Different Shooting in the World's Greatest Zoo
More 'visitors to-day to East Africa —the greatest, natural noo in the world —arrive armed only with cameras than with--rifles and guns (says a writer in .the "Daily Mail").
..The- animals which, abound in the highlands of Kenya and Tanganyika have no fear of a motor-ear, and a|>- • Harciitly regard.it merely as some new ;>iid harmless species of black rhinoceros. Most of them hardly trouble to raise their heads to look at it as it passes .by.' '-■ -'" ' :
■.- It is only ■ since , the war that the secrets of, the Screngetti Plains have been revealed. The motor-car and the aeroplane have brought this most remarkable of all game areas well within the orbit of the traveller and tourist. On foot it takes three weeks—in a motor-car in dry weather three or four days, but in an aeroplane little more than an hour is required to reach it from ,the railhead. I started from Arusha in North Tanganyika at midday to visit this great game area, landed, lunched, and was back again by 4 p.m. To reach our destination it was necessary to fly over a range of hills some 8000 feet high; on the top is a fertile crater, the largest of its kind in the world, about fifteen miles square. In it there are calculated to be.no fewcv than 100,000 head of game, chiefly zebra, wildebeest, and gazelle. Great black masses appeared to cover the ground, and apparently they seldom, if ever, move out of their naturally protected area.
Once over this range you see before you the Serengctti Plains stretching out for some 200 or 300 miles, toward that vast inland sea Victoria Nyanza —as big as Scotland. A few little lakes here and there, rocks, scrub, and bush cover "the ground.
Every square yard appears to be covered with some form of wild game. Round the edgo of one lake wo saw a magnificent leopard and' family—further on a magnificent specimen of the king of beasts, together with a.lioness mid three cubs. AYe circled for a second time over the liouess, who, so far from being frightened by us, proceeded to run after us.
We alighted for lunch, and while we took our refreshments a swarm of locusts passed by, looking like a vedbrowu cloud obscuring the sun. After lunch we started back, being very careful to avoid the locusts, -for fear they would cause obstruction in our engine. We retraced our steps only once in order to get a closer look at a dozen giraffes who appeared to be as interested in us as we were in them.
It is customary, when camping for a night or so in the plains, to tie some meat behind a lorry in the morning, and it is the exception rather than the rule if a dozen or more lions do not come and accept your invitation to breakfast. There is a -photograph on record of no fewer than 32 lions surrounding a group of interested photographers.
So tame are these superb animals that few, if any, hunters care .to shoot them.
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Bibliographic details
Evening Post, Volume CXIV, Issue 92, 15 October 1932, Page 23
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517Different Shooting in the World's Greatest Zoo Evening Post, Volume CXIV, Issue 92, 15 October 1932, Page 23
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