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Some of Nhongo Safaris Fleet of Open Safari Vehicles

The photo shows some of our fleet of Open Safari Vehicles used while on safari in the Kruger National and Hwange National Parks. These ve...

Friday 16 March 2012

Jock Of The Bushveld by Sir Percy Fitzpatrick ( Chapter 2)( Page 3)( Into The Bushveld )

Long after the other men were asleep I lay in my blankets watching the tricks of light and shadow played by the fire, as fitfully it flamed or died away.  It showed the long prostrate figures of the others as they slept full stretch on their backs, wrapped in dark blankets; the
waggons, touched with unwonted colours by the flames, and softened to ghostly shadows when they died; the oxen, sleeping contentedly at their yokes; Rocky's two donkeys, black and grey, tethered under a thorn-tree--now and then a long ear moving slowly to some distant sound
and dropping back again satisfied.  I could not sleep; but Rocky was sleeping like a babe.  He, gaunt and spare--6 foot 2 he must have stood--weather-beaten and old, with the long solitary trip before him and sixty odd years of life behind, he slept when he laid his head down,
and was wide awake and rested when he raised it.  He, who had been through it all, slept; but I, who had only listened, was haunted,
bewitched, possessed, by racing thoughts; and all on account of four lords, and the way he said them, "It was my dawg." It was still dark, with a faint promise of saffron in the East, when I felt a hand on my shoulder and heard Rocky's voice saying, "Comin' along, Sonny?" One of the drivers raised his head to look at us as we passed, and then called to his voorlooper to turn the cattle loose to graze, and dropped back to sleep.  We left them so and sallied out into the pure clear morning while all the world was still, while the air, cold and subtly stimulating, put a spring into the step and an extra beat or two into
the pulse, fairly rinsing lungs and eyes and brain. What is there to tell of that day?  Why! nothing, really nothing, except that it was a happy day--a day of little things that all went well, and so it came to look like the birthday of the hunting.  What did it matter to me that we were soaked through in ten minutes? for the dew weighed down the heavy-topped grass with clusters of crystal drops that looked like diamond sprays.  It was all too beautiful for words: and so it
should be in the spring-time of youth. Rocky was different that day.  He showed me things; reading the open book of nature that I could not understand.  He pointed out the spoors
going to and from the drinking-place, and named the various animals; showed me one more deeply indented than the rest and, murmuring "
Scared I guess," pointed to where it had dashed off out of the regular track; picked out the big splayed pad of the hyena sneaking round under cover; stopped quietly in his stride to point where a hare was sitting up cleaning itself, not ten yards off; stopped again at the sound of a clear, almost metallic, `clink' and pointed to a little sandy gully in front of us down which presently came thirty or forty guinea-fowl in
single file, moving swiftly, running and walking, and all in absolute silence except for that one `clink.'  How did he know they were there, and which way they would go, and know it all so promptly? were questions I asked myself. We walked with the sun--that is towards the West--so that the light would show up the game and be in their eyes, making it more difficult
for them to see us.  We watched a little red stembuck get up from his form, shake the dew from his coat, stretch himself, and then pick his way daintily through the wet grass, nibbling here and there as he went. Rocky did not fire; he wanted something better. After the sun had risen, flooding the whole country with golden light, and, while the dew lasted, making it glisten like a bespangled transformation scene, we came on a patch of old long grass and, parted by some twenty yards, walked through it abreast.  There was a wild rush from under my feet, a
yellowish body dashed through the grass, and I got out in time to see a rietbuck ram cantering away.  Then Rocky, beside me, gave a shrill whistle; the buck stopped, side on, looked back at us,
and Rocky dropped it where it stood.  Instantly following the shot there was another rush on our left, and before the second rietbuck had gone thirty yards Rocky toppled it over in its tracks.  From the whistle to the second shot it was all done in about ten seconds.  To me it looked
like magic.  I could only gasp. We cleaned the bucks, and hid them in a bush.  There was meat enough for the camp then, and I thought we would return at once for boys to carry it; but Rocky, after a moment's glance round, shouldered his rifle and moved on again.  I followed, asking no questions.  We had been gone only a few minutes when to my great astonishment he stopped and pointing straight in front asked: "What 'ud you put up for that stump?"  I looked hard, and answered confidently, "
Two hundred!" "Step it!" was his reply.  I paced the distance; it was eighty-two yards. It was very bewildering; but he helped me out a bit with "Bush
telescopes, Sonny!" "You mean it magnifies them?"  I asked in surprise.  "No!  Magnifies the
distance, like lookin' down an avenue!  Gun barr'l looks a mile long when you put yer eye to it!  Open flats brings 'em closer; and 'cross water or a gully seems like you kin put yer hand on 'em?" "I would have missed--by feet--that time Rocky!" "You kin take it fer a start, Halve the distance and aim low!" "Aim low, as well?" "Thar's allus somethin' low: legs, an' ground to show what you done! But thar's no `outers'
marked on the sky!" Once, as we walked along, he paused to look at some freshly overturned ground, and dropped the one word, `Pig.'  We turned then to the right and presently came upon some vlei ground densely covered with tall green
reeds.  He slowed down as we approached; I tip-toed in sympathy; and when only a few yards off he stopped and beckoned me on, and as I came abreast he raised his hand in warning and pointed into the reeds.  There was a curious subdued sort of murmur of many deep voices.  It conveys no idea of the fact to say they were grunts.  They were softened out of all
recognition: there is only one word for it, they sounded `confidential.' Then as we listened I could make out the soft silky rustling of the rich undergrowth, and presently, could follow, by the quivering and waving of odd reeds, the movements of the animals themselves.  They were
only a few yards from us--the nearest four or five; they were busy and contented; and it was obvious they were utterly unconscious of our presence.  As we peered down to the reeds from our greater height it seemed that we could see the ground and that not so much as a rat could
have passed unnoticed.  Yet we saw nothing! And then, without the slightest sign, cause or warning that I could detect, in one instant every sound ceased.  I watched the reeds like a
cat on the pounce: never a stir or sign or sound: they had vanished.  I turned to Rocky: he was standing at ease, and there was the faintest look of amusement in his eyes. "They must be there; they can't have got away?"  It was a sort of indignant protest against his evident `chucking it'; but it was full of doubt all the same. "Try!" he said, and I jumped into the reeds straight away.  The under-foliage, it is true, was thicker and deeper than it had looked;
but for all that it was like a conjuring trick--they were not there!  I waded through a hundred yards or more of the narrow belt--it was not more than twenty yards wide anywhere--but the place was deserted.  It struck me then that if they could dodge us at five to ten yards while we
were watching from the bank and they did not know it--Well, I `chucked
it' too.  Rocky was standing in the same place with the same faint look
of friendly amusement when I got back,
wet and muddy. "Pigs is like that," he said, "same as elephants--jus' disappears!" We went on again, and a quarter of an hour later, it may be, Rocky
stopped, subsided to a sitting position, beckoned to me, and pointed with his levelled rifle in front.  It was a couple of minutes before he could get me to see the stembuck standing in the shade of a thorn-tree. I would never have seen it but for his whisper to look for something
moving: that gave it to me; I saw the movement of the head as it cropped. "High: right!" was Rocky's comment, as the bullet ripped the bark off a tree and the startled stembuck raced away.  In the excitement I had forgotten his advice already! But there was no time to feel sick and disgusted; the buck, puzzled by the report on one side and the smash on the tree on the other, half circled us and stopped to look back.  Rocky laid his hand on my shoulder:

"Take your time, Sonny!" he said, "Aim low; an' _don't full!  Squeeze_!" And at last I got it.
We had our breakfast there--the liver roasted on the coals, and a couple of `dough-boys,' with the unexpected addition of a bottle of cold tea, weak and unsweetened, produced from Rocky's knapsack!  We stayed there a couple of hours, and that is the only time he really opened out.  I
understood then--at last--that of his deliberate kindliness he had come out that morning meaning to make a happy day of it for a youngster; and he did it. He had the knack of getting at the heart of things, and putting it all in the fewest words.  He spoke in the same slow grave way, with habitual economy of breath and words; and yet the pictures were living and real,
and each incident complete.  I seemed to get from him that morning all there was to know of the hunting in two great continents--Grizzlies and other `bar,' Moose and Wapiti, hunted in the snows of the North West; Elephant, Buffalo, Rhino, Lions, and scores more, in the sweltering heat of Africa! That was a happy day! When I woke up next morning Rocky was fitting the packs on his donkeys. I was a little puzzled, wondering at first if he was testing the saddles, for he had said nothing about moving on; but when he joined us at breakfast the donkeys stood packed ready to start.  Then Robbie asked: "Going to make a move, Rocky?" "Yes!  Reckon I'll git!" he answered quietly. I ate in silence, thinking of what he was to face: many hundreds of miles--perhaps a thousand or two; many, many months--may be a year or two; wild country, wild tribes, and wild beasts; floods and fever; accident, hunger, and disease; and alone! When we had finished breakfast he rinsed out his beaker and hung it on one of the packs, slung his rifle over his shoulder, and picking up his long assegai-wood walking-stick tapped the donkeys lightly to turn them into the Kaffir footpath that led away North.  They jogged on into place
in single file. Rocky paused a second before following, turned one brief grave glance on
us, and said! "Well.  So long!" He never came back!

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