Isolation reading

John Gryphon

Well-Known Member
I have posted this tale before but its for those that previously hadnt the time to read this enthralling tale of survival.

Harry Wolhuter
Man-Eating Lion Killed with Knife
The waterhole was dry. It was quite a disappointment for the game ranger, Harry Wolhuter, and his three askaris. They were on the long return trek from a distant patrol and both men and animals were looking forward to the promise of water and a well-earned rest.
Despite the fact that it was almost dusk there was no option but to push on and hope to find that the next waterhole, nineteen kilometres away, would hold some water. Accordingly, Wolhuter left his men and pack donkeys and, accompanied by “Bull”, one of his rough Boer dogs, rode off along the track.
He had no fear of getting lost in the gathering dark as he had ridden that very path many times by night a few years previously when he was a scout with Steinacker’s Horse during the Boer War.
As he rode he reviewed and mentally crossed off the various animals that he had seen during his patrol. The Boer War had been a disaster for the game. Large companies of men permanently on the move back and forward across the veldt had to live as best they could off the land and the game of all species had been persistently hunted for meat.
On first assuming his duties as a game ranger, Wolhuter had despaired of ever seeing the game return to its former numbers. However with the passage of time the animals started to slowly trickle back into Sabi Game Reserve. Wolhuter was constantly, and expectantly, searching for any evidence of new additions to the area.
The trail led across a bare plain that had recently been burnt off, save for the odd patch of heavy grass. Wolhuter’s reverie was broken by the rustle of something large in one of the grass patches that the path occasionally cut through.
It was too dark to see, and Wolhuter assumed that it was a pair of reedbuck who favoured the area. To his surprise the animals approached and when within three metres he could make out the unmistakable form of a pair of lions.
It was a completely unexpected meeting as Wolhuter had never before seen any lion in that area. Although Wolhuter had his ever-present rifle it was too late to deal with two lions at such close quarters.
He swung his mount and spurred vigorously in an attempt to extract every effort from the horse. Before the steed had time to reach full stride it staggered under the weight of the lion that had leapt onto its hindquarters.
The great shaggy head of the lion brushed the ranger’s face as the beast took Wolhuter’s right shoulder in its mouth. Its grip was vicelike and the ranger gasped as he felt the crunch of its mighty canine teeth as they bit deeply into the bones of his shoulder.
The horse’s frantic bucking and plunging forced the lion to lose its grip. Unfortunately it also unseated the rider. Wolhuter tumbled heavily to the ground, landing almost on top of the second lion that was eagerly seeking the chance to grab the galloping horse by the throat.
There was a moment’s hesitation, which Wolhuter later considered was responsible for his salvation. The first lion, selfishly wishing to keep its prize for itself, quickly grabbed Wolhuter by the shoulder again and, rather than killing him on the spot, dragged him away.
The other lion resumed its pursuit of the horse. The ranger could hear the clatter of the horse’s hooves and the grunts of the lion together with the growls and barking of Bull who was in pursuit of the attacking lion.
The lion had Wolhuter by the right shoulder and was dragging him along on his back between its legs and, in doing so, the lion’s claws cut into his trailing arms. Wolhuter had long spurs held on by heavy leather straps and these acted as brakes, as they gauged deep furrows in the ground. Whenever the spurs impeded the impatient lion too much he would savagely jerk his burden free. This sent waves of agony searing through the badly wounded ranger.
Added to this was the anguish of knowing that the lion would soon make a meal of him. Wolhuter hoped that at least the lion would kill him before starting its meal. Hungry lions are apt to forgo such niceties!
The ranger grimly thought that his life was at its end. However, as the painful progress continued he thought of what he might be able to do to save himself. The only prospect was his hunting knife that he carried in a loose fitting sheath on his right hip.
Twice before it had fallen out during gallops across the veldt in pursuit of game and he had been lucky to find it. The chance of it still being in the sheath after this recent struggle seemed remote.
Wolhuter worked his left arm around behind him and, with indescribable joy, felt the handle of the knife in his grip. He considered several plans before deciding that the only chance lay in trying to stab the lion in the heart.
The choice was a difficult and complicated one, requiring the ranger to feel cautiously for the animal’s shoulder as it strode along purring loudly. Wolhuter’s face was pressed firmly into the lion’s mane and he had to reach awkwardly across his chest and strike backhanded.
He realized that if he bungled the attempt it would no doubt have fatal results. He made two quick stabs behind the lion’s left shoulder and a third stab into its throat as it roared in reaction to the unexpected attack.
The lion’s blood gushed out drenching the mauled victim and, dropping Wolhuter, the lion slunk off into the darkness. The ranger struggled to his feet not knowing how seriously the lion was wounded as it continued to call loudly from nearby.
Wolhuter yelled and cursed loudly in the hope of frightening the lion away. He soon stopped, however, when he remembered the other lion which he assumed would be unlikely to catch his riderless horse and could likely appear at any moment.
The next course of action he thought of was to set fire to the grass. It was difficult to strike a match as his right arm hung limp and numb. Finally when he managed to strike a match he could not set the grass alight because of heavy dew that had started to settle.
The only remaining course of action was to climb a tree. Under ordinary circumstances this would have been easy. In his injured state it was a different story. The mauled ranger had to stumble about in the dark until he finally found a tree that he could drag himself into using his one, good arm.
He struggled to climb to a height of four metres. Once there Wolhuter realized that his position was still very precarious. He was starting to feel giddy as a result of shock and loss of blood, what clothes he had left were soaked in both his and the lion’s blood and chilled him in the cold night air.
As he was still bleeding heavily from the wounds he received and fearing he might lose balance, or faint, he managed to undo his belt and lash himself to the tree. Meanwhile the stabbed lion continued to roar and growl from close at hand.
The animal’s cries subsided into a series of long moans and then came the unmistakable sound of a lion death rattle. Wolhuter felt a sense of relief to know that his attacker was dead.
However, he had no time to celebrate because, at almost the same instant, he heard the second lion arrive back at the spot where the horse had been jumped, some sixty metres away. It quickly followed his blood trail and, on reaching the tree, reared up on its hind legs and clawed at the bark.
Realizing that the tree would not prove any great obstacle to the lion, Wolhuter once again feared for his life. As he looked down he could occasionally see the bright glow of the lion’s eyes in the starlight.
Wolhuter yelled at the lion and this seemed to delay its intention to scale the tree. With great relief he heard Bull come panting up to the tree. The dog must have kept with the horse until he realized that his master was no longer in the saddle and then backtracked.
The injured ranger encouraged his faithful friend who responded by distracting the hungry lion with determined barking and snapping. It was some hours before the askaris arrived on the scene and helped Wolhuter down from the tree. The remaining lion continued to prowl menacingly about, being kept at bay only by the dogs and firebrands.
A quick search for the rifle proved fruitless and so the ranger armed himself with a borrowed assegai and set off for the next waterhole. His thirst was terrible and the only way of quenching it was to find water at the pool nine kilometres away.
When they arrived there, having been menaced much of the way by the lion, there was no water. The ranger told his men that he must have water for his raging thirst and after a long search they returned with some slimy remnants of a small pool.
Wolhuter quickly drank all but a little of the muddy brew. His intentions to have his wounds washed with the remainder were short lived, the pain proving too much.
The next morning Wolhuter could not stand, let alone walk. His men returned to find his rifle and the horse which had returned to the scene of the attack. They also found the dead lion and brought its skin, skull and heart back to camp.
They proudly pointed out the knife wounds in the heart. Initially they had doubted their master’s story of having killed the lion with his knife. Who had ever heard of such a feat!
Native bearers were obtained from a nearby village and the long journey back for help began with relays of bearers carrying the stretcher-bound ranger. It was five days march to the nearest settlement and Wolhuter’s wounds, which had not received any treatment, were by that time putrid with infection and he himself was suffering from a raging fever.
On his arrival he was treated by a doctor, unfortunately without any morphine to ease the incredible pain, before being loaded onto a train for a long trip back to the distant hospital.
In the coming weeks there were times when the doctors despaired of saving the ranger’s life. However his tough constitution saw him eventually make a good recovery. His arm was permanently maimed but, as he himself noted proudly, he could still lift it high enough to pull the trigger of his rifle! Nor did it prevent him chalking up forty-four years of exciting service as a game ranger.
Wolhuter had the lion skin and his knife put on display in his home. The knife was nothing fancy but of good steel, designed for butchering work. Some years later while on a visit to England, Wolhuter visited the manufacturer’s shop, keen to buy some more knives to take home.
The young sales assistant appraised the rough looking colonial with upraised eyebrow. His apparent disdain seemed to increase as Wolhuter informed him that he wished to purchase a dozen of the blades, adding that he thought they were excellent knives and relating how a previous knife had saved his life in the encounter with the lion.
With a distinctly withering look the sales assistant replied, “Yes, they are good knives, they will also kill a sheep you know!”‘
During his various patrols Wolhuter had many encounters with poachers. Some of the poachers had rifles which they kept hidden in caves or hollow logs and as a result the stocks were often attacked by white ants and the barrels became pitted with rust and choked with dirt.
Wolhuter stated that he would not fire one of the rifles at any price. The poachers had no qualms about their firearms and, when questioned by him they replied that they never used to clean the bore because the rifles we better as they were!
There was one particularly dedicate poacher that Wolhuter had caught a number of times. On one occasion he had an old .303 rifle and both .303 and .450 Martini-Henry ammunition.
The ranger demanded the second.450 rifle. The poacher assured the ranger that he in fact only owned the one rifle, the .303. Wolhuter asked why it was that he also carried ammunition for the .450 if he did not have such a rifle? The old poacher replied that he could alter the .450 ammo for use in his .303 rifle!
The ranger refused to accept that statement so the poacher suggested that if his handcuffs were removed he would show the lnkosi how he achieved the conversion.
Taking a live .450 cartridge he first wriggled the lead .450 projectile from its case and emptied the black powder charge for later use. Then, having borrowed a hammer, he filled the empty case with water and, placing a rusty old hexagonal nut over the primer, he hammered the case into the thick soft bark of a nearby tree.
The resulting hydraulic pressure popped the unfired .450 primer from its pocket. He then took a fired .303 case and, by the same method, popped the fired primer out. The de-primed .303 case was recovered and the bark and water flicked out.
The MartiniHenry primer was then pushed into the .303 cartridge and some of the Martini-Henry powder was poured into the case. The .450 lead projectile was hammered against a hard surface until it became elongated and thin enough to be pushed into the neck of the .303 case. The resulting projectile was overly long, but that was easily fixed by taking a knife and trimming it to an appropriate length.
“Inkosi that is how I do it! If you like you can fire it!” said the poacher proudly. Wolhuter had a very definite preference that the poacher should fire the resulting concoction. Pointing out a mark on a tree some sixty metres away, the old fellow took his dilapidated rifle and, chambering the handload, hit the mark squarely!
Wolhuter had been a keen hunter before joining the game department. His shooting did not stop then either, as there was always the need to shoot meat for the pot and to cull animals when they proved to be a pest.
In this regard he had many encounters with lions, some of them rather close calls. On one patrol a group of lions attacked his oxen during the night. Only the concerted efforts of the dogs and the fire brandishing native helpers had managed to keep the lions from killing any of the draught animals.
The next morning Wolhuter, fearing further, more costly predations, set off after the pride. Having located the big cats he crept close and took two shots. A lioness fell dead to the first shot but the second shot only wounded another lioness.
This animal came straight toward him, coincidentally rather than intentionally he believed. A small bush hid the hunter from the oncoming feline and he was confident in his ability to handle the situation, but when he attempted to chamber the third round it refused to pick up from the magazine.
Not daring to take eyes off the rapidly approaching lioness he tried again and again to chamber the cartridge. He knew that he had left camp with a full magazine.
With the arrival of the wounded lioness imminent he froze and hoped devoutly that she would not notice him and continue on her way. The cat glanced in his direction and, stopping in her tracks, she fixed Wolhuter with a fierce glare and started to growl menacingly.
He stood as if frozen and he knew without looking that his native helpers were fixed rigid themselves, not many paces behind him. The smallest movement would precipitate an attack. After what seemed a very long time the lioness suddenly resumed her trotting run.
It then occurred to the ranger that the cause of the problem was probably the fact that the magazine of his .303 had not been pressed properly home. A tap with the palm of the hand clicked the magazine into its proper place. Wolhuter then had no difficulty in dropping the lioness before she could go any further.
One Christmas Day a native farmer came to see Wolhuter and complained that during the night some lions had come and killed five of his livestock. The ranger saddled his horse and, after collecting a few of his native rangers and dogs, set off in pursuit.
The spoor led into a patch of thick bush adjacent to the small jutting outcrop of a granite Kopje. Wolhuter told his men to give him ten minutes to get in position before attempting to drive the offenders out into the open.
He proceeded to the small hill of stone and, leaving his horse, he climbed some fifty metres up the sloping face to where a rock projected out into space, offering an excellent view of the country below.
The ranger called on his men to begin the drive. He was beginning to wonder just where the lions had gotten to when he heard the rattle of loose stones on the hill side behind. He spun around to discover that the lions had inexplicably decided to ascend the hill.
A male presented a quick shot which Wolhuter took, sending the animal cascading down the steep slope and into the bush below. Another lion popped up and went tumbling down the kopje on receiving another snap shot. Then a lioness appeared almost opposite the ranger. On the impact of the bullet she tumbled down to fetch up, wounded and angry, at the base of the projecting rock on which he stood.
At this point with the roaring and raging lioness only some nine metres away Wolhuter discovered that he was out of ammunition. It was, and remained, a mystery to him how this came about, because he was always very careful to ensure that rifles had fully charged magazines.
There was nothing to do except stand very, very still and hope fervently that the lioness would continue to remain unaware of his presence and that it would succumb quickly to its wounds.
There was spare ammunition in the horse’s saddle bags and there were two ways of getting it; walk past the lioness or drop over thirteen metres to the ground below. Luckily for Wolhuter, and to his enormous relief, the lioness died from her wounds and, quickly hurdling her body, he ran down to recharge his magazine.
The ranger returned to his lookout position. He could hear a racket in the bush below as the beaters approached and eventually one of the askaris appeared and announced that two local tribesmen had been mauled.
Wolhuter hurried down to discover two men with rather bad bite wounds on their limbs. They were bleeding profusely and had stuffed the great puncture wounds with grass and leaves to try and stem the blood flow.
They had been attacked by one of the first lions that Wolhuter had shot but the lion had died before it could administer any more damage and was lying close by. The two villagers were not part of the organised beat but were from a nearby kraal, where they had been celebrating Christmas to excess with native beer and on hearing of the hunt had rushed over to join in and had managed to place themselves in the wrong place, at definitely the wrong time.
Stumbling onto the wounded lion they had defended themselves with axe and spear. In fact it was probably the spearing that had accounted for the lion. The wounded warriors assured Wolhuter that they could walk the one and half kilometres to the ranger station with the assistance of some friends. Accordingly he set off after the remaining wounded lion and its uninjured companion, despatching both in short order.
Wolhuter did not always need to have a rifle in his hands in order to find himself in an exciting situation with big game. Like most of the Great White Hunters he could list many very close escapes from death.
He shared the universal hatred of the crocodile, having witnessed many tragedies resulting from the animal’s great strength and cunning.
Returning from a long hot ride both the ranger and his horse were very thirsty. At the Sabi River Wolhuter let his mount drink its fill and when the horse had quenched its thirst and stepped back from the water he dismounted and went to take a drink himself.
On hands and knees and just in the act of lowering his lips to the water some sudden impulse made him pause. With immeasurable horror Wolhuter realized that he was staring straight into the eyes of a big crocodile that was lying just below the surface not a metre away.
Evidently it had been on the point of attacking the horse at the moment that the animal had finished its drink and stepped back. Wolhuter threw himself backwards and dashed back to snatch his rifle and place a shot into the reptile’s head.
The ranger and his askaris spent the rest of the afternoon in pursuit of the big lizard and after a hectic chase finally finished if off. The beast was just under five metres long and of very heavy girth.
Wolhuter considered that but for a slight, fresh run in the Sabi he would not have seen the crocodile. There would then have been only one, unavoidable outcome to the encounter.
Wolhuter survived the Boer War, bouts of lever, serious injuries and a lifetime of close encounters with big game. His autobiography “Memories of a Game Ranger” is worth the effort of tracking down in library or second-hand bookshop.
The final words in his book summarize the man and the era. “It was a hard life; full of risks; but we were compensated by the interesting things we saw and did”.


Now ye wouldnt blame the man if he had tainted his under wear eh!
 
The lion tale enthralled me to no end when I first read it oh so long ago.
Harry was venerated by the tribesmen who (rightly so) were in awe of a man (white too) that killed a maned lion with a knife. ...impossible!

FOR THOSE REALLY KEEN MEN you read it again here in Harrys own words....much better.


Harry Wolhuter served as the first game ranger in the Kruger National Park, South Africa.

His character is summed up by the warden of the park at the time, Colonel James Stevenson-Hamilton: "I suppose there can be few if any men in all Africa possessing a deeper knowledge and wider experience of bush lore in all its phases and in his prime he held all the qualities requisite to give effect to that knowledge and experience; a powerful frame, an iron constitution; cool courage and quiet determination. In addition, his complete mastery of the local Bantu language, and acquaintance with their customs, earned him exceptional liking and respect among the tribal natives."

In the early days the only way to get around the park was on horseback. With pack donkeys and several scouts Harry would go out on patrol for months at a time moving into different areas and setting up camp from where he would scout the area.


This is an extract from Harry Wolhuter himself:

"In August, 1903, I was returning from one of my usual patrols on the Olifants. On the second day after leaving the camp my objective was a certain waterhole en route, at which I intended spending the night, when we reached it we found that the pool was dry. It was now about 4 p.m., and the only thing to be done was to push on to the next water-hole which was about twelve miles distant.

Accompanying me were three police boys driving the donkeys which carried all my possessions, and three dogs; the latter all rough "Boer" dogs, very good on lions. I instructed the boys that I would ride ahead along the path to the next water-hole and they were to follow. I then started to go ahead along the trail, and of the dogs "Bull" escorted me; the bitch "Fly", and a mongrel-terrier, remaining with the boys.

Although it became dusk very soon I continued to ride along the path - as I had often travelled that route by night during the Boer War to avoid the heat of the summer sun. I gave no thought to lions, as I had never before encountered these animals in those parts. Most of the herbage had been recently burnt off, here and there a patch of long grass remained. While riding through one of these isolated patches I heard two animals jump up in the grass in front of me.


It was by now too dark to see, but I imagined that the animals in question were a pair of reedbuck, as this had always been a favourite locality for these antelope. I expected them to run across the path and disappear; but instead, and to my surprise, I heard a running rustle in the grass approaching me.

I was still riding quietly along when the two forms loomed up within three or four yards, and these I now recognised as two lions, and their behaviour was such I had little doubt but that their intentions were to attack my horse. Although, of course, I had my rifle (without which I never moved in the veld) there was not time to shoot, and as I hastily pulled my horse around I dug the spurs into his flanks in a frantic effort to urge him to his best speed to get away in time; but the approaching lion was already too close, and before the horse could get into its stride I felt a terrific impact behind me as the lion alighted on the horse's hindquarters.

What happened next, of course, occupied only a few seconds, but I vividly recall the unpleasant sensation of expecting the crunch of the lion's jaws in my person. However, the terrified horse was bucking and plunging so violently that the lion was unable to maintain its hold, but it managed to knock me out of the saddle. Fortune is apt to act freakishly at all times, and it may seem a strange thing to suggest that it was fortunate for myself that I happened to fall almost on top of the second lion as he was running around in front of my horse, to get hold of it by the head.

Had I fallen otherwise, however, it is probable that the lion would have grasped me by the head, and then this book would assuredly never have been written! Actually, the eager brute gripped my right shoulder between its jaws and started to drag me away, and as it did so I could hear the clatter of my horse's hooves over the stony ground as it raced away with the first lion in hot pursuit; itself in turn being chased by my dog "Bull".


Meanwhile, the lion continued dragging me towards the neighbouring Metsimetsi Spruit. I was dragged along on my back, being held by the right shoulder, and as the lion was walking over me his claws would sometimes rip wounds in my arms and I was wearing a pair of spurs with strong leather straps, and these acted as brakes, scoring deep furrows in the ground over which we travelled. When the 'brakes' acted too efficiently the lion would give an impatient jerk of his great head, which added excruciating pain to my shoulder, already deeply lacerated by the powerful teeth.

I certainly was in a position to disagree emphatically with Dr. Livingstone's theory, based on his own personal experience, that the resulting shock from the bite of a large carnivorous animal so numbs the nerves that it deadens all the pain; for, in my own case, I was conscious of great physical agony; and in addition to this was the mental agony as to what the lion would presently do with me; whether he would kill me first or proceed to dine off me while I was still alive!

Of course, in those first few moments I was convinced that it was all over with me and that I had reached the end of my earthly career.

But then as our painful progress still continued, it suddenly struck me that I might still have my sheath knife! I always carried this attached to my belt on the right side. Unfortunately, the knife did not fit too tightly in its sheath, and on two previous occasions when I had had a spill from my horse while galloping after game during the Boer War it had fallen out.

It seemed almost too much to expect that it could still be safely there after the recent rough episodes. It took me some time to work my left hand round my back as the lion was dragging me over the ground, but eventually I reached the sheath, and, to my indescribable joy, the knife was still there! I secured it, and wondered where best first to stab the lion. It flashed through my mind that, many years ago, I had read in a magazine or newspaper that if you hit a cat on the nose he must sneeze before doing anything. This particular theory is, of course, incorrect; but at the time I seriously entertained the idea of attempting it, though on second thoughts I dismissed the notion, deciding that in any case he would just sneeze and pick me up again - this time perhaps in a more vital spot!


I decided finally to stick my knife into his heart, and so I began to feel very cautiously for his shoulder. The task was a difficult and complicated one because, gripped as I was, high up in the right shoulder, my head pressed right up against the lion's mane, which exuded a strong smell (incidentally, he was purring very loudly, something after the fashion of a cat - only on a far louder scale - perhaps in pleasant anticipation of the meal he intended to have) and this necessitated my reaching with my left hand holding the knife across his chest so as to gain access to his left shoulder.

Any bungling, in this manoeuvre, would arouse the lion, with instantly fatal results to myself!However, I managed it successfully, and knowing where his heart was located, I struck him twice, in quick succession, with two back-handed strokes behind the left shoulder, the lion let out a furious roar, and I desperately struck him again: this time upwards into his throat. I think this third thrust severed the jugular vein, as the blood spurted out in a stream all over me. The lion released his hold and slunk off into the darkness. Later I measured the distance and found that he had dragged me sixty yards. Incidentally, it transpired later that both first thrusts had reached the heart.


The scene, could anyone have witnessed it, must have been eerie in the extreme, as, in the darkness, I staggered to my feet, not realising how seriously I had wounded the lion whose long-drawn moans resounded nearby. I thought first to frighten him off with human voice and shouted after him all the names I could think of, couched in the most lurid language.

Suddenly I remembered the other lion that had chased my horse. It was more likely that it would fail to catch the horse, once the latter was at a full gallop, and then, what was more probable, it would return to its mate and find me there, quite unarmed except for my knife - as of course my rifle had been flung into the long grass when I fell off my horse.

At first I thought of setting the grass alight to keep away the second lion; and, getting the matchbox from my pocket, I gripped it in my teeth, as of course my right arm was quite useless, not only on account of the wound from the lion's teeth in my shoulder, but also because it claws had torn out some of the tendons about the wrist. I struck a match and put it to the grass, but as there was by now a heavy dew the grass would not burn - fortunately, of course, as it turned out, else my rifle would have been burnt.My next idea was to climb into a tree and thus place myself beyond the lion's reach. There were several trees in the vicinity, but they all had long stems, and with my one arm I was unable to climb them.

Presently, however, I located one with a fork near the ground, and after a great deal of trouble I managed to climb into it, reaching a bough, some twelve feet from the ground, in which I sat. I was now commencing to feel very shaky indeed, both as a result of the shock I had sustained, and loss of blood; and what clothes I had left covering me were saturated with blood, both my own and that of the lion, and the effect of the cold night air on the damp clothing considerably added to my discomfort, while my shoulder was still bleeding badly.

I realised that I might faint, from loss of blood, and fall off the bough on which I was sitting, so I removed my belt and somehow strapped myself to the tree. My thirst was terrible: and I would have offered much for a cup of water. One consoling reflection was that I knew my boys would find me as I was not far from the path.


Meanwhile I could still occasionally hear the lion I had stabbed grunting and groaning in the darkness, somewhere close by; and presently, resounding eerily over the night air, I heard the long-drawn guttural death-rattle in his throat - and felt a trifle better then as I knew that I had killed him.

My satisfaction was short-lived, however, as very soon afterwards approaching rustles in the grass heralded the arrival of the second lion which, as I had surmised, had failed to catch my horse. I heard it approach the spot where I had got to my feet and from there, following my blood-spoor all the time, it advanced to the tree in which I sat. Arriving at the base of the tree, it reared itself up against the trunk and seemed to be about to try to climb it.

I was overcome with horror at this turn of affairs, as it appeared as if I had got away from one lion, only to be caught by the other: the tree which harboured me being quite easy to climb (had it not been so I could never have worked my way up to my perch), and not absolutely beyond the powers of a determined, hungry lion! In despair I shouted down at the straining brute, whose upward-turned eyes I could momentarily glimpse reflected in the starlight, and this seemed to cause him to hesitate.

Fortunately, just then, my faithful dog "Bull" appeared on the scene. Never was I more grateful at the arrival of man or beast! He had evidently discovered that I was no longer on the horse, and was missing and had come back to find me. I called to him, and encouraged him to go for the lion, which he did in right good heart, barking furiously at it and so distracting its attention that it made a short rush at the plucky dog, who managed to keep his distance.

And so this dreadful night passed on. The lion would leave the tree and I could hear him rustling about in the grass, and then he would return, and the faithful "Bull" would rush at him barking, and chase him off, and so on. Finally he seemed to lie up somewhere in the neighbouring bush.


Some considerable time later, perhaps an hour, I heard a most welcome sound: the clatter of tin dishes rattling in a hamper on the head of one of my boys who was at last approaching along the path. In the stillness of the night one can hear the least sound quite a long way off in the veld. I shouted to him to beware as there was a lion somewhere near. He asked me what he ought to do and I told him to climb into a tree. I heard a rattling crash, as he dropped the hamper, and then silence for a while.

I then asked him if he was up a tree, and whether it was a big one: to which he replied that it was not a tall tree but that he had no wish to come down and search for a better one as he could already hear the lion rustling in the grass near him! He informed me that the other boys were not so far behind, and I then told him all that had happened - a recital of events which, to judge by the tone of his comments, did little to reassure him of the pleasantness of his present situation!

After a time, which seemed ages, we heard the little pack of donkeys approaching along the path, and I shouted instructions to the boys to halt where they were, as there was a lion in the grass quite near, and to fire off a few shots to scare him. This they did, then as they approached to the tree in which I sat, I told them first of all to make a good fire, which did not take long to flare up, as some form of protection in case the lion returned: and then they assisted me down from the tree. It was a painful and laborious business, as I was very stiff and sore from my wounds, and I found the descent very much harder than the ascent.


The first question I asked my boys was whether they had any water in the calabash which they always carried with them. They replied that it was empty, and so the only thing for us to do was to set out for the next waterhole, which was about six miles further ahead. Before leaving, they searched unsuccessfully for my rifle in the long grass.

To arm myself I took one of the boys' assegais, and then, with the donkeys, we set forth. Before leaving the place we took some firebrands from the fire and threw them into the veld in the direction where the lion had disappeared: nonetheless, he followed us for a long way, and we could hear him now this side of the path, now that; but we had three dogs with us now, and they barked repeatedly at him, successfully keeping him off.


At last we came to one of my old pickets of the Steinacker days where the huts were still standing. Here, formerly, there had always been a large pool of water, so I sent two of the boys with the canvas nosebag which was the only utensil we took for carrying water. My disappointment can be measured when they returned to report that the pool was dry, for you must remember that not a drop had passed my lips since the previous day.

I said that I must have water, or I would die, and told them to take a candle from among my baggage, place it in a broken bottle and with this rough lantern to go and search for water. They were two good natives, and off they set once more. They seemed to be away for hours but when they did finally return they had the nosebag half full of muddy fluid; and this they set on the ground in front of me.

It was pretty filthy-looking stuff: still it was water; and I knelt down beside it and drank until I could drink no more - leaving a little with which they could wash my wounds. They proved to be too awkward and clumsy over the latter job, however, and after a few minutes I could bear it no longer, and ordered the boys to desist. Actually the wounds received no dressing of any kind (I could not see the largest wound, which was on my back) until I reached Komatipoort - four days later!

I then told the boys to unroll my blankets so that I could lie down. My arm was so painful that I instructed them to strap it to one of the poles in the roof of the hut, thinking thereby to ease the pain, but it did no good, and afterwards I had it undone again. I need hardly add that there was no sleep for me that night, and next morning I was in a raging fever; and though I had walked six miles on the previous evening, I was unable to walk - or even stand - now.
bed the lion, and then follow its blood-spoor for a short distance when they would find its carcass.

I could observe that they were a bit dubious about the reality of my having actually killed the lion (though they had politely refrained from hinting their scepticism) as it was an unheard of thing for a man to kill a lion with a knife. All my orders were obeyed, and in due course they returned with the skin, skull and some meat, and the heart to show me where I had pierced it with the knife. They also brought with them my horse which had later returned to the scene of the accident.

It is strange that the horse should have returned, after the terrible fright it had sustained, but I put this down to the companionship between horse and man in the veld. The bridle was broken, but the saddle was intact: in fact I am using the same saddle today, forty years later!

The boys brought the horse to the door of my hut where I crawled to see him. He was badly clawed on the hindquarters, and we rubbed a little salt into the wound (I should have done the same to mine at the time) and this certainly seemed to stop septic poisoning setting in as a result of the lion's claws.

The horse recovered completely, but, though it was a valuable animal - being salted - and a good shooting horse, he was of no further use to me afterwards as he remained so nervous that the sight of a mere buck in the veld was sufficient to make him attempt to bolt. I was obliged, therefore, to part with him - much to my regret.



My boys told me that when they opened up the lion they found the stomach empty, which proves that it had not had a meal for some days, and accordingly must have been very hungry. It would not have been long before that lion and his mate made a meal of me - in spite of the fact that I was pretty skinny and hard at the time!


The skin of the lion, and the knife with which I had saved my life, are still in my possession. The knife is the ordinary butcher's "sticking" type with a six-inch blade of the "Pipe Brand," manufactured by T. Williams of Smithfield, London, who specialised in butcher's knives, etc., and this reminds me of a rather amusing tale. Not many years after my adventure with the lion in 1903, I happened to be in London: and, since good knives were scarce in South Africa then and I wanted to bring some back with me, I visited Mr. William's shop in order to acquire some more of the type that had proved to be such a reliable friend.

There was a typical "bright young gentleman" behind the counter, and when I requested him to show me some "stick" knives, he looked me up and down somewhat disdainfully - evidently rather sceptical as to whether I had it in me to be a butcher! - before passing a knife across the counter for my inspection. His apparent uncertainty about myself was even more evident when I informed him that I wanted a dozen of these, but after a little persuasion he let me have them.

I told the salesman that they were very good knives: that, in fact, I had actually once killed a lion with one of them! This evidently confirmed his worst suspicions for, with a distinctly withering expression of the eye he retorted: "Yes they are good. They will also kill a sheep, you know!" As I left the shop I could not help wondering whether that bright young lad was not already feverishly searching the columns of the Police Gazette to see whether any mad gangster had been holding up people and murdering them with sticking knives!

I may add that, shortly after the affair with the lion, I received from Mr. Williams himself (who had been informed about the incident), a most beautiful knife, made in his workshop. This knife, of course, I still proudly treasure, is about six inches long and contains about twelve different implements: in fact, as a friend to whom I was once showing it remarked, all it requires to complete it is a small forge and anvil. I may as well conclude this digression by recounting how I came by the original knife with which I killed the lion.



One day, when I was in Komatipoort, I visited the shop of a friend, and on the counter was a big Dutch cheese, beside which lay the knife used for cutting it. I picked up the knife and examined it, as I was always interested in sheath knives. This one, I observed, was the famous "Pipe Brand," and far too good a knife to be wasted on cutting! So I removed my own knife from its sheath on my belt, laid it alongside the cheese, and put the "Pipe Brand" knife in its place. This wicked theft was never noticed as the two knives were almost identical in form and size; and my friend never suspected until I told him years later, suggesting that "fair exchange was no robbery."

But to get back to my story! My boys told me that the best treatment for the wounds caused by the lion was to bathe them in the soup formed as a result of boiling its skull, but I remarked that though this treatment might prove effective with the natives, it would not be suitable for a white man.


I knew that there were some native kraals not more than four miles away, so sent one boy off to commandeer assistance in order that I could be carried by machila, in relays of four bearers, to Komatipoort. Having collected the necessary number of natives, I instructed them how to make the machila with my blanket, and early in the morning we set out on a five days march to Komati.

My wound now became septic, I had a fever, and was in great pain. I could, of course, eat nothing and took only water which I consumed in great quantities: two of the natives being occupied solely in carrying it in calabashes, which they replenished whenever we passed any. By the time we finally reached Komatipoort my arm and shoulder were swollen to enormous size, and were smelling so badly that I had to lie with my face turned the other way.

On my arrival at Komati, Dr. Greeves attended me, but he had no morphia to deaden the pain which by now was excruciating. Next day my friend, W. Dickson, who you will remember had been with me in Steinacker's Horse, accompanied me by train to Barberton Hospital, where I received every care and attention.
I remained on my back for many weeks, and at one period the doctor despaired for my life. Once again, however, a sound constitution saw me through, and although I have never since had full use of my right arm I consider myself exceedingly fortunate in not having lost it altogether.

As it is, I can still, with difficulty, lift it high enough to pull the trigger! After some months I was able to return to M'timba to continue my duties. I once again began to hunt lions; and as I had an old score to wipe out, I think I did so with interest! The chief souvenirs of my grim adventure, the skin of the lion, skull, and the knife concerned (the latter has never been used since) are preserved in my house, ad they have all been photographed many times.


The faithful and plucky dog "Bull," who played so great a part in preventing the other lion from climbing the tree and pulling me down, was eventually killed in combat with a baboon, though the baboon also died as a result of the fight.

The old bitch "Fly," after presenting me with several good litters of puppies, was finally killed by a leopard. Each of them, in common with many other unrecorded dogs and horses - faithful and staunch companions of the men in the veld - played their part in the achievement of the present-day world famous Kruger National Park, and all of them deserves their small tribute."


 
Here is a photograph of the actual knife and lion skin taken at the museum.


18195130_404940929868738_4608992011494337788_n.jpg
 
Thanks again John, just as exciting in his own words, fantastic to see the knife and lion skin, a potent reminder of his near death experience.
 
An even better account in his own words, these guys were often understating their situation and I was amused at the phrase "my sound constitution saw me through" more like hard as nails and tougher than a rhino hide. Keep them coming John.
 
That’s some good reading! Where’s people getting their books from? The only ones I have found are $$$’s
 
Nice one John, i remember reading that book a few years ago.

You might also try John Kingsley-Heath, here is an extract of his obituary from the Daily Telegraph in 2011. His book Hunting the Dangerous Game of Africa is a classic, expensive but worth it. I have a copy if anyone's interested.

n August 1961, when Kingsley-Heath was leading a private safari along the Kisigo river in Tanganyika[, f]rom inside a blind (a shelter for hunters), he turned to see a huge, maned lion crouching behind him not 15ft away. As it gathered itself to spring, Kingsley-Heath shot it, and the lion fled. He and his gunbearers gave chase and found the wounded creature lying on its side, breathing heavily.

It was down, but not out. When Kingsley-Heath’s client opened fire, the lion made a single bound of 22ft towards the two men. Kingsley-Heath dropped to the ground and smashed the barrel of his .470 rifle over the animal’s head, breaking the stock at the pistol grip; the lion staggered. As his gunbearers and client ran for cover Kingsley-Heath struggled on to his elbows to get clear.

“Too late,” he recalled, “the lion was upon me, I smelt his foul breath as, doubling my legs up to protect my stomach, I hit him in the mouth with my right fist as hard as I could. His mouth must have been partly open as my fist went straight in.”
With a single jerk of its head, the lion broke Kingsley-Heath’s right arm; as he punched it with his left fist, the lion bit clean through his left wrist, breaking the left arm and leaving the hand hanging by its sinews. Next it clamped his foot in its jaws, crushing the bones in it by twisting his ankle.

One of the gunbearers arrived, threw himself on the animal’s back and stabbed it repeatedly with a hunting knife. With Kingsley-Heath’s foot still locked in its mouth, the lion was finally shot dead. The client reappeared, and with his rifle blew the creature’s jaws apart so that Kingsley-Heath’s foot could be removed.

“I was bleeding heavily … shaking uncontrollably, felt cold, and was likely to lose consciousness,” he wrote later. “I knew that if I did so, I might die.” Instead, after an agonising and protracted medical evacuation, followed by surgery.


Also in his book is an account of him walking into a pride of 17 lions out of which he had to shoot 10 to avoid getting killed.

Gripping stuff.

F
 
One for Frank

I remember reading an account of a hunter shooting something like 11 lions in one go either off a horse or off one of the SA ox drawn carts on a trek when a pride attacked his oxen and him. I have a feeling it was from Jock of the Bushveldt or Millais A Breath from the Veldt but can't find it?

S
 
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