Folks if you are going to the Omay you better put in your walking in advance, I was walking five miles a day most days to prepare. Three In The morning and two in the afternoon every day. I am ever so glad that I did otherwise day one would have killed me. According to my step meter by lunch time we had walked five miles.
Just after sun up we were In The Jess as they call the woods over there Following fresh buff tracks that had crossed the river flood plane,
My PH sent the trackers,Moses and Kashinga, along with the game scout , Agmire, to follow a set of tracks that looked like several animals, A wide birth was given to the feeding elephants Pictured below.
A bird chirp on the radio told us that buff were sighted. Then a short conversation let us know that we needed to mi e the truck a couple,e if miles,
Moses met us on the road and we walked down the hill towards the river below. With binoculars at a distance of about a Mile we could just make out black shapes feeding at the edge of the flood plane. Stalking slowly and as quietly as possible we covered the distance In about thirty minutes stopping to check the wind often. After much zig zagging we finally got into an observation position about 150 yards from a group of about twenty buffalos.
we watched this group for a good hour looking to see if there was a shooter In The group and while bulls were there none of them were really mature.
So it was lunch time! Wait what happened to breakfast? Joffels, a sort of pancake sandwich, had been packed In The cold box for breakfast but we never stopped to eat them. It would become a running joke each evening as Gareth would order our Joffels for the following days breakfast that we would’t eat until lunch if at all.
We found a nice spot to take a lunch break and well the table and chairs came out along with a table cloth. a cold box containEd all sorts of good food. Baked chicken wings and my favorite new dish Rice Salad.
After lunch we were back at the search walking after tracks that had crossed a road until about 4 pm. Then it was into the truck for what was about an hours drive back to camp.