IT
was a picture postcard evening. We were holidaying in Kenya, and after dinner,
were seated on low, comfy sofas in front of a glass window overlooking a salt
lick, waiting for the animals.
COME
they did, through the night. Buffaloes, whole herds of them, with a belligerent
papa guarding his harem and his heirs, deer, some startled, some brave, rhinos,
a curious, pesky hyena and a rogue elephant which took serious umbrage to the
fact that Papa Buffalo challenged him, and worked out his ire by sulking in the
bushes and chasing the baby buffaloes instead.
AND
while all this happened with the almost clockwork precision of a troupe of
varying players coming and doing their bits on a lit stage, my attention was
grabbed incessantly by a family of Egyptian geese. Papa Goose, bright of feather
and sharp of eye, stood prouder and taller than the more boringly-feathered
Mama, and Baby Goose was so tiny as to be almost a speck in the distance. Yet
did he have the energy of the very young!
BUT
let me begin at the beginning. When the first herd of buffalo decided to start
moving around the salt lick, Papa Goose quickly took position. He stepped out
and stood with his feet squarely on either side of the baby, with a
step-on-me-first attitude, while Mama stood frozen into a watchful stance
nearby.
WHEN
the imminent danger passed, the family disbanded and relaxed. Slowly, the
parents decided to sleep, taking turns of course. That was when Junior decided
it was playtime. At a speed incredible for such tiny feet, Junior decided to
take a swim. Off he went with the smoothness of a rocket to the little pond.
Papa and Mama were awakened. Papa stopped short of the water and paced the bank,
keeping in line with Junior who swam merrily along, followed by Mama at
beak-touching distance. Swim over, Junior scrambled up the bank and went to
roost at a distance from his original perch, at the far end of the lake.
THE
buffaloes came and went, the elephant completed his act, and just as the stage
emptied for a bit of quiet, Junior jumped into the water again.
REPEAT
performance. Finally when Junior decided to sleep, the family gathered around
and seemed to be done for the night.
EXCEPT
for the hyena. It came sniffing around. Papa Goose spied him just in time. One
tiny squawk of alarm and the three hurried on webbed feet into the water.
BEHIND
glass, I sent up a hope and a prayer that hyenas were averse to water. Someone
up there was listening as the buffaloes came back to distract the hyena, who
went across to hassle them a bit. The geese stepped back onto land and hidden,
watched the drama. Every time the hyena moved into their space, the trio would
move toward the water; his retreat would have them walking back to the
underbrush... almost like a weighted pulley of cause and effect.
IF
it were not a matter of life and death, it could have been a fun pantomime from
a Disney cartoon.
ALL
night I watched this drama of almost human dimensions, anxious parents very
aware of the lurking dangers, trying to keep a hyperactive ward safe from harm.
They told me that this was a daily performance; I wondered when the parents got
to sleep.
I
NEED not have worried; a quick peek at 6 am found the salt lick almost empty
except for a few grazing deer. In the distance was my pet family, asleep in
comparative safety.