by Doug French
To the minds of most environmentalists, the ham-hand
of government is needed to protect wildlife. Private property be damned — the
government must step in, otherwise every species on the planet will be hunted
into oblivion, or human development will gobble up all remaining wildlife
habitat, leading to the complete extinction of all species.
However, on the African plain it's just the opposite.
From the van leaving Hoedspruit airport to the Thornybush Game Preserve, we saw nothing but mile after mile of African
savannah, enclosed in electrified fencing (and at one point an ape bounding
across the road). Although government-owned Kruger National Park is nearby, the
area is dominated by private game reserves, with ecotourism being the primary
driver of the local economy.
If not for these private game reserves, a number of species would be extinct. Because people like the four in our party are willing to pay to see the "Big Five" and so much more, the populations of a number of these animals are thriving.
The game-reserve experience, while a good deal
dependent on serendipity, is in the hands of human expertise and experience.
The Thornybush accommodations, meals, and service are first class. But you go
for the game: the experience of a lifetime, seeing animals up close, in the
wild, that you've only seen before in picture books or cooped up in zoos.
Arriving in the afternoon, our first safari would
begin with refreshments in the late afternoon. As I sipped on lemonade, an
unassuming young Afrikaner approached me by name, introducing himself as Werner
(pronounced "Verner"). Werner would be our game ranger for our four
safaris.
To the uninitiated, the game ranger might appear
merely to be the driver of the vehicle, carrying up to ten guests plus a
tracker perched precariously on the front of the hood. And that would be
impressive enough, negotiating the labyrinth of winding dirt roads that weave
through the 11,000-hectare reserve. The roads are narrow, deeply rutted, and in
some cases close to nonexistent, as a 36-hour downpour of 17 inches a couple
weeks prior to our arrival made many roads next to impassable.
But in addition to his driving skills, Werner offered
an encyclopedic knowledge of the Thornybush flora and fauna. Not just names but
mating habits, gestation periods, digestion, and who-knows-what-all about the
147 mammals, 114 reptiles, 507 birds, 49 fish, 34 amphibians, 970 grasses, and
336 tree species that inhabit the private reserve.
Werner introduced us to Orlando, our tracker and
Werner's partner in making our experience unforgettable. Orlando hails from a
nearby village where he returns for two weeks to be with his family after
working six straight weeks.
As he loaded a Winchester .375 rifle, Werner warned us
that the animals are dangerous, and he cautioned us not to stand up in or
extend our arms out of the side of the vehicle.
Werner was in constant communication on his radio with
other rangers and at the same time having a running dialogue with Orlando in Fanigalore, a Bantu/English hybrid language used in South
Africa's mines, allowing workers from various parts of Africa to communicate.
While sightings of impala and wildebeests are common,
the Big Five are more elusive, so the game rangers stay in constant radio
contact to tip each other off to a sighting or fresh tracks. Rangers are only
allowed to leave the road to track one of the Big Five.
During our first evening, what we encountered most was
the golden orb spider, which takes a week to spin an elaborate web from brush to brush across a
road. The golden orb, Werner assured us, is harmless, but the prospect of a
face full of their sticky web and having the spiders crawling on us in the
evening dusk was less than appealing.

Photo by Fiona
Carmichael
After destroying the work of various golden orbs,
Orlando's right arm suddenly pointed, and Werner hit the brakes, startling a
male black rhino, who, with a female companion, was taking an early evening mud
bath (see photo).
We would see both black and white rhinos during our
safaris, huge lumbering beasts that sport horns prized in China and Vietnam for
medicinal purposes. According
to the BBC, "The
black market price of rhino horn is now in the region of £35,000 ($55,000) per
kg."
South Africa is home to 70 to 80 percent of the global
rhino population, and with the rhino-horn trade being a
multibillion-dollar-a-year business, last year 450 rhinos were killed by
poachers in South Africa.
Private game reserves do all they can to ward off
poachers. After all, rhinos, as members of the Big Five, are rare and expensive
to replace. But at government-owned Kruger National Park, four park employees
were recently arrested for being accomplices in a rhino-poaching operation.
"I am personally saddened to discover that some
of our own would so callously abuse the confidence and faith that we have
entrusted upon them," says Sanparks head David Mabunda.
Mr. Mabunda may be sad, but as Walter Block makes
clear, "Like public servants the world over, these may be well-meaning
people, but they have no real monetary incentive to perpetuate the
species."[1]
Professor Block points out that governments are inept
at stopping poachers, and low-level government workers are susceptible to
bribes and corruption.
The legalization
of rhino-horn sales is
actually being discussed in South Africa, but environmental groups like the
World Wildlife Fund (WWF) are vehemently opposed to the idea. "We
understand the need to come up with new ways of combating the rhino horn trade
but we are against the notion that legalising it is the answer," said
Morne du Plessis, of WWF in South Africa.
"How can we control legal rhino horn trade when
we can't even control illegal trade. There are too many unknowns for us to even
start thinking in that direction," Mr. du Plessis said.
This is not a new debate. Dr. Block wrote over 20
years ago that countries inhabited by rhinos make it close to impossible for
farmers to domesticate rhinos for profit. Instead, there continue to be
"only bureaucrats intoning platitudes about the importance of refraining
from hunting the beasts."[2]
Commercialize the rhino trade, and rhino farms would
pop up — and at the same time the rhino supply would flourish. For instance, 60 Minutes reported recently that many African species are thriving on
private hunting lodges in Texas.
The game reserve is not a place to sleep in. Everyone
receives a 5 a.m. wake-up call, and the game rangers like to start their
morning safaris by 5:30. The February morning air had the perfect amount of
crispness as we anticipated more Big Five sightings.
Very near Thornybush's main lodge is an airstrip, and
first thing, we spotted two lionesses lounging near the pavement enjoying the
cool morning air. Werner pulled our vehicle very close to the lions, but they
only yawned, showing little concern or interest.
We would actually see the entire Big
Five during our two safaris
that day: lion, African Cape buffalo, African elephant, rhino, and leopard (the
shyest). The phrase refers to the five most difficult animals to hunt on foot.
The big, powerful animals seem tame around the
vehicles, but they are still wild and unpredictable. If we forgot this was
dangerous country, the eight-foot black
mamba slithering across the
road snapped us out of it. It's the longest, fastest venomous snake in the
world — and aggressive to boot. Also, each night after dinner, a member of the
Thornybush staff would walk us to our cabins, as unaccompanied guests at game
reserves have fallen prey to leopards.
Werner and Orlando had managed to show us most
everything we could expect on a camera safari. Plus, when a member of our party
posed astronomical questions as we rolled toward the lodge under a blanket of
stars, Werner stopped the vehicle, pulled out a laser pointer and turned into
Galileo.
We still had one safari left and hadn't seen a male
lion. We told Werner and Orlando that their job was to find the king of the
jungle. It didn't happen quickly, and unlike the other three outings we seemed
to go in circles. We came upon a couple of lazy white rhinos. Interesting, but
not lions. Giraffes. Ho-hum.
Werner and his partner were taking the lion
instruction seriously. Our game ranger was clued into a sighting of tracks by
another vehicle and Orlando seemed sure a lion was nearby.
Orlando had Werner stop, and he jumped off the vehicle
to walk into the bush. Then we heard it — like sitting in the front row at the
start of an MGM movie! Orlando wheeled, ran toward the vehicle, and jumped on
to his seat. Werner started into the brush toward the roar.
Three lionesses and a male were looking expectantly up
a tree. In the tree, a leopard with a fresh baby impala kill (see photo).
Leopards and lions may be cats, but they aren't friendly. They're fierce
competitors, and the leopard was at a distinct disadvantage.
Werner thought the leopard might wait the lions out.
Lions don't climb easily. But the leopard became nervous; whether it was the
lions or our vehicle is unsure. The leopard suddenly leaped down from the tree
— 15 to 20 feet — and ran for the tree in front of our vehicle, with the lions
in hot pursuit. We were stunned. Werner quickly backed up.
Again the leopard jumped down and ran up another tree
just escaping the lions. Werner was concerned that we were putting the leopard
in danger. He pulled the vehicle around near the tree where the leopard had
left the dead impala draped over a branch.
Soon the lionesses came back, and one ventured to
climb and retrieve the kill. The 300-pound cat made it up the main trunk, claws
gouging the tree's bark. Then things got tricky. The impala was hanging just
out of the lion's reach. The cat carefully adjusted its weight, trying to
balance on a limb that allowed enough stability to reach up and grab the
impala.
Finally, the impala was secure in the lioness's jaws.
But now the hard part. While leopards have a locking wrist or anklebone that
aids in climbing and descending, lions' ankles slide sideways under their body
weight.
Meanwhile, the two other lionesses waited calmly under
the tree, hoping to scoop up a falling impala. But the lioness held on,
clumsily sliding down the tree trunk. With the kill secure and now on terra
firma, the lioness carried the impala into the shade of a bush. The king of the
jungle quickly showed up to join her.
It's the prospect of witnessing this kind of drama
that tourists pay money to see, and it's the market and private property that
make it possible, at the same time providing the incentives to protect and
revitalize what were once endangered species. As professor Block makes clear,
"there is no intrinsic conflict between the market and the
environment."
Government's good intentions have done little to
protect endangered wildlife. It is only private property and market pricing
that will protect these majestic creatures for future generations to marvel at
and enjoy.
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