W.D.M Bell brought down over 1,000 elephants during his career, most often with brain shots taken with a 7x57 Mauser.
http://archive.org/details/wanderingsofelep1923bell
Good reading!
I went to Amazon.com and downloaded the free "Kindle for PC" application, then at the internet archive ( link given ) , I chose the Kindle version of this great book.
All for free. Enjoy!
Read about "Karamojo" Bell
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Larry Potterfield from MidwayUSA has these short stories about a couple of his adventures. I just read them today, coincidentally:
http://www.midwayusa.com/larrys-stories
http://www.midwayusa.com/larrys-stories
Speaking of this Larry Potterfield, he makes the most useless How-To videos on Youtube.Hakaman wrote:Larry Potterfield from MidwayUSA has these short stories about a couple of his adventures. I just read them today, coincidentally:
If we search for How-to videos it's because we want to learn the details, and not make mistakes.
The way he gives his "lessons" is as if the viewer (me for instance) had all the experience in the world and just needed that little final touch.
If he was giving a lesson on surgical appendectomies, his lesson would go like this, "You take the patient and lay him down on the table, then you take a scalpel and after cutting him open and having all his vital organs out, you reach the appendix and cut it out. And that's the way it is."
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- charlesb
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That was funny about Potterfields "How-To" videos. - You hit the nail on the head there, 3strokes.
I have always enjoyed reading books about hunting and exploring in Africa - and almost all of the best stuff is now out of copyright. The only problem is that most of them are also long out of print - but the Internet Archive has most of the best books preserved in electronic format now, and easily accessible to anyone with a computer.
I have always enjoyed reading books about hunting and exploring in Africa - and almost all of the best stuff is now out of copyright. The only problem is that most of them are also long out of print - but the Internet Archive has most of the best books preserved in electronic format now, and easily accessible to anyone with a computer.