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 5 of 6)
Taking turns, we got onto the seats, while the elephants still knelt on the ground. There was no delicate way of climbing the elephant’s back and squirming into the seat, and this was another job for the mahouts and the trainers—easing the timid and top-heavy guests into seated positions.
We set out in a long and straggling file, heading across the swamp water, looking for animals. The mahout seated on the elephant’s neck talked much of the time to the elephant, urging it onward, cautioning it, mildly scolding it when—as frequently happened—the elephant took a hunger-determined detour from the route and, tearing at bunches of palm leaves, decided to eat a whole tree. We were aimed in a general direction, a long file of elephants, great and small, some of them with humans on their backs, and we saw impala and zebra and wart hogs, and a profusion of birds; but the strongest impression I had of this outing was of a herd of elephants, idly grazing.
“Move up, move up. Come on, Cathy—move up,” Big Joe called out. And I could hear the other mahouts exhorting their elephants.
But the elephants were hungry, there was no way to dissuade a famished elephant from its food—and as far as the eye could see there was food in this glittering swamp. The elephants wrenched at leafy boughs, and crammed palm fronds into their pink mouths, and they twirled tall stands of grass with their trunks and uprooted whole sheaves of it to eat.
“Move it up!”
The cry “Move it up” did very little to provoke Cathy to move from her meal, and I could not really see the point of trying to convince this snorting and masticating beast that it was a better idea to keep moving than finish eating the tree she was stabbing with her tusks and tearing apart with her trunk.
But the experience of riding an elephant past the wildlife on the grassy banks and the herons in the channels under the high blue sky was something unimaginable to me, and though objectively I could see that the elephant was enormous, and I had always felt elephants were dangerous, I felt safe from any predators. What animal would dare attack this big-tusked creature? Its only true enemy was a human, armed with an enormous gun.
We proceeded to an island between two channels where there was a mud wallow. The elephants, relieved of their riders and seats, rolled in the soft muck and sprayed water over themselves, while we few guests sipped mineral water, seated in camp chairs, some snapping pictures, others making notes in journals.
Riding on a trained elephant, gazing upon wild elephants: It was like nothing I had ever done or seen, and, as far as I knew, it had no parallel in Africa. Added to the fact that Abu Camp was an island of luxury in the bush was the novelty of elephants for transport, and the staff working so hard to please the guests. I could understand the travel writer gushing for the magazine, writing pieces about where pachyderms play and recalling the meals: Antelope steaks sizzled on the grill as we were plied with wild mushroom risotto, cauliflower gratin, tiramisu, Veuve Clicquot...And as we sat drinking and talking an enormous hyena appeared out of nowhere....
I had seen elephants in Africa before—they are unmissable features of the landscape, visible from a mile away, and they are dauntless, never hurrying or circumspect and hunted-looking as most other African game seems. Elephants own the bush, where they are right at home, ambling in family groups, going wherever they wish. If they decide to eat a tree, they will do so, and are well known for tearing a baobab to pieces with their tusks, for the juicy pulp. If you are in their way, they will trample you and keep going. They never give the impression that they need anyone or anything. Because of their size and their appetite they spend much of the day eating. The oddity of Abu was that these elephants, born in the wild, had been captured and dominated, taught to submit to humans climbing on them.
Riding an Indian elephant (Elephas maximus indicus) in Rajasthan is not unusual; in India they are traditionally used as beasts of burden and as workers in the fields and in combat; this has been the case for thousands of years. Alexander the Great used elephants in his campaign of conquest as he battled into India, and so did the armies opposing him, as did Hannibal later, crossing the Alps. But these were Asian or Syrian war elephants, smaller, tractable varieties.
A big-eared African elephant (Loxo- donta africanus) was another matter altogether. For one thing, it is the largest land animal in the world, highly intelligent and independent and family-minded. I was thinking that Africa, which was losing its wildness by the day to urban encroachment and land-grabbers, was also sacrificing the wildness of these powerful elephants as well, in the interests of tourism.
When I mentioned this to Michael he repeated that his ultimate intention was to reintroduce most of these elephants into the wild, so that they could perhaps join a herd and live as free creatures again. This seemed to me a worthy aim.
On another day at Abu we climbed onto the elephants and were taken to a clearing by the backwater at the side of one of the wider river channels. This picnic by the lagoon stands out in my memory as the highest level of comfort one could find in the African bush, while still retaining all the elements of the safari experience. The clearing was a lovely setting, a grove of tall mopane and fig trees, well shaded but looking onto the water coursing through the thick reed beds of the Okavango. In all essentials we were outdoors in the heart of Africa, among small darting birds and tall fish-hunting herons. We were seated in camp chairs, we were served cold drinks by the Abu staff, and on an expanse of white linen, a buffet table had been laid—yellow curries and bowls of purple vegetables and a tureen of soup and platters of sliced fruit and beer and wine in chests of ice.
Nathan—his usual serene self, chatting with the other mahouts—told me how he had taken the mahouts and elephants out camping for the night recently. What fun they had swimming, playing soccer. “We were sleeping with the elephants in a circle around us.” He made it sound like Boy Scout camp. But one of the cautions in Randall Moore’s Back to Africa book—the whole Abu Camp rationale—was that it was essential that the trainer continually remind the elephant who’s boss. “Dominance...must prevail,” Moore writes; the trainer “must make it known from the start who has the best means of domination at his disposal.”
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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