Pierr'e slowly signaled for me to come abreast of him
and when I arrived he cupped his hand to his ear and began to listen
intently. A four-letter word then hissed from his lips and I turned my
head towards him in askance, only to see him staring intently into the
thick bush just ahead. Following his lead, I then studied tightly woven
grass right before us and saw his cause for concern. The two tawny rear
legs and the round belly of a lioness were barely visible about 15 feet
away. Both of us slowly raised our rifles.
I was on the third day of a ten-day hunt in the Selous, enjoying a few
days of 1x1 hunting for buffalo with my old friend and P.H., Pierr'e van
Tonder. I'd gotten into some really exciting and close up encounters with
buffalo the first two days, but had no success putting everything
together. After spending most of the early morning driving around in the
Land Cruiser without results, upon the trackers recommendation, we drove
to a dry river bed to check the sandy soil for tracks, hoping that a
buffalo or three might have decided to wait out the midday heat in the
shadows of the thick vegetation on both banks.
We arrived at our destination about 11:00 a.m. and parked the safari car
in the shade and walked down a steep hippo trail to the white sand. After
only a few hundred yards of travel down the winding koronga and fighting
the powdery footing below, I was drenched in sweat and suffering in the 90
degree heat. Buffalo hunting isn't always fun. I was already breathing
hard.
Twiga, the Masai tracker, suddenly froze. I then heard branches snap and
the unmistakable bovine bellow of a buffalo up on the bank. It didn't
sound very far away at all. We scrambled as quietly as possible and
listened some more. Again and again, we all heard the characteristic
grunts and groans of a herd slowly feeding along in front of us. Soon, we
began to find dung, still green and wet. My pulse quickened and my focus
became more intent. Pierr'e turned and made sure I was carrying my rifle,
a vintage Westley Richards .450/.400 double. "Keep up," he whispered and,.
"We're really close" were the only and unnecessary words that he'd say for
about 20 minutes as we slipped along, both following the willowy Masai. We
often stopped and scanned the shadows for the black shapes of buffalo, and
occasionally saw movement but couldn't determine gender, much less the
quality of a possible trophy.
Then it happened. As described in the first paragraph, we were only a few
feet from a lion whose intent was the same as ours and that was killing
buffalo.
I gave an involuntary shiver when, although unseen, but closer than the
length of an F250, a buffalo bellowed. The lion before us sprang and there
was a tremendous whack of flesh on flesh just to the right of me. I
couldn't tell if the lion had hit the buffalo, or the other way around,
but within a second or two, the harpies of hell broke loose.
The tremendous thunder of hundreds of buffalo hooves were all around us.
Lions growled and roared. The thud of hundreds... no... thousands of
pounds of bodies colliding was seemingly continuous. Twiga had moved just
to our rear and Pierr'e and I were back to back... and I silently thanked
God that he shot left-handed. His .500 Jeffery was at his shoulder and my
double at mine..
The thunder got infinitely louder and a cow and a full-grown calf came
around a large clump of brush and headed directly for us with a lioness
only inches behind them, swinging deliberately with her left front paw at
the left flank of the mama buffalo. I could easily see terror in the eyes
of the cow and cold deliberation in the coal-black pupils of the pursuer.
The cow had a huge part of its ham ripped from it and its nose was
spraying blood like a garden hose.
Before either Pierr'e or I could even react, all three animals saw us and
skidded to a stop, a distance we later stepped off at seven paces. Pierr'e
whispered to take a buffalo if they come an inch closer and I told him
that I'd take the buff on the right... I guess we just prayed that the
lion would flee at the shot. I don't remember why the buffalo seemed the
greatest threat, but I clearly remember that it was.
And then I could feel Pierr'e become steel. "On the left..", and somehow,
still keeping my attention on the two buffalo and the lioness in my
sights, I saw a full-grown killing machine's head and shoulders appear
only a couple of feet below the up raised rifle barrel of the Professional
Hunter against whom my spine pressed. From a slither like a snake, she
never gave us a glance and sprung for the calf. I'll never forget that
leap. From almost under our feet she had no trajectory in her flight, but
just powered straight at the animal, hitting it full on, spinning upon
contact and attempting catch the nose within her powerful jaws. She
succeeded and wrenched the calf's neck almost off its body as she dug her
claws into the horribly moaning buffalo.
When the lioness under Pierr'e feet had jumped at the calf, its mother had
valiantly lunged at the oncoming blur but missed. As a byproduct of her
attempt to save her calf, she caused the lioness behind her to miss in its
simultaneous attack from the rear, all this resulting in a blurry and
bloody tangle of two lioness and two desperate buffalo in a tornado of
death immediately before us.
As if a time out whistle had blown, the lions just let go of the prey and
the temporarily reprieved buffalo stood only inches away from their
attackers (and only feet from us). I could see the gore-covered heaving
chests of the lions. Their teeth were bared. They purred a terrifyingly
gentle r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r. Both cats just sat on their haunches for ten or so
seconds and gathered strength, it seemed. And then with a look that said,
"I know you're there", they turned their stares to us and squared their
shoulders in our direction. I was so damn close to the "right" lioness
that the round bead on the front sight didn't even cover the entire bloody
nose of the animal I had targeted. I began to very deliberately pull the
trigger. I had had enough.
A millisecond before the sear broke, the buffalo took the opportunity to
spin away and the chase was on again. "My" lion was after the calf this
time and she whipped her paws at the retreating legs of the animal and
ripped at its hams with teeth that seemed as long a those of a
saber-toothed tiger.
What the hell! Three additional lions that we'd never seen flew past us
just missing Twiga who was at our rear. Later he told us he'd seen them
within yards, crouched in the shadows, but figured there wasn't a damned
thing we could do about them with all the carnage going on in front of us.
Both the wounded buffalo tried to get up a steep hill, but with the damage
already done and the harrying of the lions, couldn't make it up and over.
They turned and came charging back directly at us, only to be turned to my
right by another lioness, to then unseen, that is, until she
professionally performed her blocking tactic. I'd never seen her even
thought she first appeared only the length of a good trout rod from me. I
aimed at the hole in her ear until she completed her task when the buffalo
turned back and bayed against a tree trunk. By this time, in full view, we
could count six lions. One or two were juvenile males... but big as
hell... and they all fanned before us and made a semi-circle around the
screaming buffalo.
The lions had it figured out. The two in the center just awaited the
inevitable while the other four began to slide to the sides and rear of
the buffalo.... again, all this no further away than the length of a
fairly "makeable" birdie putt. Twiga tapped me and pointed to our right
side. A fully adult male, albeit with only a thin mane and a still yellow
nose was slipping through the brush with a path that would go over my
shaking feet. I signaled to Pierr'e that I wanted to give way.
Pierr'e grabbed me by the shirt and pulled. Still back to back, we moved
away from the oncoming lion who alternately glanced at our retreating
figures and back at his prospective dinner. He was pretty well stove up,
and we latter figured that the initial contact had been a successful, if
temporary bashing of this big guy by one of the buffalo in the herd....
but who knows? Thankfully, he made his way into the circle of lions and
let us retire to where we now had twenty yards of comfort. Whoopee..
Twenty yards. Think about it.
For the first time, I took my eyes off of the lions and buffalo to assess
a path up the hill and to relative safety. Pierr'e, angry as hell, said,
"Don't you dare take your eyes off of them". I complied.
As if on a signal, the lions again attacked and all the animals, the
killers and the prey, thundered in a cloud of dust and flying blood down
toward the dry river bed. Ripping, tearing... all the lions taking their
turns in perfect time. I was in awe.
Pierr'e, Twiga and I didn't speak or move for maybe a full minute, still
expecting another lion or tiger or dragon or Viet Cong or T-Rex to come
out of the bushes at us. Then we heard the plantive death moan of a
buffalo... a short pause and the sound of a single buff galloping madly
away from us through the brush and the whisper-whip of the grass as the
lions followed..
We looked where we had stood during the majority of the incident. Blood
was all around where our feet had been. We looked at our britches... we
were peppered with tiny specks of red. Our legs wobbled. We wanted to sit
down, but were afraid to do so because we didn't know if we'd be able to
get up. We began a stupid giggle and the game scout and assistant tracker
who had witnessed the whole thing from the immediate hillside, joined
us... We all jabbered, no one paying one bit of attention to the other...
Finally, we began to all tell our stories to each other..... stories bound
to be embellished some as time passed, but right then.. It was real and we
couldn't lie to each other. Pierr'e, Twiga and I had bonded as brothers...
it was the most exciting time I had ever spent in my life...
I didn't just witness the Cadillacs of Killers in action.. I had been a
part of it. I didn't see it on television or even sit in a safari car and
watch it from a distance. I had blood on me. It was primal, basic,
perfect, raw and the most scarlet and scariest damn thing that man may be
able to walk away from.
And unlike Francis McCumber, I, in Pierre's eyes, had passed the test....
And I felt pretty darn good about that.
We carefully backtracked to the vehicle and I tried to eat lunch. I threw
up my guts when I took the first bite.... And then thought a little more
kindly about the dear deceased Mr. McCumber. My reaction just took 15
minutes longer than his, I guess.
I've been to the mountaintop, it seems. I loved every frantic second and I
wanted it to last forever. I wanted the Westley Richards to thump against
my shoulder when the lion took one more step or the buff lowered her head
to charge. I felt strength in my brothers' back and pure joy in their
laughter afterwards. And the memories are mine until I die... burned into
my brain as sure as a brand.
And I guess that's why I go to Africa..
JudgeG ... just counting time 'til I am again finding balm in Gilead
chilled out somewhere in the Selous.
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Atkinson Hunting Adventures