Certainly I should say that a man
charged from fifty yards or so
would have little chance for a second shot, provided he missed
the first. A hit seemed, in my experience, to the animal, by
sheer force of
impact, long enough to permit me to throw in
another
cartridge. A lioness thus took four frontal bullets
starting at about sixty yards. An
initial miss would probably
have permitted her to close.
Here, as can be seen, is a great source of danger to a flurried
or
nervousbeginner. He does not want that lion to get an inch
nearer; he fires at too long a range, misses, and is killed or
mauled before he can reload. This happened
precisely so to two
young friends of MacMillan. They were armed with double-rifles,
let them off
hastily as the beast started at them from two
hundred yards, and never got another chance. If they had
possessed the experience to have waited until the lion had come
within fifty yards they would have had the almost
certainty of
four barrels at close range. Though I have seen a lion missed
clean well inside those limits.
>From such performances are
so-called lion accidents built. During
my stay in Africa I heard of six white men being killed by lions,
and a number of others mauled. As far as possible I tried to
determine the facts of each case. In every
instance the trouble
followed either
foolishness or loss of nerve. I believe I should
be quite safe in
saying that from identically the same
circumstances any of the good lion men-Tarleton, Lord Delamere,
the Hills, and others-would have extricated themselves unharmed.
This does not mean that accidents may not happen. Rifles jam, but
generally because of flurried manipulation! One may unexpectedly
meet the lion at too close quarters; a foot may slip, or a
cartridge prove
defective. So may one fall
downstairs or bump
one's head in the dark. Sufficient forethought and alertness and
readiness would go far in either case to prevent bad results.
The wounded beast, of course, offers the most interesting problem
to the lion
hunter. If it sees the
hunter, it is likely to
chargehim at once. If hit while making off, however, it is more apt to
take cover. Then one must
summon all his good sense and nerve to
get it out. No rules can be given for this; nor am I
trying to
write a text book for lion
hunters. Any good lion
hunter knows a
lot more about it than I do. But always a man must keep in mind
three things: that a lion can hide in cover so short that it
seems to the
novice as though a jack-rabbit would find scant
concealment there; that he
charges like
lightning, and that he
can spring about fifteen feet. This spring, coming unexpectedly
from an
unseen beast, is about impossible to avoid. Sheer luck
may land a fatal shot; but even then the lion will probably do
his damage before he dies. The rush from a short distance a good
quick shot ought to be able to cope with.
Therefore the wise
hunter assures himself of at least twenty
feet-preferably more-of
neutral zone all about him. No matter
how long it takes, he determines
absolutely that the lion is not
within that distance. The rest is alertness and quickness.
As I have said, the
amount of cover necessary to
conceal a lion
is astonishingly small. He can
flatten himself out surprisingly;
and his tawny colour blends so well with the brown grasses that
he is practically
invisible. A practised man does not, of course,
look for lions at all. He is after
unusual small patches,
especially the black ear tips or the black of the mane. Once
guessed at, it is interesting to see how quickly the hitherto
unsuspected animal sketches itself out in the cover.
I should, before passing on to another
aspect of the matter,
mention the dangerous
poisons carried by the lion's claws. Often
men have died from the most
trivial surface wounds. The grooves
of the claws carry putrefying meat from the kills. Every sensible
man in a lion country carries a small syringe, and either
permanganate or carbolic. And those mild little remedies he uses
full strength!
The great and
overwhelmingadvantage is of course with the
hunter. He possesses as
deadly a
weapon: and that
weapon will
kill at a distance. This is proper, I think. There are more lions
than
hunters; and, from our point of view, the man is more
important than the beast. The game is not too
hazardous. By that
I mean that, barring sheer accident, a man is sure to come out
all right provided he does
accurately the right thing. In other
words, it is a dangerous game of skill, but it does not possess
the blind danger of a forest in a
hurricane, say. Furthermore, it
is a game that no man need play unless he wants to. In the lion
country he may go about his business-daytime business-as though
he were home at the farm.
Such being the case, may I be pardoned for intruding one of my
own small ethical ideas at this point, with the full realization
that it depends upon an entirely personal point of view. As far
as my own case goes, I consider it poor sportsmanship ever to
refuse a lion-chance merely because the
advantages are not all in
my favour. After all, lion
hunting is on a different plane from
ordinary shooting: it is a
challenge to war, a
deliberate seeking
for
mortalcombat. Is it not just a little
shameful to pot old
felis leo at long range, in the open, near his kill, and wherever
we have him at an
advantage-nine times, and then to back out
because that
advantage is for once not so marked? I have so often
heard the
phrase, "I let him (or them) alone. It was not good
enough," meaning that the game looked a little risky.
Do not
misunderstand. I am not advising that you bull ahead into
the long grass, or that alone you open fire on a half dozen lions
in easy range. Kind
providence endowed you with
strategy, and
certainly you should never go in where there is no show for you
to use your
weaponeffectively. But
occasionally the odds will be
against you and you will be called upon to take more or less of a
chance. I do not think it is quite square to quit playing merely
because for once your
opponent has been dealt the better cards.
If here are too many of them see if you cannot
manoeuvre them; if
the grass is long, try every means in your power to get them out.
Stay with them. If finally you fail, you will at least have the
satisfaction of
knowing that circumstances alone have defeated
you. If you do not like that sort of a game, stay out of it
entirely.
XII. MORE LIONS
Nor do the last remarks of the
preceding chapter mean that you
shall not have your
trophy in peace. Perhaps
excitement and a
slight doubt as to whether or not you are going to
survive do not
appeal to you; but
nevertheless you would like a lion skin or so.
By all means shoot one lion, or two, or three in the safest
fashion you can. But after that you ought to play the game.
The surest way to get a lion is to kill a zebra, cut holes in
him, fill the holes with strychnine, and come back next morning.
This method is
absolutely safe.
The next safest way is to follow the
quarry with a pack of
especially trained dogs. The lion is so busy and
nervous over
those dogs that you can walk up and shoot him in the ear. This
method has the
excitement of riding and following, the joy of a
grand and noisy row, and the fun of
seeing a good dog-fight. The
same effect can be got chasing wart-hogs, hyenas, jackals-or
jack-rabbits. The
objection is that it wastes a noble beast in an
inferior game. My personal opinion is that no man is justified in
following with dogs any large animal that can be captured with
reasonable
certainty without them. The sport of coursing is
another matter; but that is quite the same in
essence whatever
the size of the
quarry. If you want to kill a lion or so quite
safely, and at the same time enjoy a
glorious and exciting
gallopwith lots of accompanying row, by all means follow the sport with
hounds. But having killed one or two by that method, quit. Do not
go on and clean up the country. You can do it. Poison and hounds