In search of big game
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David C. Weber
“My Lord, look at the guns! Welcome to Zimbabwe.”
My son Douglas was as amazed as I at the gun cases that come off
the plane from Johannesburg -- nearly 10% of the 80 passengers on the
flight came to Victoria Falls with weapons for shooting big game.
There are governmental “concessions” designated for hunting.
“Have no fear,” our professional safari guide, Gavin, said. “No
hunting in any game concession we’ll be in.”
True enough. We first visited Botswana’s Chobe National Park for
close viewing of huge Savannah elephants, cape buffalo, giraffe,
Burchell’s zebra, Nile crocodile, sable antelope and on and on.
We had carefully chosen Botswana, a well-governed country with 22%
of its entire land protected in game preserves. Its game concessions
provide more isolated visits with all the popular cats and other big
game save the rhino. Nary a crowd around a kill! Each camp, with
tribal staff, provided marvelous food, whether it be the hot cereal
around the campfire at a chilly dawn, an ostrich steak, superb fruit
and veggies or the chocolate-crunch torte with pistachios and sour
cherries for dessert one evening. Safari life can have one feeling
pampered!
For the eight of us tourists (with two guides), the Land Rover
vehicle ride is itself a rather wild experience, holding on over
deeply rutted dusty tracks, some flooded with as much as 30 inches of
flood water.
Then “Wow! Look!” Gavin braked sharply when a rare wild dog
crossed our track in hot pursuit of a terrified impala. And one
night, Douglas and I were on edge all night as some dozens of
elephants surrounding our tent were fiercely trumpeting as if they
were rampaging, fighting each other -- their overwhelming raucous
bellowing going on literally all night long. No sleep for us that
night!
From Chobe, we moved to the legendary Savuti camp, a famous
watering hole for hundreds of elephants. The two-person tents at each
camp were on permanent platforms, with running-water facilities in a
private open-air annex. Since July is winter there, we were not
surprised by nights in the high 40 degrees. At noontime, it was in
the upper 80s, feeling even hotter sitting watching game on a morning
game drive in the sun and, after a daily siesta, another drive into
the evening. Insects were seldom seen: never the famous tsetse.
Then it was on to Jacana camp amid the famous Okavango Delta flood
plain.
Hippos en masse, their petite ears flicking out the water as they
surfaced. (During such safari drives, we learn collective nouns --
it’s a journey of giraffes, a raft of hippos, a dazzle of zebras, a
conference of baboons, a sounder of warthogs, and a clan of hyena.)
And how lucky we were to spot the shy sitatunga antelope, seen from
the mokoro dugout canoe poled so skillfully by a Bayei tribesman.
Finally, we stayed in the tents of Kaporota camp. Leopards and
cheetahs were awesome, as was a crashing herd of 1,000 cape buffalo.
We then returned to camp, notes in arousal, scanning today’s
digital snapshots, and curled up in comfy beds in our private tent,
perhaps to listen to the snorts of hippos plodding by for food, the
distant roar of a lion, or the raucous trumpeting in a nearby herd of
squabbling elephants.
Though we didn’t know until the next morning, two of our group
were frightened late in the evening when they spotted a leopard on
the path right by our tent.
And the sky! Never have I seen the Milky Way in such startling
clarity. Amazing silences and sounds with sensational sights of
myriad sparkling stars!
Each site sported spectacular birds such as African fish eagle,
Pel’s fishing owl and the saddle-billed stork (we counted 166 species
without trying!).
Though some safaris drive one from camp to camp, our program used
10-people Cessna Caravan planes, landing on clay strips cleared of
mopane brush within a few miles of the each camp, thus saving tons of
relocation time.
Daily game drives were constantly exciting. We watched 16-foot
Nile crocodiles bask on the riverbank and a female leopard sleeping
the day away high on a limb. We were surprised to hear that the
attack-kill ratio of such big cats as lion, leopard and cheetah is
actually poor. An animal more closely related to the felines than
canines, despite appearances, the spotted hyenas we saw have a far
better technique for hunting.
The lions impressed us, especially while hearing them loudly
chomping on a cape buffalo’s head -- viewed from the 25-foot safety
of our open vehicle!
The only time we were at all threatened by these wild creatures
was when a lone bull elephant flapped his ears and scuffed up dirt in
our faces, prompting our guide to bang the Land Rover side very hard
with the flat of his hand, the sound backing the animal away at once.
The cameras were ever busy.
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