Who Is Ashley Vosper and Where Is He Going?
Category: About the project, people | Date: May 21 2007 | By: admin
Ashley working on his laptop under an unfinished hut.
Ashley is an unpresuming Brit , who understates most everything and speaks in a heavy “brogue”. He disagrees. Smiling sweetly he says its “blarney” not “brogue”. Anyway the rest of us are always saying “What? Would you repeat that one“. Here in Kinshasa, the capital, however, the language challenge for Ashley is French. Hard to get by without it. Ashley’s deformation of the simplest French phrases would raise the hair on a Parisian cat.
But, however he talks, and really it is not too much, Ashley is the right person for this job. The job: exploration of the least known track of forest in Congo. Where? Dead center: Congo’s darkest heart, south of Kisangani, west of the Lualaba River, 250 km east of the largest forest park on the African continent: Salonga National Park. Ash will explore this equatorial forest drained by the Lomami River , mystery forest. No reports – even from colonial times – just google map satellite images.
Why are no more people living along the Lomami? Why is this blanket of forest so unknown? Well, no roads. And there has never been much population there, so missionaries never got established. Not enough souls to save. No missionaries means no airstrips, no schools, no health care. But the truth is we don’t know why there are so few people there.
Why didn’t the government put in health care and elementary schools? Those basic institutions would have brought more people. True, but the government never has made that sort of investment. One explanation is that it has never had the chance. There was war at independence, a war that lasted years. And there was war from the mid-90s right through the first half-decade of this century. But another explanation is that it wasn’t a priority… there were plenty of other priorities in what was a failing economy and a failing nation-state.
Maybe that will change now. Maybe. There’s a new Congolese government, just elected at the end of last year-2006.
But no waiting, the area has hardly been touched by the 20th century let alone the 21st and now is the time for exploration. Ashley already has the satellite phones, compasses, GPS’s and malaria cures ready… The outboard has been bought. All that is needed is a huge dugout. Last purchase, we’ll make it next week in Kisangani. And of course, we’ll post the photo.
Terese Hart


9 Responses to “Who Is Ashley Vosper and Where Is He Going?”
Searching the Elusive Bonobo in Congo » Blog Archive » The dugout crew down the Lomami, DR Congo, on 26 May 2007
[…] is this crew? Most were with Ashley on his search for bonobo in the Salonga National Park. Here’s Ashley’s take on […]
Margie Riley, on 27 May 2007
Hi Ash, this BLOG is interesting stuff, keep up the good work, good luck in ur search, Love Margie NZ
Searching the Elusive Bonobo in Congo » Blog Archive » Why the Lomami River?, on 31 May 2007
[…] could say Ashley, the leader, is pushing off for adventure. I could say the appeal is that huge blank (about 60,000 […]
Mike Riley, on 12 Jun 2007
Hi Ashley (from your kiwi cousin). Looks like all is going well. We distribute the news. Stay well. Mike Riley.
Searching the Elusive Bonobo in Congo » Blog Archive » Diamonds are North -- Okapi Too, on 13 Jun 2007
[…] Ashley searched for the perfect pirogue in Kisangani – I headed NORTH into diamond […]
Searching the Elusive Bonobo in Congo » Blog Archive » Who is Terese and why is she writing here?, on 19 Jun 2007
[…] I am now coordinator of the TL2 project (Tshuapa-Lomami-Lualaba project). I work closely with Ashley, who is now paddling up the Lomami and keeping us updated in this blog. But you will read me here, […]
jenny vosper, on 12 Dec 2007
Keep up the great work and stay safe.jenxx
Jeff Rycroft, on 23 Mar 2008
Keep on doing the good work that you always wanted to do. Keep safe from a special 14th floor Trowbridge mate
Lindy Grant, on 24 Mar 2008
You are doing so well Ash. We are all so proud of you over here in the UK
Trackback URI | Comments RSS
Leave a Reply