My dear Bvekenya, and Mrs. Bvekenya
- Jan. 12th, 1958
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"You
have probably heard of the wonderful trip that Anne
and I took with Tom Bulpin and his wife – 3.5
months right through the Rhodesians, Belgian Congo,
Uganda, and Kenya – and home through Tanganyika."
Thank you both ever
so much for the excellent cheese which so kindly
sent us – and which we have immensely enjoyed.
It is far, far better than any cheese we can buy
locally. We both wish you all an exceedingly happy
year, with all health and prosperity.
It was a great pleasure for me to meet that very
nice son of yours, who is managing
Mr. De Kock’s Apiaries.
You have probably heard of the wonderful trip
that Anne and I took with Tom Bulpin and his wife
– 3.5 months right through the Rhodesians,
Belgian Congo, Uganda, and Kenya – and home
through Tanganyika. We visited all the game reserves
and national Parks on route, and saw any amount
of game – many in East Africa, which I had
never seen before. At one time, in the Wankie
Park of Rhodesia, we watched over 108 elephants
drinking by moonlight!
In the Queen Elizabeth National Park of Uganda
there are 14,000 hippo, and they are finding them
quite a problem, as they are grazing off all the
veld, and walk about on land all day.
In Uganda we went after (on foot) and actually
saw a large male Mountain gorilla – a huge
brute almost as broad as buffalo, standing nearly
6 feet high when absolutely erect, and as broad
as two big me! We only saw him running away (which
he did on all fours) but quite close (about thirty
yards). That was 8,500 feet up in the bamboo belt
of the Birunga Volcanoes. By love, you would have
loved to have got among those bamboos! They grow
from 8,000 feet up in the mountains, and in huge
dense forests of lovely slender poles. The gorilla
eat the young shoots, which they peel to get at
the pith inside, and they also eat the wild celery
plants which from the undergrowth, and make a
fresh bed each night, of pulled over saplings
(to form a springy mattress) on which leaves are
thrown down – the whole form making a nice,
more or less circular, shallow bed, about 3-4
feet in diameter.
You would also enjoy a visit to the Ivory Room
at Mombasa where all the Ivory is collected for
sale and shipment. We saw tusks of all sixes and
ages, and rhino horns and hippo teeth (much of
it taken from poacher, as well as legitimately
shot), and were told that the quantity we saw
there was worth about 40 000 pounds sterling!
It was interesting to note the difference between
the “hard” ivory of the Forest elephants,
and the “soft” (more valuable) ivory
of the Bush elephants – the type you hunted!
In Rhodesia we met Mr Sandes, now Warden at Zimbabwe,
who remembered you in your poaching days, and
had enjoyed, a copy of “The Ivory Trail”.
The book is on sale all over the Rhodesia and
East Africa.
Anyhow, one day you must visit us here again,
and hear all about it in detail,
and see my drawing.
With very best wishes to you all, and many thanks,
Astley Maberly