A movement is caught by the corner of my eye, I turn. My tent steward nods and I know my guests are moving towards the land cruisers. I pack it all up lest some baboon take to the keyboard and am off for a drive. We’re going to look for a leopard on the Wandamu ravine, the conditions are perfect. Sun is at its mid afternoon hottest and will soon turn the Seronera Valley golden. The leopard is sneaking through the grass land just testing scent and as she meanders down the line of trees wanders over to the track within a foot of the car and sprints up a fallen tree not 12 feet from us without a concern in the world. The setting sun in its absolute splendor silhouettes her with umbrella acacia trees beyond to the west. This moment of magic besides the equatorial ball of fire on the western horizon is only interrupted by the ratatat of cameras going off at a blistering pace. Then, over the radio I hear a whisper from Rama, “Dawaaaaa”. It’s the call to sundowners and off we trundle back to camp where Max waits by the bar dressed in white Kanzu sporting a less elaborate traditional Muslim cap without a plume of feathers.
I was a year old when my parents were driving out of the city in dad’s red Alpha Romeo convertible; he sees a sky blue Pontiac Parisienne pass in the opposite direction. He apparently looks over his shoulder as it goes by, turns to see all is clear, spins the wheel, guns the motor, burns rubber and in blast of determination speeds after the Pontiac. Within half an hour he had bought the car from the Governor General of the Belgian Congo who was visiting Dar-es-Salaam. No doubt the very same guy I now see in this picture from the past. I still have a picture of three Maasai and myself sitting on the hood of that car somewhere in southern Tanzania. I do not know what happened to it.
Back at my tent I reach down to open the zipper and hear something, turn on my flashlight and scare off a hyena boldly approaching. I open my windows all the way letting a breeze drift in with the starlight, turn on the reading light and pick up the magazine. Sometime during the night I wake up. The magazine is on my chest and the lion are roaring. This is my world, my everyday.
Francesco