Oregon Writer Pens Cover Story in Smithsonian Magazine about West African Giraffes
October 24, 2008 (Ashland, Ore.)—Time spent with free-roaming West African giraffes on the plains of West Africa landed Oregon writer, Jennifer Margulis, Ph.D., the cover story of the November issue of Smithsonian Smithsonian is one of the country’s most respected publications.
Margulis first observed the West African giraffes 15 years ago, according to Smithsonian’s Executive Director Carey Winfrey.
Niger, a parched country
“Margulis has been interested in Niger’s free-roaming giraffes for some fifteen years, ever since she lived in that parched country working for a nonprofit development agency in 1992 and 1993,” Winfrey wrote in the magazine’s profile of the author.
Niger’s giraffes, Giraffa camelopardalis peralta, are the last giraffes anywhere in Africa that live side by side with villagers in their natural habitat.
They are not on protected nature reserve, like giraffes elsewhere in Africa.
West African giraffes are an the verge of extinction
Though the exotic creates are on the verge of extinction, Margulis’ article captures a hopeful tone for their survival. The last census data shows that the herd is healthy and the population is on the rise. Despite a scarcity of resources and a hostile environment, the giraffes seem to be thriving.
“This article took over a year to write and research,” says Margulis. “On Thanksgiving Day last year I was on the top of a 4X4 following giraffes in the bush.”
Margulis’ story depicts scenes of a remote, parched, yet beautiful place that few Americans have heard of and even fewer have visited.
While the picturesque descriptions are reminiscent of our romantic images of the desert, much of the article is surprising, like Margulis’s description of parka-wearing guides setting out in searing heat in search of the towering animals.
We’re looking for some of the only giraffes in the world that roam entirely in unprotected habitat,” Margulis wrote. “Though it’s well over 90 degrees Fahrenheit by 10 a.m., the guides find it chilly and are wearing parkas, and one of them, Kimba Idé, has pulled a blue woolen toque over his ears. Idé bangs on the windshield with a long stick to direct the driver: left, right, right again. Frantic tapping means slow down. Pointing into the air means speed up. But it’s hard to imagine going any faster…”
Margulis lives in Ashland, Ore., with her husband and three children. The whole family trekked together through Africa during Margulis’ year in Niger as a Fulbright Scholar from 2006 – 2007.
Over two million readers
According to senior editor Terry Monmaney, Smithsonian boasts a circulation of over two million readers. The print edition of the magazine is being shipped to stores this week. The article is available as of last night on the internet: http://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/giraffe.html
“I’ve written for many publications, but this cover story, with its beautiful look and brilliant photos is something I am extremely proud of,” Margulis said of the accomplishment.
A profile of Margulis is also in the magazine, penned by Winfrey in his Editor’s Note column.
Margulis, who used to write a weekly column in the Ashland Daily Tidings, has won several awards for her work, including an Independent Publishers Book Association Award. She has appeared live on prime-time TV in France and has also published articles in the New York Times, the Washington Post, Ms Magazine, and Military History Quarterly.
She is the author of two books about parenting: Why Babies Do That and The Baby Bonding Book for Dads (with James di Properzio), she’s also the editor and co-author of Toddler: Real-Life Stories of Those Fickle, Irrational, Urgent, Tiny People We Love and of a classroom edition of an 18th-century American play, Slaves in Algiers, about white slaves in North Africa.
More information about the author can be found here.
Laura Helmuth is the Smithsonian editor responsible for the article about West African giraffes. Photos available upon request.
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Published: October 24, 2008
Updated: January 28, 2024
Holly says
Congrats, Jennifer! Smithsonian is my sister’s absolute FAVORITE magazine — I’ll have to brag to her that I know one of its writers!!