I've only recently come across Sofia and her fantastic OSINT challenges courtesy of her recent guest challenge creation for Bellingcat. You can find the link to her challenges here and the link to #031 here.
This OSINT exercise was listed as "easy" for beginners. I admit I didn't find it easy (and a comparison to Sofia's excellent walkthrough reveals why, but more on that later).
The important thing is that I managed to finish it anyway, even if somewhat unconventionally.
As always, I have spoiler guards on critical details. Click the spoiler button in the bottom left to turn on/off all spoiler protection. If you leave it on, individual spoiler guards will disappear when clicked → (just like that).
What follows is a breakdown of my path to the answer to this exercise. But, before we begin, letβs triage the exercise itself.
Source: Sofia Santos
Based on the exercise brief, we don't have a lot to go on:
Anyway, that's the fun of it. Let's begin!
Throughout this exercise, I kept records in an investigation plan. You can view mine here and access the template for your own use here (click File > Make a Copy or File > Download).
To get the most out of this walkthrough, I recommend following each step using the tools and sources provided below.
Investigation Stages
Tools Used
Sources Used
The record I kept during this investigation shows 17 distinct steps, and whilst many helped build the context I needed to eventually get answers, many didn't. I have collapsed many together for brevity. For transparency, you can see the full, messier process in my investigation plan linked above.
That being said, I'll still walkthrough what I thought and what I did, even when it led me to a dead-end. You can decide for yourself where I took wrong turns and how you might have avoided them (I know that's what I'm trying to do when preparing these write ups).
I try and start with really simple searches matching images or text. Since we don't have lots to go on here. All we can really do is start with a reverse image search anyway.
Result: A hit! - the photo matched to this site (and all the other #031 walkthroughs, shoutout!).
Sources: zooborns.com
π Initial Hypothesis:
Our mysterious newborn giraffe was born on either the 21st or 23rd of October 2009 at Virginia Zoo to Imara and Billy, and is currently living at an unknown location.
Sources:
X/Twitter,
Flickr
Result: Virginia Zoo made two relevant tweets in November 2009. One tweet from Nov 19, 2009 mentions "a female Masai giraffe born on October 21". A tweet from Nov 14, 2009 mentions Flickr pictures of the baby giraffe. Searching with Flickr for photos of "giraffe" from the Virginia Zoo account from October 2009 doesn't reveal any names for the mysterious newborn giraffe but does confirm its date of birth as Oct 21, 2009 and that our challenge photo was originally posted by Virginia Zoo (on Nov 12, 2009). Extending the search dates to include up to Jan 1, 2012 reveals a photo from February 2010 that identifies both of the parents and mentions Willow who was born in October. This reveals the name of the giraffe is likely Willow.
π Updated Hypothesis:
Our mysterious newborn giraffe, Willow, was born on 21 October 2009 at Virginia Zoo to Imara and Billy, and is currently living at an unknown location.
Why: While we know Willow was born at Virginia Zoo, we should be able to find information regarding her current location either as an exhibit or details of a transfer via Twitter or the zoo's website, since this would have been a big event.
Sources:
X/Twitter, virginiazoo.org
Result: No further information - The oldest post on Virginia Zoo's blog mentioning "giraffe" is June 22, 2015 and no helpful information was found on the Masai giraffe exhibit page. On X/Twitter there was mention of a new baby giraffe named Kellen in 2013, but no mention of Willow beyond the two tweets announcing her birth in 2009.
Sources: zoochat.com
Results: Found a thread on zoochat.com which lists the different Masai giraffes at different zoos across North America as of 2021. A ctrl+F search for 'Willow' revealed an animal at Disney's Animal Kingdom: Willow (Billy x Imara) born October 21st 2009 at Virginia Zoo, thus confirming that Willow was transferred to a different zoo.
π Updated Hypothesis:
Our mysterious newborn giraffe, Willow, was born on 21 October 2009 at Virginia Zoo to Imara and Billy, and had been living at Disney's Animal Kingdom since an unknown date.
Why: Since Willow transferred to Disney's Animal Kingdom after she left Virginia Zoo, they might have been press in anticipation of or upon her arrival.
Sources: allears.net
Results: Article from a site of unknown reputability that described Willow's transfer from Virginia Zoo to Disney's Animal Kingdom. Willow is mentioned as being nearly 1-year-old at the time of transfer meaning this had to take place prior to 21 October 2010.
Note: Somehow I managed to completely miss the date of transfer that is clearly mentioned in the article. More about that in my post-challenge reflections. In addition, I could have verified that the giraffe in the picture was Willow by matching her skin pattern. However, that wouldn't have necessarily meant that the details in the text were correct.
Search Prompts: "willow"
site:.disney.go.com -grandmother
-kangaroo
"giraffe" AND "disney's
animal kingdom" before:2011-01-01
after:2010-10-21
giraffe
(from:DisneyParks)
Willow
(from:DisneyParks)
Results: No further information
When I got here, I was a bit stumped. I had Willow's birth location and date. I knew she was at Disney's Animal Kingdom as recently as 2021 (if the article was to be believed), but the trail had gone cold. It's possible that she's moved again since 2021, but there were not even any mentions of her from Disney's Animal Kingdom around her transfer date.
I would have been best served carefully reviewing the information and sources I had collected thus far (revealing that I already had the transfer date). However, instead I decided to go back to the conservation program angle. In the article I found that mentioned Willow's transfer, there was a mention of genetic experts who decide which animal goes where to ensure healthy, diverse breeding populations. Maybe there is a record from that expert organisation (and hopefully its open to the public)!
Sources: zoochat.com, allears.net
Result: An article from allears.net mentioned Zella and featured photos from Dr Mark Penning, a vetenarian at Disney's Animal Kingdom who uses Instagram under @drmarkatdisney. I also stumbled upon a link to a facebook page called Disney's Animals, Science and Environment (https://www.facebook.com/DisneyASE) which made conservation related-posts. However, there were no posts before 2014 on DisneyASE facebook page.
Sources:
Instagram
Results: I found an Instagram post claiming to be of Willow and her baby in October 2020 on Dr Mark's Instagram page. A comment on his photo declared that Disney's Animal Kingdom is part of AZA (a quick google revealed the Association of Zoos & Aquariums) which might have a conservation dimension? I saw AZA mentioned in the article in step 6, but I didn't look into it.
Note: I decided to use Google to search Instagram because I wanted to perform a more advanced search than what Instagram usually allows. It might be possible to do similar searches through Instagram organically, but I found Instgram couldn't match multiple hashtags in a single search whereas Google could.
Results: No further information - I found a database but it was restricted to AZA members.
Note: In my haste, I didn't properly read what the different conservation records they had were. I did later.
Sources: aza.org
Results: The first hit on google was again the AZA. So, I decided to have a closer look. What I found on their website was that part of their conservation records for endangered species was something called a 'studbook' which detailed the bloodlines, pedigrees, and transfers of all animals that were in the conservation program.
Sources: researchgate.net
Results: I found the 2011 studbook for Masai giraffes in America which listed a female giraffe named Willow born 21 Oct 2009 at Norfolk (the Virginia Zoo is in Norfolk) and transfered to Disney's Animal Kingdom on 11 October 2010. It doesn't list the date as a departure or arrival but given that it is the day before the one listed in the article (that I missed), I think it's close enough.
π Updated Hypothesis:
Our mysterious newborn giraffe, Willow, was born on 21 October 2009 at Virginia Zoo to Imara and Billy, and had been living at Disney's Animal Kingdom since 11 October 2010.
We know that Zella, Willow's calf was born in 2020 at Disney's Animal Kingdom and I'm kinda banking on the hope that she hasn't moved since then (when she was photographed by Dr Mark with her baby). In support of my hunch, it appears from the AZA records that they generally try move giraffes early in their lives and then leave them at a single location.
Why: Although I had found the photo of Willow and Zella from 2020 through Dr Mark's Instagram page, I didn't think that was sufficiently "in her habitat" or "current" enough for the exercise to be considered complete.
Sources: Instagram
Results: I decided to trawl through Instagram and see if I could find a post with a giraffe from Disney's Animal Kingdom that might be Willow (based on her spots). I found a post from 2023 showing Willow. In the images below from left to right, you can see the continuity of skin patterns between Willow as a baby (source: Virginia Zoo flickr), Willow as a new mother (source: Dr Mark's Instagram), and Willow photographed in her current habitat (source: Kingdom Conquerors Instagram). I think Willow's face marking in the shape of Africa on her left cheek is particularly distinctive (and very cool)!
Our mysterious newborn giraffe, Willow, was born on 21 October 2009 at Virginia Zoo to Imara and Billy, and had been living at Disney's Animal Kingdom since 11 October 2010. She is pictured in her current habitat here on 23 August 2023.
This challenge was a lot harder than it needed to be. I made plenty of silly mistakes which were embarrassing at first, but I think prove excellent opportunities for learning and growth. Completing this exercise, writing this walkthrough, and reviewing Sofia's exemplar taught me four blind-spots I hadn't previously noticed.
For me, the real break in this challenge came when I googled: zoo animal transfer database usa.
I recognise that not doing that earlier was to throw away a cheap & lazy search which would have benefited the investigation greatly. You don't get points for style, you get points for robustness and results. There was nothing wrong with that search and it led me to a clue: the existence of the AZA and studbooks, which really helped me crack the final pieces of the puzzle.
The reality is that I believed it couldn't be that easy. A claim that was not founded on any actual evidence. A simple cheap & lazy search would have been enough to refute such a claim. I think next time, I will commit to doing 5-10 cheap & lazy searches before I do anything too fancy, not because I'll get the answer necessarily, but because they will ensure that I've tried to exhaust the available answers from the bottom up.
This probably goes without saying, but it was the major bane of this challenge for me. It's so easy to get excited or desperate during a challenge like this. The emotional highs and lows that come with making progress on a puzzle. However, the sage advice to make haste slowly is vital. If I had taken the time to be careful and read information fully, I could have halved the duration of this challenge.
I loved being swept away to find the next clue, but that meant I often missed what was in front of me all along. I also believe that periodic reviews of collected evidence may help reveal information missed on a first pass.
This wasn't a lesson I learned directly, but instead after watching Sofia's walkthrough.
A few times in my investigation and in Sofia's walkthrough, a link to what was expected to be a specific webpage such as an article, re-routed to the homepage of the website instead. This pattern can suggest that the page is no longer listed. Pages turnover reasonably quickly and older information may be archived or taken down. For this challenge, it was unlikely that an article detailing the birth of a giraffe that moved facilities within a year, over 15 years ago would be interesting enough to keep up. These pages might however be archived on the Wayback Machine.
When comparing my path to Sofia's walkthrough, I remembered something quite amusing.
After realising the existence of AZA studbooks and finding two via Google (from 2009 and 2011), I thought to myself that I was on the right path. Without the 2011 studbook being publically available, I reasoned, the challenge would have been impossible to complete.
Therefore, I must be on the right path since Sofia made this exercise and it has to be possible. But, upon watching her walkthrough, Sofia's path didn't go anywhere near the AZA or studbooks. The danger of meta-gaming OSINT challenges is that real investigations are not pre-fabricated. Of course luck and serendipity exist, but reading into them too much can be a hinderance too.
Just another reminder to stay vigilant to get the most from these challenge and to build good habits.
Thank you for reading. I hope this walkthrough helped get you unstuck or gave you some ideas as to you how you might try to tackle your next challenge or investigation.
I always really appreciate feedback or comments from anyone reading. You can find me on X/Twitter, Bluesky, and LinkedIn at the handle @rgmarchant. I'd love to hear from you, especially if you found the answer a completely different way to me. Please let me know!
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