A
Day Like This One |
The
African night was receding as we approached the waterhole, but it was
still too dark to see tracks. My mood was as dark as the night had been
and was failing to rise with the dawn. We were running out of time on
this hunt and I was worried about buffalo. Emotional highs and lows are
necessary if the hunt is to be memorable and this one was hitting the
bottom. But it was just as much physical as mental this time. Who knows
if it was something I ate or simply a virus, but I was feeling like my
stomach was full of killer bees, while the rest of me had been drained
of energy and life. I was sick and discouraged and like a little boy who
had been sent to his room without supper I sulked pitifully while the
others stood quietly in the dark pretending they didn’t notice.
A baboon started barking to our left on the far side of the water hole, protesting loudly because we would dare to invade his domain. Like a sleeping neighbor awakened by a loud party, a lion off to our right began to growl back a surly response. The two bickered back and forth as I made my way behind a termite mound to be sick. After I finished and collected my rifle and what was left of my dignity I noticed a movement in the brush ahead. A large, sleek, lioness was slinking through the brush like a smoky specter, first there, then not, then perhaps. Her path made it clear that she was intent on making breakfast out of the loudmouth baboon arguing with her man. She passed by, paying no attention to the hominids bearing arms and soon enough the baboon was silent. His fate remained a mystery as in the new light the trackers had found the spore left by a herd of buffalo and we had started off in pursuit. With the sun came the heat and in my fevered condition I was not dealing well with it. Usually when on the track of buffalo I am jazzed and full of adrenalin. When the trackers need to stop and sort things out I am like a boxer sent to a neutral corner, bouncing from leg to leg and trying to control the urge to return to action. But, today when they stopped I would collapse against the nearest tree and sit with my head between my knees, drenched with sweat. A fire had burned through this country, charring all the trees, so before long my back was covered with a mixture of wet, black soot and I didn’t care.
But, they settled the dispute quietly and somebody found the track again. We followed and within half a mile the spore began to grow steadily fresher. Like trackers in every other place I have visited in Africa, these have a rhythmic way of shaking their right hands as they track, pointing at each new find with their index fingers. I have found that I can often gauge how fresh the spore is by watching these graceful hand gestures. We are moving fast now and their hands are starting to look like they are directing an orchestra in a fast-tempo performance. One older tracker, Maulidi, adds an odd vocal accompaniment to the job of tracking. Each time he sees the next bit of spore he grunts softly to himself. For hours it’s been a mournful tune, as slow as a funeral dirge, but now he is picking up the pace and the grunts start to sound like the base track for a hip-hop rap song. The trackers are moving fast, coursing each other like bird dogs eager to have the first point. We are moving quickly on the track, the mood is improving, even mine, and with each step we know we are closing the gap. We are back in the hunt. The land is becoming rougher and more broken and we round the base of one of several small hills, going fast and feeling good. Linda spotted them first, which made the trackers unhappy as it’s a point of pride to always see the game before the client. But, that’s soon forgotten as three big bulls break out of the herd to our left and on top of a small wooded hill. We freeze as the bulls wander back down the hill and right at us. Jaco throws up the shooting-sticks and tells Linda to shoot the lead bull. “No wait” he says, “the second one is better, shoot him.” The words are barely spoken when Malaya Hatari, Linda’s .416 Remington, shatters the tension. The center bull staggers and the three of them run up the hill in front and to the right. I had seen the bull’s leg collapse before he recovered and knew I had the same thoughts that had concern painted on Jaco’s face. We stood silently thinking what neither of us wanted to say out loud, it might be a shoulder hit, or she might have hit him too low. I knew that the smart thing was to continue on the main herd’s tracks and try to fill my tag while we allow her buffalo time to make up his mind to die. But, how do you explain that to a friend who has just shot a buffalo?
A bellow came rolling down the right hill and with it the trackers started hugging Linda. We assumed it was the death bellow of her bull, but it grew louder and rose in intensity until it became this anguished scream that sounded not like death, but rage. Suddenly two buffalo came charging down the right hill, headed at full speed straight for us. We stood in the open, the nearest trees too far to reach. Soon, they were close enough to see that the lead bull was spraying blood out of his mouth and his side and that the bull following had blood all over his horns. In an instinctive act of protection the game scout grabbed Linda and pushed her behind him so that he could shield her with his body. Then realizing his mistake, that this lady was a hunter, he stepped aside. The delay allowed the bulls to close the gap too much. I was holding off shooting out of deference to Linda, as this was her bull, but they were too close and it was decision time. My gun was up and my safety off and I started to swing the crosshairs in time with the buffalo’s gait. I had about an ounce left on my trigger when Mamma Hatari made her .416 roar. The bull stumbled and Jaco’s .458 Lott spoke so fast that the two shots sounded like one. The bull hit the ground at full speed and skidded to a stop, throwing a cloud of dust and dirt into the air.
We ran back to Linda’s buffalo as he was struggling to get up and she shot him under the right eye and ran the 400 grain bullet through his brain and the full length of his body.
If I had one wish for the world, it may well be that every hunter should have a day like that one. (This was excerpted from an article that appeared in the July 2006 issue of The American Hunter Magazine.)
Our hunt was with Jaco Oosthuizen and his camp was one of the finest I have ever visited. The staff was outstanding, as was the service and food. Hunting here was one of the most enjoyable trips of my life and I highly recommend a safari with them. GAME Trackers AFRICA
- Ondjamba Safaris |