Saturday, December 12, 2015

hippoPUBamus #11! Saturday, November 7th, 2015

Thanks everyone who joined us this year for hippoPUBamus #11 and/or donated to our hippos, Darrow and Kuchek!

We raised nearly $400 this year, and Karen Paolillo, founder of the Turgwe Hippo Trust which we support in Zimbabwe was so appreciative!  Below is her message to us after we made the donation this year, as well as links where you can find more awesome info about the hippos. Also, there is a link to the photo album from this year's hippoPUBamus and to more photos of the hippos.

Thanks again for a great time and your continued support for the hippos and support of having such a great time together, year in and year out!


Above photo shows Kuchek standing on the far left, and his son Darrow on the right side sleeping next to his mum, Relief.

Email from Karen Paolillo on November 16th:
You are so wonderful.  Your donation came along right at the moment we needed it. The games scouts have caught a lot of poachers over the previous month and we need bonus money to pay them for their efforts, so your donation will go towards paying them and keeping these wild animals safe.  My photo below for my address shows your boy Kuchek on the left standing up, I took it this year.  Darrow is the smallest one sleeping next to Mum Relief near the end on the right.  I will now attach Kuchek’s newsletter followed by:
His photos
Certificate
You are so kind to not only donate but continue to support Kuchek and Darrow and I really hope you know it is people like you that allow us to do what we do here for the animals.

Love and hugs

Karen and Kuchek, Darrow and all the hippos

Karen Paolillo
Founder Turgwe Hippo Trust
facebook Turgwe Hippo Trust
Links of Interest: 

Monday, October 5, 2015

hippoPUBamus #11 info!

Hi friends!

We hope you are getting excited for HippoPUBamus #11 on Saturday, November 7th! Below is a tentative t-shirt and koozie design for the pub crawl. Please let us know your order by October 12th. Last year we raised a record $430 and we hope you can help us exceed that this year!  Also, included below are hippos of Darrow and Kuchek, the hippos we sponsor on the Turgwe Hippo Trust in Zimbabwe. It's gonna be a great time!

Facebook Info Here. Bars, specials, and map to follow!

Here's also a video of one of the hippos and a crocodile





Wednesday, October 22, 2014

hippoPUBamus #10 Info!

Hi hippoPUBamus friends!

We hope you're getting excited for Saturday's 10th Annual HippoPUBamus!  We know we are.


We have the map ready for the pub crawl, which outlines the bars we will visit, the timeline, and specials.

Click on the link below, all the info is there (also listed below for you).  Save it in your phone so you don't get lost, or print a copy for yourself if you're old school like that. If you have questions, let us know.  If you click on the skulls on the map the addresses pop up, with the times of stops and specials.

MAP:


Also, if anyone would like to volunteer to wear a fabulous hippo onesie, please let me know.

If you ordered a t-shirt and would like to pick it up before Saturday night, please let me know. If you are picking it up at the crawl, please try and stop by the Tooey's (the first bar) and snag it. Remember, $20 for the shirt you ordered, and the funds go to support our hippos in Zimbabwe.  Speaking of, apparently one of our hippos, Dizzy, is a wanderer so we will be sponsoring Kuchek again as well as another hippo who is still hanging around the reserve (our hippo lady just happened to email us this update yesterday).  And if you didn't get a shirt you can still donate to the hippos if you are feeling generous.


See you Saturday night!  The fun starts at 6 p.m.  Feel free to invite more friends!  The hippos would want us all to celebrate together. The more the merrier.
Thanks!

The HippoPUBamus planning gang


p.s. most of us have always walked the past 9 years during the HippoPUBs. Of course if you plan to bike, you will just get to the bars faster, but please bike with care. If you need a ride at any point, there's uber, lyft, bus, cabs, and we can help you get any of those if you need. Safety first friends!


10th Anniversary HippoPUBamus route:Note: There is food at almost all of the bars this year, or nearby the bars, so everyone should be able to obtain proper sustenance with their libations (and yes, this even means me).

6:-7:30 p.m. Bar #1: Tooey's, Off ColfaxAddress: 1521 Marion St.Specials: Happy Hour Prices!

7:30-8:30 p.m. Bar #2: Streets of London Pub / VooDoo Doughnut Address: Streets: 1501 E. Colfax; VooDoo: 1520 E. Colfax. These are simultaneous in case you prefer a doughnut over a brew.Specials at Streets: $2 PBR and Shot Special! (I tried to get VooDoo to make us a hippo doughnut but struck out...but I tried

8:45-9:45 p.m. Bar #3: The SquireAddress: 1800 E. Colfax.Specials: $5 Svedka, Jim Beam, or Espolon Tequila. $2 Coors, Coors Light, and PBR Drafts!

10-11:00 p.m. Bar #4: Three LionsAddress: 2239 E. ColfaxSpecials: Great Divide Beers Titan and Collette and Tito's Vodka Specials!

11:15-12:30 p.m Bar #5: 3014/O'Delay Tacos/Beetle BarAddress: 3014 E. ColfaxSpecials: $3 Jager/Fireball; $3 Craft Beer Cans (a dozen choices!); $5 Cinnamon Toast Crunch Shots; $5 Happy Hippo shots (Vanilla vodka and Rumchata)!

12:45-Closing time Bar #6: Atomic Cowboy3237 E. ColfaxSpecials: They have a standing PBR/Whiskey shot special for $5 late night. Also, they are having a dance party and DJ as they are kicking off a donation drive in partnership for Urban Peak on Saturday night that runs through Thanksgiving. Also, there is a costume contest. Seems like a great way to end the 10th annual hippoPUBamus!






Friday, January 3, 2014

2013 HippoPUBamus update!

Happy new year everyone! We know the HippoPUBamus was back in October, but we wanted to give you a short update on the two hippos we sponsor at the Turgwe Hippo Trust in Zimbabwe.

The hippos we adopt are Dizzy, who is almost seven years old now, and her older brother Kuchek who is on the cusp of becoming a teenager. He will turn 13 years old this March.

This year the HippoPUBamus raised nearly $400, all of which we donated to the Turgwe Hippo Trust to sponsor both Dizzy and Kucheck again as well as help with repairs and other costs the Turgwe Hippo Trust currently has, including transporting hay for the hippos and repairing vehicles for the Trust.

Karen Paolillo, the founder of the Turgwe Hippo Trust, sends us biannual updates on Dizzy and Kuchek, and we have shared Dizzy's most recent update below, including a stunning nighttime photo of the siblings spending quality family time together.



Kuchek in foreground and Dizzy behind him taking a rest at the hay


Dizzy, alongside all of Robin’s family, is now regularly being fed at one of the two feeding stations next to our home Hippo Haven.  For the first time in 21 years I have had to feed the hippos again. The drought is not as bad as in 1992 but even so I will be feeding for five months.

Dizzy was one of the first hippos, alongside her brother Kuchek and Cheeky, to feed.  Cheeky fed back in 92, so obviously remembered that sometimes humans can be useful and knew what to do, taking to the food within a couple of days.

Dizzy was the second hippo to take advantage of this artificial feeding and now spends every night with the rest of Robin’s family happily munching away.

I feed Rhodes grass hay as the main bulk to fill their huge tummies, as well as survival ration and horse cubes as the added protein which holds all the goodness they need to maintain a healthy condition.  Dizzy is actually very funny as she was the first of the hippos to lie down next to the hay while feeding. The photo above shows her and her brother Kuchek taking a rest from eating to lie on the hay. Hippos normally feed at night and rest wherever they are grazing, so this is very normal. I have seen through the trail camera that I leave next to their food, that they arrive at the hay about ten minutes after we have left, which is at dark and at about six thirty pm and then they stay the entire night at the two feeding stations. They take time off to have a nap and then feed again. At around five a.m. they go back to the river into their pool.  Here they then spend the entire morning digesting and sleeping, which at this moment is usually on land, lying in the sun on the sandy banks of the river. This allows me to check their condition and see their overall appearance.  I have noticed that they are slowly beginning to gain a bit of weight, which is fantastic.

I have slowly increased the amount of hay and other goodies and at this moment the family of 11 hippos is consuming 14 bales of hay, 50kg of Survival ration and 10 kg of horse cubes each night.  This will probably increase as it gets hotter and dryer and we move into the extreme heat of October and November.

Dizzy is still the most curious of people amongst all the Turgwe Hippos and she loves to be photographed. When I take the volunteers or visitors down to the pool in the river to meet the hippos it is always Dizzy who comes the closest to us all.  Her family members have always been gentle hippos and even her brother Kuchek, who is a young bull, is a quiet and gentle male and has a lovely character.  Dizzy could get pregnant this year as she is at the age where many of the Turgwe Hippos have had their first calf. I believe that her best friend Kiboko is pregnant as she is beginning to show signs that she could be, but we will only know for sure around the last month of pregnancy as hippos hardly ever show that they are having a calf until the last moment.

Dizzy still spends a lot of time next to her brother on land and in the water, and they seem to have a very close bond. Their mother Mystery is still living 14 km away with her new son Monty, and Chubby the young male.  She visited here once this year but seems to prefer being with Chubby, which is I am sure due to the fact that her calf is a male.  Dizzy thankfully has decided to remain living here with Kuchek and not join her mother further away. 

She thanks you as her foster parent for caring about her life and supporting her.

The Turgwe Hippo Trust was started in the early 1990s when the hippos' lives were in danger due to a devastating drought in the southeast Lowveld area of Zimbabwe. Karen and her husband set up a water supply and feeding program to help save the hippos at that time and have continued to protect the hippos during times of drought and from the threat of poachers.

Denver's Own HippoPUBamus is an annual pub crawl that began in 2005 as the brain child of a small group of friends who, after hiking Bierstadt 14er, decided we needed to offset all that exercise and start a pub crawl. Combining a love of hippos with a catchy name, the HippoPUBamus was born! We collect donations from friends and from t-shirt sales to sponsor Dizzy and Kuchek. We hope you can join us in Fall 2014 for our 10th anniversary!

Tuesday, June 11, 2013

Update on our Hippos! Dizzy and Kuchek

As most attendees of the annual HippoPUBamus pub crawl know, the extra money we garner from hippoPUB crawl t-shirts is donated to the Turgwe Hippo Trust in Zimbabwe. A few times a year, Karen Paolillo, founder, sends us updates on the two hippos we sponsor, Dizzy and Kucheck. 

Below are their stories written by Karen, as well as recent photos.  We hope you enjoy reading about their status and are looking forward to the 9th annual hippoPUBamus coming sometime this fall!

DIZZY 



Dizzy, alongside her brother Kuchek, Robin, and the rest of the group have moved yet again to a new pool in the Turgwe River.  Last year they lived on the Mokore side of the Turgwe in a pool more or less opposite their normal one next to Hippo Haven.  This year, thanks to late rains falling in abundance over a very short period, the river came down in a huge flood.


This created two new pools about half a mile downstream from the Trust’s headquarters.  These pools are still in the Turgwe River and are at a place called the Chlabata pools.  They used to be decent pools before 2000 when the land invasions commenced within Zimbabwe.  


When the people took over certain areas within the Conservancy, the Chlabata pools were part of the invaded sections. The hippos were daily harassed by these illegal settlers.  We caught them throwing rocks at the hippos as well as using catapults, and when we tried to explain that this was not a very sensible way to behave they were just as aggressive towards us. Sensibly the hippos left the area altogether and have not been back there for eleven years. 



This year is the first time the pools are deep again and the people at present are not coming there as they have water inland so do not need to visit that specific area for their water requirements.  I just hope that when they return the hippos will once more come back to the pools closer to Hippo Haven where they are perfectly safe and we can protect them.  I will keep a vigil on them while they are at Chlabata, hoping to prevent any kind of aggression towards them if the people return there.  This is all part and parcel of what happened to this wildlife area when it was illegally invaded.  The poaching became a daily event and harassment of animals like the hippos a regular occurrence.  I obviously worry non stop about them at this spot, especially for the tiny baby Banky.  Yet Cheeky, Banky’s mother, knows the area well and at the first sign of people not being pleasant I am sure she and the others will return to our area.  Dizzy has never come across this kind of human behavior so I hope for her sake she will be spared anything in that line and they will just find lots of people in their area unsettling and return quickly to Hippo Haven.



As they are wild animals I cannot just make them come back to a secure place, but like any animal they are far from stupid and I believe will come home.  Dizzy’s mother, Mystery, moved with her calf to Chubby’s pool which is also utilized by these illegal settlers and she learnt to keep a very low profile, tucking herself and her baby up in the reeds. Nowadays she stays there for most of the daylight hours.  She likes it better there as I believe her new calf is a male.  So it is safer with just a young male like Chubby than here alongside his brother Kuchek, and Robin the bull.



Dizzy is such a friendly hippo with such a trusting character that I would hate for any human to be cruel to her. Maybe the water will actually become too shallow and they will move home before they have any problems with the settlers.  Dizzy is very independent; her closest friend is Kiboko, another female of the same age and often the two of them can be found lying together, resting their head on each other’s body.



She thanks you as her foster parent for caring about her life and supporting her. Without these hippo adoptions we would not be able to help the hippos as we do.  The adoptions pay for the regular daily outgoings that the Trust has to have in order to exist and fulfill our role as protectors of these amazing animals.


KUCHEK




Kuchek and the rest of the hippos in Robin’s family group have all moved to a new pool this year. It is actually in the main channel of the river in the area called the Chlabata pools. This is a place where the hippos used to live regularly up until 2001. At that time the land was illegally invaded by people who mainly came into this wildlife area to poach but under the umbrella of land resettlement. Although it was agreed by government that it was a mistake for the people to invade this wildlife Conservancy they are still here 12 years later.



This invasion meant that two of the hippos main areas suddenly had people utilizing the river for washing purposes as well as to water their domestic livestock, cattle and goats.  The people at that time were extremely aggressive towards us and the animals and so they chased the hippos away from the pools by throwing rocks at them and daily harassing them.



Now 12 years later the hippos this year moved back there. This was due mainly to an enormous amount of rain falling in a very short period of two weeks and allowing old pools to have the sand and silt washed out of them.  The hippos have always liked that area so they moved back.  Fortunately up until now the people have hardly come back to the river as they have had water inland but they are slowly beginning to filter back.  What this means is I am keeping a careful watch over the hippos hoping that this time they will be left in peace.  There is enough water in that channel for the people to use the bottom pool and leave the hippos nearer to our home alone.  If they do harass them then the hippos I am sure will return to Hippo Haven which is only half a kilometer upstream.



Kuchek is not old enough to remember all of the problems as he was born in March 2001 and the people actually invaded our area in October 2001.  He is very happily living still with Robin the bull.  The entire family now numbers 11 hippos as one female Relief has returned.  Relief has been gone for three years but it is not unusual for a Turgwe Hippo to move away and then return at a later stage.  In her case her mother is Cheeky and she seems to want to care for Banky, Cheeky’s new son, as she is constantly with him.



Much to my amazement Kuchek and Robin are behaving themselves in Banky’s presence as often bulls will threaten a new male calf.  Cheeky even initially took Banky to live upstream with Tembia the bull’s family and they too accepted him which is very unusual. 



Kuchek seems to like Banky as often they will be close to each other and I have never seen him or Robin threaten the calf, which is lovely.  Kuchek is now maturing and often Robin will leave him in the river pool while Robin goes away for a short period. Robin is getting on in years now and I think at times he likes to be on his own away from all the other hippos and so then Kuchek is the bull in charge. Although I have not seen him use his authority as he defers to Tacha and Cheeky the two females.  They like to dominate and originally it was Cheeky who appeared to be the dominant female but of late Tacha has taken over this role.  Kuchek just minds his own business and lets the females get on with it.



This year I will need to feed the hippos again as for the first time in over 21 years we have hardly any grass, and it is only May just at  the end of the rains.  The land where the hippos graze is covered with mainly weeds.  The hippos have managed to put weight on again and do not look too bad at all. Yet once we get into the hotter dry months which is around September that will not be the case.  So I am planning to feed them a diet of hay and a mixture of other things called survival ration, which contains cotton seed and other ingredients suitable for them, as well as horse cubes. 



This will be an extremely expensive undertaking.  The last time I did this was in the horrendous drought of 1992 and then I only fed 13 hippos and 58 other wild animals.  This time there are 21 hippos to feed and a lot more wild animals. I am hoping to be able to raise enough money to do this from August until the hopeful new rains in late November/December. I will need all the help I can get from the hippos adopted parents as well as any person who is keen to save these animals lives.


Please spread the word about this need and if you can come up with any fund raising ideas to help the Turgwe Hippos it would be so much appreciated.



In the meantime Kuchek thanks you as his foster parent for caring about his life.