News

Industries

Companies

Jobs

Events

People

Video

Audio

Galleries

My Biz

Submit content

My Account

Advertise with us

Tourism & Travel News South Africa

Subscribe & Follow

Advertise your job vacancies
    Search jobs

    Bird watching in Soweto with birdman Raymond Rampolokeng

    Raymond Rampolokeng brings the binoculars into focus as he pans the riverbank. The nearby hubbub of Soweto hums in the distance, but his intense concentration guards the moment in a veil of silence. How he'd love to catch a glimpse of a Cape Sparrow, the indigenous bird to which he feels such a special connection.
    Image: . Raymond Rampolokeng
    Image: Beautiful News. Raymond Rampolokeng

    Soweto might not boast the exotic, colourful allure of forest birds or the majesty of eagles, but the wetlands that dissect the urban sprawl are still home to a gorgeous array of airborne life. For Rampolokeng, the area’s first ever bird guide, the humble sparrow holds his gaze the longest. Unassuming and often taken for granted, he sees much of himself in its nature.

    Rampolokeng was unemployed when he came into contact with the Wits Bird Club and Birdlife SA while volunteering at Soweto Mountain of Hope. The former groups gave him the chance to take part in a bird guide course that changed everything.

    “Who would have thought that bird watching could take place in Soweto,” muses Rampolokeng, who is now affectionately known as the Birdman of Soweto. After working for Birdlife SA as a community biodiversity conservation project coordinator for four years, the Gauteng local made history when he launched Bay of Grace Tours, his hometown’s first birding tourism company.

    “I’m very much like a bird,” he explains. “I’m colourful and also reserved. However, I just come to life when I get to the outdoors.” Birds have not only given Rampolokeng a source of income, but a means to showcase the wild side of urban tourism.

    Watch the video.

    Beautiful News

    Let's do Biz