Boran was a tribe from Survivor: Africa.
Initially failing to win any challenges in the first two episodes, it seemed quickly that Boran could be wiped out fast. However, once the switch came, with the help of Teresa and Frank, the remaining Boran members took over the game and made up the final 4.
Their tribe color is yellow/gold.
Members
Original
File:S3 clarence t.jpgFile:S3 diane t.jpgFile:S3 ethan t.jpgFile:S3 jessie t.jpg File:S3 kelly t.jpgFile:S3 kimj t.jpgFile:S3 lex t.jpgFile:S3 tom t.jpg |
- Clarence Black, a basketball coach from Detroit, Michigan.
- Diane Ogden, a postal mail carrier from Lincoln, Nebraska.
- Ethan Zohn, a soccer player from Lexington, Massachusetts.
- Jessie Camacho, a sheriff from Orlando, Florida.
- Kelly Goldsmith, a researcher from Santa Fe, California.
- Kim Johnson, a retired teacher from Oyster Bay, New York.
- Lex van den Berghe, a former IT expert/musician from Sta. Cruz, California.
- Tom Buchanan, a rancher from Rich Valley, Virginia.
Post-Tribe Swap
These following castaways became the second Boran tribe, which existed from Days 13-20:
File:S3 clarence t.jpgFile:S3 ethan t.jpgFile:S3 frank t.jpg File:S3 kimj t.jpgFile:S3 silas t.jpgFile:S3 teresa t.jpg |
- ► Clarence Black
- ► Ethan Zohn
- ► Frank Garrison, a telephone technician from Odessa, New York.
- ► Kim Johnson
- ► Silas Gaither, a bartender from Germantown, Tennessee.
- ► Teresa Cooper, a flight attendant from Jackson, Georgia.
Tribe History
Day 1-12
At the beginning of the game, most members of Boran started to become weak and dehydrated, notably Jessie and Diane, who became frequently nauseous during the first three days. Their weakness doubled over at the first Immunity Challenge, where they lost to the rival Samburu tribe. After the challenge, Diane fainted due to exhaustion. Back at camp, while the rest of the tribe were away gathering water, Clarence and Diane shared a whole can of beans without the others' consent. When the other six returned, they vented their disappointments to Clarence making a mistake in judgment. This statement would then bury a deeper hole for Clarence in the future. Despite this, Clarence's strength weighed more than trust, and the weaker Diane was eliminated in a 6-2 vote. Also dehydrated and weak, Jessie soon followed after Boran lost the next Immunity Challenge on Day 6.
With two members down, morale in Boran was at an all-time low. Adding insult to injury, right after Tribal Council, a pride of lions were outside their Boma fence (acacia thorn branches, the camp's only protection from predators). Despite their early three-challenge losing streak, Boran rebounded and won their first challenge, an important reward of a 100-gallon potable water dispenser good enough until the merge. Empowered and rejuvenated by winning the water tank, Boran then won the Day 8 Immunity Challenge, sending Samburu to their first Tribal Council the next day.
The animals continued to plague and scare Boran. On Day 11, a cape buffalo blocked the tribe's path to their water hole (their original water source that was now reduced to an area for cleaning clothes). With grunting and whistling being ineffective to scare the buffalo away, the tribe went into another direction. Their cohesiveness, however, reflected into the next Immunity Challenge, where they became victorious once more, thus sending back Samburu to Tribal Council. After Samburu's second trek to Tribal Council, the game was now even for the two tribes with six members each.
Days 13-20
On Day 13, both tribes received a vague Tree Mail telling them to select three members of their tribe to go on "a quest." Boran chose Kelly, Lex, and Tom. Much to their shock, the three representatives from Samburu (Silas, Frank, and Teresa), now wearing similar gold buffs, came into their camp, signaling a tribe switch. The new members were welcomed with open arms, but Ethan, Kim J., and Clarence still had reservations, notably Ethan who vented in a confessional that he became sad when his closest allies Tom and Lex will now be competing against him.
Holding a grudge against the younger Samburu alliance for not treating them nicely and eliminating their allies Carl Bilancione and Linda Spencer, Teresa and Frank (the only remaining members of the older Samburu alliance) promised their loyalty to Boran. Teresa approached Kim J. that if Boran loses at the next Immunity Challenge, they would vote out Silas, the ringleader of the younger Samburu pact. Teresa also informed Kim J. about Lindsey's past votes. Kim J. then talked to Ethan about purposefully losing the next Immunity Challenge seriously, stating that it will be a win-win situation. With Silas only taking the challenge seriously, Samburu won, sending Boran back to Tribal Council.
Back at camp, Silas approached Ethan and asked him to vote Clarence out. Knowing that it might not work, Silas then fabricated a story that Frank was the most untrustworthy person in the old Samburu. Kim J. then started to interrogate Silas about his connection with Teresa, Frank, and his former Samburu tribe mates. Sensing Silas' insincerity, the original Borans ultimately sided with Teresa and Frank. They turned on Silas because of his questionable trustworthiness, and he was next to go in a 5-1 vote. With the presumed cancer of the tribe gone, the Boran tribe won the next Immunity Challenge.
On Day 20, the two competing tribes were merged into the Moto Maji tribe, and Samburu moved to Boran's old camp site for the remainder of the game.
Tribe Camp
Both tribes on Survivor: Africa were given a traditional African dwelling consisting of a small unfinished hut surrounded by a protective fence made of thorn bushes. The tribes were required to repair the hut to provide adequate shelter and make sure the fence was secure in order to keep out wild animals such as lions. The Boran tribe ultimately managed to take better care of their camp than the opposing Samburu tribe did with theirs, and in addition, the Boran tribe won a large bucket of fresh drinking water as a reward, eliminating the need to boil water. When the merge came, the Boran tribe's camp was judged by both tribes as the "better" of the two camps and thus the merged tribe, Moto Maji, made their home at the former Boran camp.
Gallery
Trivia
- Boran, along with Samburu were the first tribes to partake in a tribe switch.
- Boran was the first tribe to visit Tribal Council after a tribe switch, and ergo, the first tribe to vote somebody out after a tribe switch.
- They also became the first tribe to vote out someone who switched tribes.
- Boran is the first tribe in Survivor history to have all the original tribe mates of the same gender make the merge (all of their original males: Clarence, Ethan, Lex, and Tom).
- Boran is the first tribe to enter the merge with the majority of its original members.
- Boran is the first tribe to visit the first two Tribal Councils.
- Boran is the only gold colored pre-merged tribe.
- Boran is the second yellow/gold tribe after Pagong.
- Boran is the first tribe to throw a challenge, throwing the first Immunity Challenge after the tribe swap.
- Every time Boran visited Tribal Council, the person that was voted out voted first.
- Boran is the first tribe to have a contestant from Nebraska on it.
- Boran is the third tribe to have three of it's original members comprise the final three. The others are Tagi, Ogakor, Chuay Gahn, Koror, Fei Long, Malakal, Foa Foa, Villains, La Flor, Ometepe, Upolu, Salani, and Galang.
- Boran only had its original members voted out in pairs (First Diane and Jessie, then Clarence and Kelly and finally Big Tom and Lex.) Because they made the finals, Kim and Ethan were not voted out.
References
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