In Many Ways Old Africa Still Exists

Rare Breed

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While so many things and places have changed in life in many ways, they remain the same. I am rereading Rourk's Horn of The Hunter for probably the fifth time coming off my 14-day leopard hunt last week. Reading Rourk's typical day it reminded me of almost the exact same type of day I just spend in Zim without the alcohol at lunch.

When he describes his tent with mosquito netting listening to all the animals at night it was the exact same experience. When he describes being awakened with hot water and tea, a piece of toast then off for the day in the cold calm morning, that was exactly what I did each day. Every lunch was done in the bush in the shade and was always cold never hot. The evenings were the best when we would drive up after 120 miles per day over 14 days driving over roads so rough I came home with large bruises on my back and rear end to see "the small bright lights of the fire." waiting for us. Our first adult beverage was always by the fire to warm ourselves while always a hot dinner would then greet us in the cook tent. We would celebrate and talk about our day with our joys and disappointments.

Rourk's hunt was in about 1950 and my latest was in 2025 so 75 years later...no question the amount of game seen is quite different but I found the experience to be wonderfully the same in so many ways...no I did not get my leopard but I got my taste of old Africa and this old Nostalgic hunter could not have been happier!!!
 
Robert Ruark’s writing always came across to me as having dark undertones.

Read Uhuru and it comes pouring through.

Ruark was perpetually drunk and died because of it in London in his 50th year of life.

Hard to figure who struggled with more demons, Ruark or his mentor Hemingway.

Leopard hunting in a blind seems to me the, perfect metaphor for much of life, endless waiting for brief moments of intense exhilaration that may or may not pan out.

Like waiting for the lightening but generally just getting the lightening bug.

And having to settle for it.
 
Ruark served in the american merchant navy during the war..in convoy traffic. Now, I remember Norwegians sailors back home with wrecked nervs from sailing for years drinking heavily..so I can understand Ruark..
 
....Leopard hunting in a blind seems to me the, perfect metaphor for much of life, endless waiting for brief moments of intense exhilaration that may or may not pan out.

Like waiting for the lightening but generally just getting the lightening bug.

And having to settle for it.

:A Clapping:
 
While so many things and places have changed in life in many ways, they remain the same. I am rereading Rourk's Horn of The Hunter for probably the fifth time coming off my 14-day leopard hunt last week. Reading Rourk's typical day it reminded me of almost the exact same type of day I just spend in Zim without the alcohol at lunch.

When he describes his tent with mosquito netting listening to all the animals at night it was the exact same experience. When he describes being awakened with hot water and tea, a piece of toast then off for the day in the cold calm morning, that was exactly what I did each day. Every lunch was done in the bush in the shade and was always cold never hot. The evenings were the best when we would drive up after 120 miles per day over 14 days driving over roads so rough I came home with large bruises on my back and rear end to see "the small bright lights of the fire." waiting for us. Our first adult beverage was always by the fire to warm ourselves while always a hot dinner would then greet us in the cook tent. We would celebrate and talk about our day with our joys and disappointments.

Rourk's hunt was in about 1950 and my latest was in 2025 so 75 years later...no question the amount of game seen is quite different but I found the experience to be wonderfully the same in so many ways...no I did not get my leopard but I got my taste of old Africa and this old Nostalgic hunter could not have been happier!!!
@Rare Breed
You would be surprised at some things in the world even our own don't seem to change.
As the old saying goes the more things that change the more they stay the same.

Stange how a lot of younger people want to relive some of the things we and our parents did.

I don't do change easily that's why I'm still a bit of a technophobe. Next you know we will have phones with computers in them and be able to make video calls like the Jetsons did back in the 60s. Dang they may even figure out how to put cameras in phones soon.
Bob
 
Ruark served in the american merchant navy during the war..in convoy traffic. Now, I remember Norwegians sailors back home with wrecked nervs from sailing for years drinking heavily..so I can understand Ruark..
Recently on FB Ruark page , a clip out from a newspaper news segment telling Lt Ruark was wounded in action in the Atlantic , and decorated for it .
Not his writing , a journalist and that he never to my knowledge wrote about himself at all .
 
Thank God there are still parts of the world and things we can do where that is the case!
 

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