The Joys and Dangers of Exploring Africa on the Back of an Elephant
Renowned travel writer Paul Theroux journeys through Botswana’s spectacular, wildlife-rich wetlands
- By Paul Theroux
- Smithsonian magazine, April 2013, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 6)
“Want to know one of the best ones?” he said. “It was lying on the ground for hours watching the antics of dung beetles as they battled over a pile of elephant dung, with the brood pairs frantically rolling away the nuptial ball.”
The strangeness of being in an open-sided room, around a linen-covered dining table, in the middle of an African swamp, kept the conversation somewhat subdued. It was a situation daunting even to the much-traveled millionaires at the table, humbled by the surrounding darkness. The meal was delicious, but past the torches and lanterns at the edge of the platform we could hear the snorts and grumbles of hippos thrashing in the reeds, and the bird squawks and the crackle of electrocuted insects frying on the bug zapper.
After dinner, Michael took me aside and introduced me to Star, a young Tswana woman, all smiles, who was the chef, and to his managerial staff, his colleagues, the people who ran the operation in his absence. One, a man of about 30, had been at dinner, listening intently but had said nothing. Because of his reticence, I said hello.
“This is Nathan,” Michael said. “He was traveling around Africa and visited us. He discovered he liked what we were doing. He found us, not the other way around.”
His friendly bluster made Nathan smile, but still he seemed rather shy. I introduced myself and we talked awhile. He said he was from Australia and had been at Abu just a few months, and that his girlfriend, Jen, also worked at Abu.
“Nathan’s one of our trainers,” Michael said, because Nathan had not yet said so.
His shyness showed in his faintly smiling downcast face, the sideways tilt of his head, his deferential posture, even the way he planted his feet. But when the subject turned to elephants Nathan brightened. He had worked with elephants in Thailand and Canada too, and seemed very serious about knowing everything about elephant behavior. He had strong opinions about their behavior, how teachable they were, how they responded— and he reminded me of horse owners, who speak of the subtlety of horse responses—how they’re smarter than the rider; or of the dog owner who says, “Nugget is always a little nervous around really selfish people.”
One by one, the guests were escorted to their tents by a guide raking the path with the light of a powerful flashlight, looking for a snake or a scorpion, or possibly a hippo—hippos leave the water every evening to climb ashore and feed on vegetation.
The night air crackled with the slapping of bats and the fit-fit-fit of insects and the hoots of herons and the thrashings of hippos browsing in the reeds under my sleeping platform.
Dawn is sudden in the water world of the Okavango, without any hills or heights to delay the sunrise, and the shimmering mirrors of the lagoons and channels intensified the light, which is all gold.
After breakfast, Michael showed me around the camp—the staff quarters, the composting field, the solar panels—and at the elephant compound he introduced me to the mahouts. Big Joe, George, Itaki, Collet, Frank and Nathan, the one non-African, were leading the elephants from their stockade to an open area where each elephant, with an iron cuff shackling its foot, was chained to a large eye bolt. The clanking of the long heavy chains, the bang of the bolts, the shouted orders of the mahouts, as the elephants shuffled, was at odds with the idyllic place—a courtyard with a canopy of high foliage, the sunlight filtered through the dust kicked up by the elephants.
“She’s a good girl,” Nathan said, and he rested his head against the thick gray post of her leg. “Aren’t you, Sukiri?”
“How old is she?”
“Eighteen,” he said in the Australian way, ay-deen. “She was orphaned from a cull at Kruger with Thandi and Seeni. They were brought to Gaberone. That’s where we got them. Steady, girl!”
Now the seating platform—a howdah-like contraption—was lifted to their backs and strapped around the elephants’ middle, and when this was done each elephant was verbally hectored until it knelt, its whole body flat to the ground. This was accomplished through a slow folding of the legs beneath them and a sagging collapse of the big gray belly.
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Comments (4)
To the Editors of Smithsonian Magazine, Randall Moore's outburst below is entirely in character.. However, this story is not about him, but rather about Abu and the experience there at a time after he had sold the business. Yes, there is a small inaccuracy in that the first elephants that he brought back to Africa were not part of the original Abu herd. However that is old history and only relevant if Mr Theroux was writing a piece about Randall Moore or the full history of the camp. I did work there over a period of 19 years, nine of them for Randall Moore. This is not the forum for a tit for tat between Mr Moore and me, so whatever his personal opinion of me may be, it is utterly churlish to use that to attack Mr Theroux, one of the world's most pre-eminent and highly respected travel writers. The piece is about Mr Theroux's experiences at the camp, and in my opinion, it perfectly captures much of the essence of what it was like to be on safari at Abu. This article is a tribute to all those who invested their lives and passion into making Abu one of the great safari experiences on the continent. Yours sincerely, Michael Lorentz Passage to Africa
Posted by Michael Lorentz on May 1,2013 | 03:44 AM
Randall - Your outburst below, whilst entirely in character, is completely uncalled for. The story is not about you, but rather about Abu and the experience there at a time after you had sold the business. Yes, there is a small inaccuracy in that the first elephants you brought back to Africa where not part of the original Abu herd, but that is old history and only relevant if Mr Theroux was writing a piece about you or the full history of the camp. This is not the forum for a tit for tat between you and me, so whatever your personal opinion of me may be, it is utterly churlish to use that to attack Mr Theroux, one of the world's most pre-eminent and highly respected travel writers. The piece is about his experiences at the camp, and in my opinion, perfectly captures much of the essence of what it was like to be on safari at Abu. This article is a tribute to all those who invested their lives and passion into making Abu one of the great safari experiences on the continent. Yours sincerely, Michael Lorentz Passage to Africa
Posted by Michael Lorentz on April 30,2013 | 03:19 AM
Letter to your editor; Dear sir, It is very sad to read an article in a magazine I considered in such high regard, that is filled with so many inaccuracies. Paul Theroux should be ashamed! He is either too old to research, read, or write this kind of article. The fact that he mentions my book BTA as a reference for the article and then proceeds to reinvent the facts speaks for itself. He should have read my second book Elephants for Africa as a reference to my work in the Okavango Delta and perhaps he would have had a chance to get some of the facts correct! Perhaps his only reason for writing this article was to provide some public relations prose for his friend Michael Lorentz, whom never worked for twenty years at Abu Camp with the elephants! I founded Elephant Back Safaris and built Abu Camp and only served nineteen years in this position myself! Very disturbing to read such a poorly constructed article! Sincerely, Randall Jay Moore
Posted by Randall Jay Moore on April 22,2013 | 04:22 AM
Articles like this are why I love coming to this website. Thank you so much for taking me to Africa on a vivid journey while on my lunch break stuck in a stuffy cubicle. :)
Posted by Jason on March 27,2013 | 04:47 PM