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SERENGETI
SAFARI - MEMORIES OF MISCOMMUNICATIONS

Serengeti Safari - Memories
of Miscommunications
by: Nola L. Kelsey
The scene before me could be
matched nowhere else on earth. Parched yellow grass spread out
before us as far as the eye could see - broken only by the
occasional umbrella tree and a few hundred thousand migrating
wildebeest forming a dusty, thin gray line on the horizon to the
north. As the sun pounded down from overhead, heat vapors danced up
from the ground. This was the Serengeti - a place with no equal!
Nine days earlier my
six-year-old son, Jerry, and I had arrived in Arusha, a beautiful
Tanzanian ‘metropolis’ and the main jumping off point for those
wishing to book budget safaris. As with all visitors, the word of
our arrival spread like wildfire. By dinner the first night, three
of Arusha’s tour operators were courting us. By breakfast our
journey was booked.
Two days later we were off.
Nothing was left to chance. A jeep, driver, cook, tents, water
(though I felt it best to bring my own) and park permits, were to be
provided for us as part of our safari package.
WILDLIFE ABOUNDS
Five days of photographic heaven
followed. Tanzania’s best: Lake Manyara, Ngorongoro Crater, Olduvai
Gorge all were our playgrounds. Each was an oasis offering its own
unique landscape and unimaginably diverse wildlife. Finally, as I
looked over the edge of Ngorongoro I put my camera down. No photo
could do it justice. Those who do not venture there will just never
know! All this grandeur, and still the place of my calling, the
Serengeti, was ahead. This was the safari I had dreamed of.
An inconspicuous signpost in the
middle of nowhere marked our arrival at my 14, 763 square km. field
of dreams. We had four days to spend in the Serengeti. Yet, within
twenty minutes giraffes galloped past in their slow-motion way.
Playful zebras danced in dust storms of their own creation. Nearby,
lionesses lovingly groomed playful cubs. This life long fantasy
achieved was all laid out for our film to capture. What more did we
need?
I know we needed a drink of
water. I reached, I looked, I counted, one! There was one bottle of
water alone in its box. Next, I added. Two people, six days out,
three days left, 13 bottles of water gone. I suspected a flaw in the
plan. With little choice, I begrudgingly surrendered the last bottle
of ‘good’ water to my progeny. I would drink the questionable water
provided by the safari operator the rest of the trip. Why not? After
all, It was a safari.
An hour later, still roasting in
our jeep, we photographed an incredible golden lion as he lazed in
the mid-day sun. This magnificent beast was obviously oblivious to
our presence. His bed, a gigantic reddish brown termite mound
standing over three feet high, could easily have slept two more.
FRUSTRATION MAKES AN APPROACH
Inspired, and thirsty, it was
time to go forth with the courage of that lion and consume the
mystery water. Thomas, my driver, was a spotlessly tidy, smartly
dressed, obviously well washed and well-watered fellow. As I
approached, he flashed his perfect smile and asked what I needed.
Water I replied. Thomas looked ‘off.’ “Ninataka maji ya kunywa” I
tried. (attempting Swahili for I need drinking water) Ah, Thomas
replied, “Maji hapana” (meaning no water). I tried English again. We
still had no water.
I am sure my body temperature
rose five degrees as I tried to figure out why Thomas had not
brought any water from camp that day. Then, it rose another eight
degrees while I tried to figure out why he did not need to drink
anything. Oh well, we would soon return to camp where I would
indulge in all the beige colored water I could ever hope for. I
decided to tough it out. Se la vies. We were on a safari.
As evening approached, we
relaxed in the shade near a water hole. The sweet sent of cool water
filled the air. The emerald green pool shivered ever so slightly
with each twitch of a hippo’s ear. When the sun sank low, the
parched orange horizon beckoned for one last snapshot. It was time
our crew headed for camp.
Meanwhile, back at the camp, our
cook had dinner ready and waiting. Before the Jeep stopped my door
was open. I approached him parched, “maji ya kunywa?” I said. He
responded, “maji hapana.” “I mean water,” I regrettably snapped.
“You must have some to drink!” Both Thomas and the cook shook their
heads ‘no’ and looked at me as if I was crazy for thinking anyone
would have water in the bush. Didn’t I know I was on safari?
Not being parent of the year, I
took my sons water - some of it anyway. We put the rest away for
morning.
CONTEMPLATING THE SITUATION
I sat grudgingly at dinner
watching my son, my driver and my cook, all laughing together on the
man side of the camp. As a zoologist, I knew they had to have water,
didn’t they? Just how stupid did they think I was? Then the
questions swam through my mind. How could we stay out here nearly
three more days without any more water? What happened to the water
the Tour Company agreed to send? What did the cook cook with? How
was Thomas staying so freaking clean? If I killed my offspring and
took his water, do they extradite me or would I stand trial in
Tanzania? And, just how stupid did they think I was?
That night I sat by the fire
under the most brilliantly lit sky I have ever seen. I sat speaking
to Thomas, explaining that Homo Sapiens consumed water. It was a
necessity! It was a fact! He didn’t buy it for a second. Ultimately,
I gave up. I told my crew we would have to return to Arusha the next
day. Had I been alone, I would have risked death by dehydration for
one more day, but the PTA frowns on this sort of thing. Obviously
annoyed by my insane whims the guys turned in.
The remainder of the night was
dedicated to reflecting on days past, on our incredible experiences
and on something else - something odd. The previous morning while we
drove through a dust-ridden wallow, we had approached a Maasai
Warrior walking barefoot through the grasslands. Thomas pulled near
to ask of cheetahs and such. As they spoke, I eyeballed this
magnificent looking man who leaned against the front of our jeep.
His long, twisted strands of
hair were red with ocher and draped elegantly down his perfectly
built back. He wore the traditional red Maasai fabric that was
slightly tattered. In his right hand was a spear, pointed at both
ends. In his left hand was the less traditional orange Fanta. Yes, I
did a double take. It remained an orange Fanta. Thinking back, I
recalled droplets of condensation. I was sure it was cold. I could
not even come up with H2O, well enough a refreshing sugary beverage.
Was I hallucinating? Was I even on safari?
VANISHING THROUGH THE BUSH
The sweltering heat of morning
came all to soon. Breakfast with thick condensed milk, missed the
spot completely and reconfirmed my decision to leave. The cook and I
began to pack up camp. Jerry and Thomas (Tom and Jerry?) wandered
into the bush together long before the work was finished - surprise!
Whenever, I started any project the men tended to fade into the
trees. In fact, completing the task at hand, I realized my
moisture-retaining chef had vanished. An hour later no one had
returned.
I was guarding our waterless
belongings from a troop of misschevious baboons and could not go in
search of my three self-osmoting delinquents. Besides, If the men
perished, it would prove to them my theory that they needed water to
live. Ha! I would be vindicated! Ritchesness would prevail! Thus
instead, I sat filming my new found primate friends. After all, I
was still on safari?
Half an hour later the guys
emerged from the bush, talking casually as they slurped on their
strawberry Fantas. My mouth dropped. Jerry nonchalantly pointed off
behind them as he passed and asked, “Mom, why didn’t you came to the
soda stand with us? You could at least have gotten some bottled
water.” I stood defining dumbfounded! Were they slurping away each
time they vanished? What was a soda stand doing in the middle of…?
Why hadn’t someone just said it was…? Ah..? Was there a Denny’s in
there as well? How silly of me to have expected them to mention
this. Auuuuuug! Hadn’t I realized I was on a safari?
About The Author
Zoologist turned satirist Nola
L. Kelsey is the author of the scathingly wicked satire Bitch
Unleashed: The Harsh Realities of Goin' Country and coauthor of the
twisted political workbook Keeping the Masses Down. Kelsey’s ezine,
Wanderlust Ink, is tracking her escape from South Dakota normality
to life as a shoestring backpacker in SE Asia. Receive the Bitch
Unleashed e-book free and/or subscribe to Wanderlust Ink at,
http://www.NolaKelsey.com.
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