Ian Manning
AH senior member
The contribution of American hunters to Africa has been immense. Theodore Roosevelt certainly set it all in motion. Whom did you hunt with all those years ago in Zambia? Larry Wilson hunted with me in 1970 in the Luangwa; the result of his need to research his Roosevelt biography.Mr Manning I wish I could answer your question as to how much African indigenous people have benefited over my decades of travel around that vast continent. I must confess I liked the old days better. An example of change is behavior of government game scouts while accompanying a safari. Decades ago at the end of a long safari a govt scout would be pleased with a few dollars. A few years ago the first morning the assigned scout wearing expensive aviator glasses along with his designer leather jacket snapped his fingers and said his fee was five hundred bucks. The attitude not the fee was bothersome. Another story if i may. Fifty years or so ago i finished a forty day Zambia hunt and the game scout had been priceless, a classy, gentleman who helped make the adventure a wonderful success. At the end, for various reasons I had no small bills so offered him a 100 dollar bill which he declined. He indicated the Indian at the Duka ( a tiny shop) would cheat him out of it it, and if he walked to Lusaka to spend it he would be robbed. But most importantly if his wives (note plural) knew he had that much money they would give hime no peace. Now there was a wise man. He wanted my old tennis shoes, a small transistor radio with lots of batteries. I tossed in a pocket knife. Kindest regards.