What is Mojo-Zen?

My photo
Mojo-Zen is the collected ramblings of zoologist and cultural explorer, Will Benson.

Friday, 27 August 2010

Into the Zambian bush

So here I am, my new home - the Zambian bush! Following a 1hr hair-raising flight in a bumpy prop' plane (which smelt strangely of the Imperial War Museum, presumably a hint at the age of the plane) from Lusaka to the near non-existent town of Mfuwe, I was met by my beaming driver, Kelvin, to take me the 45 min ride the lodge.

The drive along the red dirt track through the tiny villages was amazing. The smell was just incredible; warm dusty air and the wood smoke from the villages and the charred shrubs burnt back as part of the yearly 'slash n' burn' cycle. Before we even made it to the lodge we saw a group of about 4 lions lounging by the road in the increasing midday heat - I could tell I was going to be happy here.

To make this blog slightly more digestible I'm going to stick to a plan of each week uploading ten of the best photos of my past 7 days and then tell you all a bit about what's been going on - hopefully that way I can share the best of the filming and tracking action our here, as well as giving me a nice and easy guide to stick to (the heat, about 30 degrees, makes my thoughts a little slow you see!

The action so far: Week 1
The amazing sunset I was blessed with on my first night's game drive. The dust kicked up from the parched mid dry-season landscape gives the sunsets out here the most amazing orange glow. Just out of shot was another juvenile giraffe and a tiny baby. This was taken just a few minutes before the adults attempted to cross the river before meeting a croc and deciding to go back the other way.


A hyena making off with the remains of an impala. The kill was actually made by a leopard we had seen only moments earlier, but as is the way with hyena, they must have bullied the lone leopard out of its meal.


Three beautiful lions taking in the sun on the banks of the Luangwa River. We had hoped to drive along this track and down on to the sand, but with these amazing animals blocking our way we had to simply admire them from our vehicle and then head back the other way.

And of course my bush edit suite...this is just part of my double en-suite room, pretty amazing for the African bush!


Self portrait on our morning game drive. We set off from the lodge in one of the game viewing vehicles around 6:30 every morning, just after the sun has come up and the game is beginning to awake. The morning drive lasts for about 3 hours (with a little break for tea, coffee and snacks around 8) and provides amazing light to film the wildlife just as it goes about its morning business.


This is the beautiful dawn sky that greets me everyday, just as the bush begins to stir for another day.


Our evening game drive is from 4 to 8, and even though the light is only good for filming for the first few hours, it's still a beautiful drive, topped off without fail with an amazing pink and orange sunset. The joy of filming with a luxury safari company is that of course every sunset is accompanied by a sun-downer, so most evenings I can be found sinking a couple of G & Ts watching the setting of the Zambian sun....which is nice!



Spot the leopard! The South Luangwa National Park is one of Africa's top locations to see leopard, and I can definitely vouch for this. This is just one of the handful of these amazing cats that I've seen in my first week here, hiding up in a tree to escape the midday heat.


Sometimes I think it would be nice if the wildlife could keep itself to the bush and not follow he home at night! As well as the hippos, hyenas, bushbuck, impala, baboon, monkeys, lion and leopard that are found wandering our camp at night, there is also a veritable menagerie in my room, in the shape of geckos, skinks and horrible spiders.



Wednesday, 18 August 2010

Expedition Zambia is go go go...

Finally the time has nearly come for me to pack my bags once again, and head off into the wilderness. In just five days time I shall be flying to Lusaka in Zambia, where I'll then hop on a precariously tiny aeroplane to Mfuwe in the beautiful South Luangwa National Park, where I will be based for the coming three months.

This filming trip has taken many months of planning, but now all that is left to do is work out how exactly to fit the 80 hours of miniDV tapes, 1500GB of hard drives, 2 cameras, 3 tripods, journals, shot-logs and various field-guides into my backpack.
I hope to add photos and films here as I go, to document this amazing opportunity I have been given to live and film in one of Africa's most incredible and wild, National Parks.

Friday, 30 July 2010

An Experimental Film

As well as old photos, I've rencently located a stash of old videos which I shot on my digital camera when in Borneo in 2008. Instead of simply leaving them to gather digital dust, such is the sad fate of many of my images, I thought I'd edit them together into a short film.

For those technically minded folk out there, these clips were shot on a Fujifilm S5600, and edited on Movie Edit Pro 16.


Monday, 26 July 2010

From The Archives: BORNEO

A selection of shots from an amazing month long trip I made to Borneo's states of Sarawak and Sabah with my eternal traveling companion Brian, in 2008.

(Kuching's waterfront by sunset)

(Proboscis monkey, Bako National Park)

(Brian and me resting in one of the lodges on the trek to the Pinnacles)

(Pitcher plant, Sarawak)

(view from the longhouse, Mulu)

(sun kissed peak from Gunung Kinabalu)

Four men and a Swiss saucepan...

...But these are no ordinary men, and theirs is no ordinary Swiss saucepan.

These four men are four musicians from East London who collectively go by the name of the Portico Quartet. And their Swiss saucepan is actually not a saucepan at all, but a wonderfull pan shaped instrument called the 'hang'.

Shortlisted for the Mercury Music Prize in 2008, and with two fantastic albums out on the shelves of your local HMV, it is definitely time that anyone who has not yet heard of them to check them out.

Below is the first track that I heard from the Portico Quartet that got me hooked on their unique sound...

Mojo-Zen is off to Zambia

When I’m not working for various documentary production companies in London, developing and writing science and factual films, I’m usually hatching my next master plan to go and study, photograph or film something exciting in some remote corner of London/the UK/the World.

In August this year I will be packing my backpack full of camera kit and hopping on a plane to the African wilds of Zambia. My mission: to film and edit a number of short promotional films of the animals, plants, people and scenery of the South Luangwa National Park.

The films will be made for the Bush Camp Company, a safari company who have operated in Zambia for the last 11 years and who lead what are regarded to be the best walking safaris on the continent with some of Africa‘s most experienced guides, including the famous naturalist Phil Berry. I have the amazing luck to be based at their recently refurbished Mfuwe Lodge, overlooking a spectacular ox-box lake (yes these do exist outside GCSE textbooks) in the heart of the unspoilt grassland and miombo woodland of the Luangwa Valley.


During my three month stay I’ll hopefully get a chance to film their walking safaris and game drives, as well as the many conservation initiatives that have been set up through the Bush Camp Company to preserve the amazing habitat and the livelihoods of those who live there.

As I film and photograph the incredible sights and sounds of life in the African bush I will add them here as I go - I look forward to sharing the adventure.

Saturday, 17 July 2010

The Last of the Great Explorers...

I wanted to bring your attention to a living legend that I've been reading about recently. This man is one of a dieing breed - truly one of the last great explorers...

His name is CHARLES BREWER-CARÍAS. A 71 year old explorer, naturalist and author who lives in the jungles of Venezuela and has no intention of retiring. He has 16 plants, three reptiles, two insects and one scorpion named in his honor. He has endured a raft of tropical diseases, including deadly leishmaniasis, a spleen-enlarging ailment caused by the bite of a sand fly.

In 186 expeditions into Venezuela’s backlands, Mr. Brewer-Carías has discovered the world’s largest sinkholes, on a tabletop mountain called Sarisariñama, and practiced dentistry among the Yekuana tribe, whose language he speaks fluently. He once survived by eating roasted termite larvae, and has received the Order of the Liberator award for venturing into jungle at the center of a territorial dispute with neighboring Guyana.

A full list of his current work and past exploits can be found here.

I salute this man...