125: All's Well With Boswell



2021 Audi A4 facelift review, test drive. Follow us on 4 th Jan 2021 10:00 am. Back after a long break, Audi’s most popular sedan brings with it a fresh new look, a new engine and some new tech too. Study Help Full Glossary for Fahrenheit 451 All's well that is well in the end a paraphrase of Shakespeare's All's Well That Ends Well, Act IV, Scene iv, Line 35. And on either side of the river was there a tree of life, which bore twelve manner of fruits, and yielded her fruit every month; and the leaves of the tree are for the healing of the nations a prophecy from verse two of Revelation.

  1. 125: All's Well With Boswell &
  2. 125: All's Well With Boswell Park

2020 might be running roughshod over just about everyone, but Honda just made our year with one tiny little announcement. Folks, the 2021 Honda Trail 125 ABS is officially getting a U.S. release! Images that say “Trail 125” on the side depict the U.S. model, while images that say “CT 125” are for other markets. American Honda posted photos of the U.S. market version on its Facebook, while it posted a mix of images on its website.

We’ve been hopeful ever since the CT125 Concept broke cover (and not a few hearts) at the 2019 Tokyo Motor Show. Still, as anyone who’s been following motorcycle releases for a bit can tell you, simply wanting a cool bike to come to the U.S. doesn’t mean it will happen. Thankfully, this time, we’re getting what we want—and pretty quickly, too!

The U.S. version will come in just one color: Glowing Red. No Matte Fresco Brown for us, but you know what? If Honda had to limit it to a single color for our market, we’re hardly going to complain about that shade of red, as it’s quite nice.

It’s powered by the same 124.9cc air-cooled, fuel-injected, four-stroke, single-cylinder engine as is found in the Super Cub, mated to a four-speed semi-automatic transmission. Disc brakes stop you all around, and it’s equipped with ABS as standard. Curb weight is 259 pounds, including a full tank of gas in that 1.4-gallon tank. The front suspension offers 3.9 inches of travel, while the rear offers 3.4 inches of travel.

Gallery: 2021 Honda Trail 125 ABS

That’s all well and good, but what is this diminutive adventurer actually going to cost if you want to buy one? Base MSRP for the 2021 Trail 125 ABS is $3,899—which is $150 more than the Super Cub C125 ABS, and $100 less than the Monkey. For everyone who loved the CT 90 and CT 110—and everyone who wanted to love one—your 2020 ride is here!

A Mighty Hunter:

Source: Facebook, Honda

125: All

Meet Boswell. Boswell is a relatively famous elephant who lives in Zimbabwe. His primary notoriety is for standing on his hind legs to fetch juicy leaves and branches that others cannot reach. He is also on his way to film stardom, as one of the featured elephants in “The Last Great Tuskers.” As you can tell, he wears a collar so that his whereabouts can be tracked by those studying the few remaining big tuskers. While Boswell’s tusks are not as large as some of the other “super tusker” elephants featured in “The Last Great Tuskers,” they are large — ensuring that he is a target of poachers. Being collared is no guarantee that he can escape a premature death, but the fact that he is being watched by rangers gives him some relative protection.

I had the privilege of meeting “the Bos” while in Zimbabwe this past August. While he did not grace us with his hind-feet-only stance, he did pose generously and often. Our guide, Honest, had spent a great deal of time observing Boswell; perhaps that is why the elephant was so generous with his time. Nevertheless, his comfort with humans has carries a big risk, even though elephants purportedly can sense if nearby humans come in peace or for ivory.

Zimbabwe’s relationship Boswell and his brethren is complicated. Zimbabwe has always had large elephant populations. Now, it accounts for at least 25% of the remaining elephants in Africa, as Zimbabwe did not experience the epidemic of poaching that decimated elephant populations in Central and East Africa over the past decade. That makes it an appealing target for poachers. Unlike its neighbor, Botswana, which has an even higher percentage of elephants, Zimbabwe is a failed state politically. Under the control of Robert Mugabe since the country’s independence from Great Britain in 1980, the potentially wealthy country has been drained of its former riches. Unemployment now is 90% and the currency is worthless. Recent demonstrations in the urban areas calling for Mugabe to resign were firmly squashed. A sense of despair permeates any conversation with Zimbabweans as to the future. Such circumstances nurture black market activities, including poaching for organized crime operations.

Recent poaching in Zimbabwe has been even more nefarious and insidious with the use of cyanide at waterholes by poachers. Not only does this kill the elephants who come to drink, but all other species who drink the same water source or predators and scavengers who ingest the dead elephant carcasses.

Mugabe and his cronies have been seeking approval from UN officials to sell their huge stockpiles of (what they claim to be) legal ivory. During the recent CITES conference in South Africa, Zimbabwe, Namibia and South Africa lobbied hard to sell their stockpiles on the international market to raise funds to improve conservation and protection measures of wild game. While these proposals were defeated, these countries were successful in keeping elephants within their borders from being classified as “critically endangered.” Because elephant populations in southern Africa are healthy, the status of critically endangered was not viewed as necessary. That means those countries are still able to entertain a legal ivory market within their boundaries. In Zimbabwe’s Hwange Park, approximately 44,000 elephants roam; the carrying capacity of the park is one elephant per square kilometer, or 14,000 elephants.

But back to Boswell, member of a very exclusive — and endangered — club. In March, one of the largest of the super tuskers,Satao II, was slain by a poison arrow in Kenya’s Tsavo Park. According to Africa Geographic, the massive 44,000 km² Tsavo Conservation Area (twice the size of South Africa’s Kruger National Park) is home to the highest population of large-tusked elephants in the world, with 6 ‘super tuskers’ (of approximately 25-30 in the whole of Africa) and 15 emerging tuskers (young bulls who have the genes and potential to become tuskers). There are also 7 cows with tusks reaching the ground that are being monitored.

125: All's Well With Boswell &

I hope to visit Boswell again in 2018 when I return to Zimbabwe. I pray that Bos and his super tusker colleagues benefit from the current decline in the demand for ivory in China and escape the scourge of poaching. Sadly though, this poaching has taken its toll on the super tusker gene pool, meaning that future generations will not likely get to have a personal encounter with one of these amazing creatures.

125: All's Well With Boswell Park

Categories: Elephant Anatomy, Elephant Populations, Elephants, Illegal Ivory Trade, Ivory, Poaching, Safari