I was in Satara Camp, a fenced camp in the Kruger National
Park; my hut number 179 was right at the fence. As dusk slipped in predators began to patrol the
outside fence boundary seeking handouts from rule breaking guests. Inside the fence tourists patrol, torch in
hand, to see what’s on the other side; fence walkers I call them.
My first night the patrollers were hyena; a large gangly
animal equipped with one of the strongest jaws of the African land as well as a
couple of jackal. The animals walked the
fence-line head down smelling for any prize that might have been tossed over. On my second night I sat by the fire having
just finished a delicious meal; cocktail in hand when a grandfather and
grandson duo from a hut two doors down came back from fence walking. They stopped to say hello and told me of a
hyena down the way with a broken leg who was being harassed and bitten by other
hyenas. I walked down to see the action
but the animals had already dispersed by the time I got there.
Hut 179 with a view of the fence-line |
Just as I was about to think this was just a tired hyena, and
not the one mentioned being harassed earlier, she stood up and with only her front
legs - both back legs drawn up, dangling, never touching the ground - she “walked”
to a new spot and laid down again.
In her new position I again looked for blood, cuts, bite
marks or any sign that her back legs were broken but found none. In a bit of shock at what I just witnessed
I sat back down at my fire and thought about the situation, occasionally shining the
light on her. Eventually when I shined the
light she was gone.
I went to bed that night thinking – like the neighbor said –
she was a hyena with a broken leg or legs.
But every time the sounds of the Africa bush awoke me that night I
thought about her and what had transpired.
There was no sign of trauma at all on her body and I got a good look at
both sides. There was no blood at all. And when she got up and “walked’ on her two
front legs she did so with no visible or audible signs of pain. Not to mention it is a feat for a four legged
animal to walk on only her two front legs and this hyena did so with no
stumbling, as if she had perfected the art; not like she had just broken her
legs and was trying to figure it out.
This is the only picture we got of her as she laid by the fence. |
I concluded that she was born deformed; her two back legs
not fully formed. If that were the case
I would assume she would have been rejected by her own clan and therefore would be on
her own scavenging others’ kills and patrolling a camp fence for handouts. That night another clan must have come upon
her and harassed her which our neighbor witnessed. After her harassers moved on she came to our
quiet part of the fence to rest before continuing her patrol.
I will never know the truth; the story will remain filled
with holes and speculation unless someone out there also saw this hyena and can
shed any light. Until then, I choose to
believe she is still patrolling Satara; lonely but surviving as best she can.
No comments:
Post a Comment