang Orangutan Centre NewsLetter
Allow me to introduce…Manfred!
Name : Manfred
Sex : Male
Age : 1.7 year old
Arrival date : 13/03/2019
Condition at arrival
at the Sintang Orangutan Center : severe malnutrition and dehydration
Present condition at SOC : health
The West Kalimantan forestry police asked our Sintang Orangutan Center (SOC) staff to help them investigate information on and evacuate a small orangutan that was illegally kept in the village of Nanga Awin. Arriving there after a 5-hour journey with the project’s terrain vehicle the information turned out to be correct. In a simple wooden house behind the local church a small very sick male baby orangutan was discovered in a very small fish trap!
The moment that doctor Jati of the Sintang Orangutan Center encounters Manfred in the simple wooden house of the local Dayak hunter. Notice how small the fish trap is and how the baby has nothing else but sugar water
It turned out that the owner, a local Dayak, had caught the baby in a very remote watershed up the Kapuas river from the city of Putussibau. He did not give any more details, except that the forest there is still in a very good condition and he and his friends normally go fishing and hunting there. As usual they checked their snares to see if any wild boar had been caught and that is when he found the baby with its hand in the snare. He claims that there was no mother to be seen but there were long hairs of an adult orangutan there. The Dayaks know about several people having been jailed for killing and eating orangutans as was published in the newspapers so they will make up stories. Almost certainly the mother was also trapped in the snare that must have had some ripe fruit in it to attract the wild boars. And almost certainly the mother was killed and eaten by the hunters.
The “owner” had had Manfred for almost three months when the forestry police and our team showed up in his house. The man had Christian tattoos and proclaimed to be a Catholic. He had basically only kept the baby alive by giving it water with sugar, sometimes water with forest honey. He kept the baby almost all the time in that fish trap as you can see in the pictures here.
When SOC vet Dr Jati took him out of the trap the baby tried to crawl away but ended up almost fainting at the kitchen rack. We should not have come a day later… The hand of little Manfred that still had some snare material in the flesh was treated that very same night he arrived with doctor Jati at our orangutan clinic in Sintang. Unfortunately, doctor Jati was not able to save one finger of his left hand and that had to be amputated.
The “owner” asked to be paid for the cost of keeping the baby alive, which of course was not going to happen! The forestry police finished the legal documents and doctor Jati took little Manfred with him. Manfred refused to be held but did want to sit in one of the other vets, Dr Vicktor’s, neck where he could hold on to his hair the way an orangutan baby hangs on to its mother.
Fortunately thanks to the good care of our medical team Manfred recovered quickly from the severe malnutrition and dehydration. He is still very wild, not wanting to be held, but has gained much confidence as manifested by the tiny little cheekpads he developed at the center after he was put together with some other orangutan babies. His best friend and protector is Tom, another orangutan baby that is slightly older than Manfred. Tom will let nobody come close to Manfred, unless Eni, one of our Dayak baby sitters for the orangutans, plays with Tom first and then Manfred will join in.
Manfred always stays high in his enclosure except during meal times, when he does come down to enjoy the food, very slowly and deliberately. He is also already pretty good at making nests with the fresh branches our staff bring every day into their socialization cage.
With a clean bill of health and natural behaviour we feel confident that Manfred will do well in the various stages that he has to go through before he can be released back in the forests of the national park of Betung Kerihun. We work with local Dayaks in this region and try to empower them to change their hunting practices by getting education opportunities and jobs with our SOC project. In return the local Dayak people help us prevent other people from entering the national park.
A big thank you to the supporter, whose generous donation paid for the many years of care that baby Manfred will go through in our Sintang Orangutan Center.
Willie Smits
Wishing you a very Happy New Year! Thank You for Your Interest and Support in 2019
SEASON GREETINGS
Wishing all our friends and supporters a Merry Christmas and a Happy 2020
Masarang Hongkong Volunteer Team