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Danger in the Dust

Page 6

by Sally Grindley


  ‘What’s India like?’ Joe asked.

  Their mother, Binti, who was an international vet, had just announced that they were going to spend time there while she helped with research into why vulture numbers were declining to such an extent that they were becoming endangered.

  ‘It’s hot and noisy and chaotic and full of wonderful smells and there’s an amazing photo to be taken every few seconds,’ Peter told him.

  Joe perked up at the idea of that. He had his very own camera and wanted to follow in his father’s footsteps as a wildlife photographer.

  ‘So why are vultures in India endangered?’ Aesha wanted to know. ‘We saw lots of them when we were in Africa.’

  ‘It seems they may be sensitive to a drug used to treat cattle,’ Binti replied.

  ‘Vultures don’t eat cattle, do they?’ said Joe.

  ‘Yes, they do,’ said Binti. ‘When cattle die, farmers take their carcasses to a communal place and leave them for vultures and other scavengers to pick over. Traces of the drug have been found in some carcasses, and there appears to be a link between that and the dramatic reduction in vulture numbers.’

  ‘So they need to stop using the drug,’ said Aesha. ‘Job done.’ She pushed back her chair and collected the dirty plates.

  ‘If only it were that simple,’ said Binti. ‘Farmers rely on certain drugs to keep their cattle healthy. And cattle are vital to the farmers’ livelihoods.’

  ‘It’s never simple, is it, Mum?’ Joe commented.

  Foggy the dog woke from his slumber under the table and nestled his head on Joe’s knee.

  ‘So many things depend on other things, don’t they, Foggy?’ he continued.

  ‘Upset one cog in a finely tuned engine and the whole lot grinds to a halt,’ his father agreed. ‘It’s the same with the natural world, and it’s usually man’s interference that causes the problem.’

  ‘Sometimes human beings are so dumb. We do so much damage to the world around us.’ Aesha sounded as if she’d rather not be human. Joe often wondered if she was an alien rather than his sister.

  ‘Sometimes a perfectly innocent pursuit can cause problems,’ said Binti. ‘One of the things that’s not helping the vulture population in India is kite-flying. That’s the main reason for my trip.’

  ‘Kite-flying!’ Joe was incredulous. ‘How can kite-flying affect vultures?’

  ‘It probably scares them!’ said Aesha.

  ‘It’s worse than that. January the fourteenth is the annual International Kite Festival in Ahmedabad, where we’re staying. Everyone flies kites to celebrate Uttarayan – the end of winter and beginning of summer,’ Binti explained. ‘They cover the strings of the kites with ground glass, which makes them sharp. The idea is that kite-flyers target rival kites and try to cut them out of the sky. Sadly, large numbers of vultures get caught up in the strings.’

  Joe grimaced at the thought of what could happen to the vultures.

  ‘Mum, that’s awful!’ Aesha cried. ‘Surely not many vultures would fly into them, would they?’

  ‘Yes, unfortunately – especially since the festival covers such a huge area,’ said Peter. ‘Your mother will be helping to save the injured birds while we’re there.’

  Joe looked at his mother with pride. Not only did his mother come from Tanzania, which meant he was half-African, but he and Aesha were lucky enough to travel the world because of their parents’ professions. It’s so cool having an international vet for a mum, he thought.

  Chapter 2

  The next few days passed in a whirl as Joe and his family prepared themselves for their trip. Joe was excited about all the opportunities he would have to take photographs, and the more he thought about the kite festival, the more he wanted his own kite to fly.

  ‘I wouldn’t want to put glass on the string because of the vultures, but it would be so cool to fly a kite with everyone else,’ he said to his mother and father, hoping they would agree and buy him one.

  They arrived at the boarding kennels and said their goodbyes to Foggy, who trotted off happily enough as soon as he spotted another dog in the distance.

  Their last stop was Peter’s favourite photographic shop, where he stocked up on equipment to take the amazing wildlife photographs that hung on the walls of their house and appeared in newspapers and magazines. Joe gazed enthusiastically at the cabinets and shelves with their displays of cameras in all shapes and sizes, as well as lenses and leads, cases and batteries. There was so much more to taking a photograph than pointing a camera and pressing a button.

  As they left the shop, Peter handed Joe a small package. ‘It’s a zoom lens for your camera,’ he said. ‘You’ll need it for photographing those kites . . .’

  OUT NOW

  Also by Sally Grindley

  Paw Prints in the Snow

  Shadows under the Sea

  Feathers in the Wind

  My Name Is Rose

  Bitter Chocolate

  Torn Pages

  Broken Glass

  Spilled Water

  Saving Finnegan

  Hurricane Wills

  Feather Wars

  Bloomsbury Publishing, London, New Delhi, New York and Sydney

  First published in Great Britain in July 2013 by Bloomsbury Publishing Plc

  50 Bedford Square, London WC1B 3DP

  This electronic edition published in July 2013 by Bloomsbury Publishing Plc

  Manufactured and supplied under licence from the Zoological Society of London

  Text copyright © Sally Grindley 2013

  The moral right of the author has been asserted

  Licensed by Bright Group International

  www.thebrightagency.com

  With thanks to ZSL’s conservation team

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  may be liable to criminal prosecution and civil claims for damages

  e-ISBN 978 1 4088 2653 9

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