ID'ing Elephants: A Blog By Lesli Woodruff

ID’ing Elephants: A Blog By Lesli Woodruff

Van 6 tot 16 april 2026 kregen vrijwilligers een unieke kans om in de huid van een olifantenonderzoeker te kruipen in het Zuid-Afrikaanse Kariega Game Reserve. In samenwerking met de Kariega Foundation en Bring The Elephant Home (BTEH) hielpen zij als assistenten bij het observeren van wilde olifanten. Zo droegen ze direct bij aan natuurbescherming, terwijl ze deze indrukwekkende dieren van dichtbij ervaarden. Vrijwilliger Lesli Woodruff schreef over dit bijzondere avontuur een blog, die je hieronder kunt lezen (in het Engels).

ID’ing Elephants: Year 3

Two years ago, I had the privilege of doing an elephant research program with Bring the Elephant Home at the Kariega Game Reserve in the Eastern Cape of South Africa. We spent 10 days living and (literally) breathing elephants. Suffice to say that I was hooked! The focus of that program was research on herd and individual behavior after dropping internal fences at the Kariega Game Reserve.  I wrote about that first trip here. A year later I was back, where the focus was on individual ID and data collection for an AI app we were beginning to develop. More on that later.

So now I’m back in South Africa for a 3rd volunteer expedition. I’m happy to report that the herds seem to be thriving. Here are some initial observations from this go-round:

More Mingling

We spent an hour watching 3+ herds come together and intermingle in a vibrant green valley one afternoon. Bukela, Beauty, Half Moon, their herds, the other minor matriarchs, and their herds socialized as Vula, in full musth, surveyed his new domain. It was an amazing sight to see 60+ of these magnificent beasts in one panorama.

So. Much. Joy

Without anthropomorphizing (interpreting an animal’s behavior as if it feels exactly like a human) too much, I’d say the individual elephants look joyful. After the meet-and-greet in the valley, a parade of elephants marched from there to the nearby watering hole. We watched elephants of all sizes frolic, blow bubbles, roll in the mud, socialize, bob, spray, dunk, and splash. There is no doubt in my mind that elephants love a good mud wallow. And even Vula dunked and played, musth and all. All of us in the vehicle were ear-to-ear grinning; the joy, contagious!

Kambaku left a Legacy, or 6

We spotted at least 5 new calves, born between Oct-Dec. Elephants have a 22-month gestation period, so it’s highly likely that these are Kambaku’s offspring. Elephant cows (females) prefer to mate with the most mature bull even if others are in musth. His legacy lives on.

Balu is growing into his own

It’s no mystery that my favorite elephant here is Balu. He is an adult bull, about 25 years old, with wavy ears and a cute, almost mischievous smile to his face. That spunkiness may get him in trouble, though, as he was also in musth this week. When we spotted him in the valley at the herd convention, he was very interested in the females until Vula stormed in and pushed him out. It was a scary moment or two for Balu, but he got the message and left. Fingers crossed he stays out of Vula’s way until their musth is over.

Technology to the rescue

The other update is our new mobile app. My real job is as a Learning Strategist on Microsoft’s Healthcare Copilot products. After the first program I attended, I was convinced that there had to be a way to use AI for elephant identification. One hackathon and a couple of years later, a small (but mighty) team of colleagues and I are partnering with the Microsoft AI for Good LabConservation X Labs/WildMe, and Bring The Elephant Home to create an AI-powered elephant re-ID mobile app. Re-ID is the science of identifying and monitoring a species in its natural habitat. We tested a prototype of the app in the field during this trip, and we’ll be iterating and building over the coming weeks and months to fine-tune and launch. We’re sure that a mobile re-ID app will help citizen scientists and researchers alike identify and learn about the individuals and herds at their reserve.

Bedankt, Lesli!

Een grote dank aan Lesli Woodruff voor het schrijven en delen van haar bijzondere ervaringen in het Kariega Game Reserve. Dankzij haar persoonlijke verslag krijgen we een unieke inkijk in de samenwerking tussen de Kariega Foundation en Bring The Elephant Home.

Wil je meer lezen over Lesli’s avonturen of haar eerdere expedities met BTEH ontdekken? Bezoek dan haar website: lesliwoodruff.com/category/africa

Daarnaast willen we Lesli’s partners bedanken, wiens steun en technologie dit werk mede mogelijk maken: Microsoft AI for Good Lab en Conservation x Labs / WildMe. Samen maken we het verschil voor de olifanten in Zuid-Afrika!

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