It was such a find. We made a latish
booking for the Franschhoek Literary Festival. With only a month to go, most of
the guesthouses were taken. But we found a self-catering cottage on a wine farm.
Yes please!
The pictures showed a cute thatched structure
high up on a mountain, with amazing views of valley over autumnal vineyards. Breakfast
was included. Bonus!
So we booked it, and when we arrived on the
day the cottage was everything it said it was. Large open-plan under a roof of crazy beams and thatch. En suite with comforts
like a kettle and heater.
Nothing to prepare us for the horror to
come.
The cottage was separate from the main
building, which called itself a lodge. (Big hint there.) There were zebra and
springbok on the surrounding fields, wildebeest and a few larger buck too.
(Another clue that passed us by.) Some farmers have horses, I thought, others
like their livestock a bit wilder.
What the owner of this lodge liked best, it
soon became clear, was to serve his wildlife stuffed.
We took the short road to breakfast the
next morning, and walked into a hall of death.
The lion greeted us just inside the door.
His teeth were bared, his eyes blazed yellow. They were marbles. His hide was
soft and tawny, the 'body' beneath it was hard. I know because I reached out and stroked him. My hand burned with the memory of it all though the meal.
We had entered a macabre mausoleum to one
man's blood lust. There were eight heads in the dining room. I counted them, waiting for my poached eggs.
They were mounted high up on the walls, their throats huge and soft and vulnerable.
These were the most majestic of buck: eland, impala, kudu. There were European stags, Asian rams the antlers of American elk. There was a buffalo. No continent had been spared, it seems.
They were mounted high up on the walls, their throats huge and soft and vulnerable.
These were the most majestic of buck: eland, impala, kudu. There were European stags, Asian rams the antlers of American elk. There was a buffalo. No continent had been spared, it seems.
I wondered aloud whether the picture was of
the same animal that the man shot. It was, the M'aitre d' assured me. 'That's
him over there.'
He pointed to the entrance hall. And there
the leopard was, above an arched doorway, standing this
time, on a different branch, posed to look threatening. I hadn't even noticed him when I walked in, drawn as I'd
been to the lion's intense, dead yellow eyes.
There were some moose horns in that passage
too. In this case they hadn't bothered with the rest of the head. The place was
a tribute to taxonomy. (One of the heads still had the tag dangling from it.)
But these trophies had not been bought. They were, the Maitre d' told me, all animals that the owner of the lodge had
personally killed, himself. He had built this lodge, in fact, to house his considerable
collection.
Sticking my knife into the little squares of butter, spreading marmalade on toast. I could tell David was feeling squeamish too. Across the hall from the dining room was a cosy lounge; a fire burned bright in the grate, which was straddled by two enormous elephant tusks.
We had to rush to make our first FLF
session of the day, so made a hasty escape. The quease didn't leave me.
The previous afternoon we'd caught to a discussion on animal rights that included rhino horn trade and trophy hunting. One of the speakers was GarethPatterson, the 'Lion Man', who took George Adams's lions to safety from Tanzania to Botswana.
The previous afternoon we'd caught to a discussion on animal rights that included rhino horn trade and trophy hunting. One of the speakers was GarethPatterson, the 'Lion Man', who took George Adams's lions to safety from Tanzania to Botswana.
"Trophy hunters are serial killers," he said, after
demonstrating the ugh-ugh-ugh that he used to communicate with the lions he
lived with for so long.
(He wasn't quite as articulate arguing against sustained
harvesting of rhino horn to preserve the very few rhinos we have left, which
was John Hanks' suggestion.)
The next morning, our last, we knew what to
expect, and it was even more grisly than we remembered. I counted 28 heads in
all, not including the free-standing antlers.
There were two more rooms we hadn't looked
at. A passage along the back with ducks and geese in a frieze up the wall,
a 3D parody of the ceramic ones people of a certain age and social class have on their walls. These, of course, had once really flown.
There was a second lounge, with glass doors
opening on to the view. In its back corner, facing this vista of vineyards and tame wildlife (oxymoron that?), was a giraffe.
Well, part of a giraffe - the ceilings weren't high enough for all of it, so
they just cut him off below the neck. After all, that's the only extraordinary
part, isn't it? This part that's greater than the sum of its whole?
There was a foot of some sort in front of
Mr Giraffe, with a bit of leg attached. I don't know whether it was his or some
other creature's. There was an ashtray or a flat candle on top of it. I really
couldn't bear to look any closer, or any more.
But as I turned to escape the room I saw
the piece de resistance. In even more excruciating bad taste than the hoof
ashtray was the zebra-head-on-a-plinth. The stand was made of hardwood (probably
rare). The shape of Africa was cut out of it, the hollow space filled with yet
more zebra skin. This whole continent is mine for the taking, the conqueror
seemed to be saying.
I have a thing for horses (live ones), so
it hurt to see this his wild equid face, made comical as his neck was posed to
show off a stripe in the shape of a necktie.
I don't why it is that this wealthy man
gets his kicks claiming the life force of these creatures as his own. I don't know
why he is not deeply ashamed to display this need publically. I suppose there are
people who feel powerful, in the presence of these corpses. As if they'd had a
hand in bringing them here, in claiming them. Which, in a way, I suppose they did.
I don't understand it. I wish I had never seen
it. But now that I have, I had to share it.