by John Seerey-Lester | Mar 19, 2026
An overturned jeep, no water, and a charging elephant in the night. What else could go wrong?
by Alan Ritchie | Jan 20, 2026
An excerpt from Ruark Remembered by Alan Ritchie who served as Ruark’s personal secretary for 12 years. Then finally the day came, and as it so happened with the aid of a ten-year-old Samburu-Rendille maiden, that Bob got on the trail of what promised to be very big...
by John Seerey-Lester | Aug 21, 2025
By September 1909,Theodore Roosevelt’s year-long safari had moved on to the Meru region on the northeastern slopes of Mount Kenya where, with the help of Edward Butler Horne, the first district commissioner, they would hunt for more elephant. TR had already shot his...
by Dwight Van Brunt | Jul 7, 2025
The flight from Atlanta to Johannesburg provides those unwilling to embrace the charms of Ambien with ample opportunity to think. In point of fact, beyond ample. It offers a rare and uninterrupted block of time that is best used for pondering complex issues in great...
by John Seerey-Lester | May 28, 2025
It was 1913 when renowned hunter and sculptor Carl Akeley created his most famous sculpture, “Wounded Comrade.” Inspired by an actual event Akeley witnessed on his first trip to Africa in 1896, and encouraged by fellow sculptor Alexander Phimister Proctor,...
by Frederick C. Selous | May 21, 2025
The author makes a perfect double on elephants during his famous African wanderings.
by Beryl Markham | May 12, 2024
I suppose, if there were a part of the world in which mastodon still lived, somebody would design a new gun, and men, in their eternal impudence, would hunt mastodon as they now hunt elephant. Impudence seems to be the word. At least David and Goliath were of the same...
by John Seerey-Lester | Feb 18, 2024
One of the first hunters to take advantage of the “Ivory Rush” in the Lado Enclave, John Boyes soon learned just how dangerous his new occupation would be. The death of King Leopold of Belgium in 1909 created an elephant hunters’ free-for-all in the...
by Theodore Roosevelt | Sep 8, 2022
Hunting elephants in cover so thick they can only be located by the rumbling of their stomachs.
by Robert Matthews | Jul 18, 2022
Only eight short paces would separate the aggressive young rogue and his pursuers when they finally met in the dark of an African night.