By Jeff Hemphill - NDP Intern 2016 Jun.
From
countless days being spent on the water fishing to the sun soaked days drinking
cold beer on the white sand beaches of Florida, I have grown a strong passion
for marine wildlife and the environment in which it inhabits. When I arrived at
university I seemingly ignored this passion and began my path to engineering,
because of course that’s where all the money is. Soon after I realized I had
gone the wrong direction and switched over to something a little more
comfortable in Environmental Science. This door opened up a world of
opportunities and I began looking into internships to further my path and see
where it could take me. Towards the end of 2015 I happened to come across a few
opportunities on a conservation website and figured I’d go ahead and see if I
could land one. The Namibian Dolphin Project happened to email me back with a
return email saying that they’d love to have me join their cetacean research
team. This kind of threw me off though. My ignorance of Africa immediately
kicked in and I became utterly confused as to where in the world I had just
applied to go. After a few months of preparation, excitement, and 48 hours of
flying I found myself landing in the middle of an African desert to be filed
into a hut of an airport. The thoughts started popping into my head of what in
the heck did I just get myself into?
Soon
after getting settled into the cottage I realized my ideology of Africa was
completely wrong. The views from the back porch were of a beautiful lagoon teeming
with wildlife. The only thing that really puzzled me was the weather. Was I in
Walvis Bay, Namibia? Or Seattle, Washington? Thank goodness I brought my winter
clothes (basically every jacket I own). The first week we unfortunately
couldn’t get on the water due to the high winds and misty mornings, but soon
after being trained and getting some formal background we were finally able to
get some good research in. Boat days consisted of early, cold mornings waiting
or the mist to clear, but once it did we got to see some amazing things.
My
first boat day I was absolutely amazed with the high jumping Heaviside’s
Dolphins. We just happened to catch them at a time when they were full of
energy and doing some awesome tricks (not so easy to photo ID). A few boat days
had gone by and they kept promising that bottlenose would be around soon, but I
seemed to be having no luck. Until my first encounter came about. This happened
to be another extremely impressive day where the bottlenose were very energetic
and fortunately not only did I get some good photo ID, but also got some really
cool jumping pictures. These guys were not like the smaller cousins in the
Florida panhandle. They were huge! I was blown away by the size of them,
especially when they would jump right next to the boat.
From
this internship I gained a lot of very useful knowledge and research
experience. The team members here taught me the basic techniques of photo
identification, some in depth acoustics data interpretation, as well as some
boat and life skills. A huge thanks to everyone for being patient and very
helpful with us interns and giving us some ground to get our careers under our
feet!
Jeff taking some photos of dolphins in Namibia