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I am reading the book THE COUNTRY OF THE DWARFS; by Paul Du Chaillu. He mentions he had enough photography equipment and chemicals for 10,000 photos. The transportation of this alone require 24 men! And to imagine today I can have oen small pocket camera, with a 64GB SD card, and can have double that number of photos, and require nothing more than to put the camera in my pocket! He also had the following equipment forhis safari: 72 pairs of boots 24 pairs of shoes 12 pairs of linen slippers 12 dozen pairs of slippers 6 dozen pantaloons 7 dozen handkerchiefs 100 pounds of soap 75 bottles of quinine 10 gallons of castor oil 50 pounds of Epsom salts 2 quarts of landanum 100 pounds of arsenic 12 muzzle loaders Oh, and he is going on a 5 year safari | ||
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One of Us |
Six dozen pantaloons does sound a bit excessive. | |||
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one of us |
OOOO My... 10 Gallons of castor oil!!!!! | |||
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One of Us |
And two quarts of laudanum? I would have hated like hell to get sick on that safari. | |||
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one of us |
What do you reckon the arsenic is for? Antlers Double Rifle Shooters Society Heym 450/400 3" | |||
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One of Us |
These historical lists of supplies are always very interesting. As if it wasn't tough enough to do what some of these old timers did, the era itself made it 10x worse with the sheer volume of necessarily heavy and bulky crap they had to lug around with them. As another example, I am always amazed that Sir Ernest Shackleton had a photographer on board The Endurance. What's more, after they lost the ship and had to walk back to open water...and had to row to Elephant Island...and had to wait for ol' Ernest to paddle his way back to South Georgia for help....THEY STILL KEPT THE CAMERA AND UNDEVELOPED PLATES WITH THEM! Simply astounding. | |||
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One of Us |
Hear Hear!! Shackleton's feat was unbelievable, and the fact no one died is practically miraculous. | |||
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One of Us |
they used arsenic for field tanning birds and small mammals | |||
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One of Us |
I thought they used Alum for this. One learns new stuff all the time.
"When the wind stops....start rowing. When the wind starts, get the sail up quick." | |||
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One of Us |
and most everything else. A lot of the very old rhino mounts in museums, were steeped in pure arsenic as a preservative. Those that have been stolen and flogged off to the East, should result in some folk questioning the curative qualities of rhino horn. | |||
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one of us |
When I first got involved in African hunting (32 years ago), the guy who made it all possible never used to salt any of his skins at all. Instead, when he went on safari, he'd just take an old pop bottle that he kept full of a liquid that he always referred to as his magic muti. He'd dilute about a cupful of this stuff in a gallon of water and we'd just swab the wet side of each skin in this stuff, hang up to dry in the shade and after 24 hours would fold and pack the almost dry skins for later delivery to the taxidermist and the only precautions we used to take was to wear rubber kitchen gloves whilst haldling this liquid. We used it on everything from cat skins to antelope to buff skins and as far as I can recall, we never had a single case of hair slip or any other problem. Years later, after he died, I had some of this magic muti analysed and (if I remember correctly) it turned out to be a mixture of sodium arsenate and sodium arsenite. We'd never consider using such a thing nowadays but those skins, once dried could and often would be put away for several years and could be tanned to a beautiful soft finish years later. | |||
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One of Us |
Hell, a lot of folks would have WANTED to get sick! Mike Wilderness is my cathedral, and hunting is my prayer. | |||
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one of us |
Thanks for the insight into the arsenic. Antlers Double Rifle Shooters Society Heym 450/400 3" | |||
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one of us |
In the 18th and 19th centuries arsenic was used as a treatment for syphillis, a 5 year safari is a long time. Frank "I don't know what there is about buffalo that frightens me so.....He looks like he hates you personally. He looks like you owe him money." - Robert Ruark, Horn of the Hunter, 1953 NRA Life, SAF Life, CRPA Life, DRSS lite | |||
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One of Us |
Could someone please pass this information on to Bob. He has it bad, tell him he needs to triple the dosage for the rest of his natural life | |||
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One of Us |
F#@KEN YEAH MAN! Help the old prick out! Even those with "syph brains!" The bubbly is chilled and waiting. | |||
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Administrator |
Well, our friend had so many presents to give. Here is a list of those he gave to one chief. 6 pieces of different colour silks 100 pieces of calico prints 6 silver spoons, knives and forks 1 silver goblet 1 maginificent red, blue and yellow silk umbrella 1 common brass kettle 100 iron bars, 6 feet long 11 wide 50 large copper plates, 24 inches in diameter 50 small brass kettles 50 iron pots 50 guns 50 kegs of powder 25 wash basins 12 dozen plates 6 dozen glasses 300 pounds of beads, different colour 50 pine chests 200 pairs of earrings for his wives Severalchests containing trinkets, mirrors,files,forksand knives | |||
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One of Us |
and so started the quaint custom of "baksheesh!" Visiting hunters and other tourists encounter this custom at Jo'burg Airport, where luckily for them, the custom has been modernised and only little pieces of paper depicting US Presidential portraits suffice. A lot easier than boarding an aircraft with some of the stuff listed above. | |||
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One of Us |
I wouldn't have waited to get sick | |||
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