Home ›  Peter Hofer und Team ›  Produktion ›  Waffen ›  Jagd ›  VIP-Service ›  Shop ›  Kontakt ›
         
 
Home
Real Estate
Vintage Arms
Antique Rifles and Fowlers
Miniatures
Pistols
Rifles
Shotguns
Shooting Accessories
Cartridge Bags and Accessories
Gun Cleaning Equipment
Gun Case Accessories
Archery Supplies
Vintage Accessories
Knives
Handcrafted Knives
Furniture
British Campaign Furniture
Business and Travel
Gift Ideas
Art
African Art
Painting
Books
African Hunting
Collectibles
DVD & Audio CD
Sheep & Mountains
North American Game
World Wide
Sporting Firearms
Birds & Dogs
Reference
Art/Picture/Posters
Shopping cart
Help & FAQ
Search:

 
 
Books - African Hunting -

THE WILD HEART OF AFRICA


Baldus, Rolf, edited by
The Selous Game Reserve in Tanzania
Price: EUR 72,41
2009 Johannesburg, 288p, color photos,
ISBN: 978-0-9802626-7-4
Binding: Trim Size: 8 x 11, hardcover with dust jacket
The Selous, the world-famous game reserve in southern Tanzania, is the largest protected wildlife area in the world. It was specifically created for hunting and is, in fact, not often visited by photographic tourists. It is from the Selous that the greatest tuskers in Tanzania and some of the best leopard and lion trophies have come. There are no people living within its boundaries, and it contains some of the greatest wildlife concentrations on the continent. This includes 60,000 elephant, over 120,000 buffalo, more than 500,000 antelope, and a couple thousand large carnivores roaming freely in its forests, riverine thickets, steppes, and mountain ranges.

The recorded history of the Selous goes all the way back to the mid-1800s when Richard Burton and John Hanning Speke passed the northern fringes of the Selous in search of the source of the Nile. Many interesting characters left their mark on the Selous, not the least of whom was Kaiser Wilhelm of Germany. It was his government that laid out the rules on the use of the land along the Rufiji River. Most hunters will know that the Selous was named after Frederick Courteney Selous who died near Beho Beho during WW I. He was buried in the reserve, and, for the longest time, his grave was “lost” and almost entirely swallowed by the wilderness.

Many other luminaries and African characters have made the Selous their destination. “Snake man” Ionides and famous wildlife painter Wilhelm Kuhnert are just two such men. The Selous is also interesting for the animals that inhabit it. Tales of giant tuskers and infamous man-eating lions are included in this book, which is the best and most thorough record on the Selous Game Reserve ever written. The foreword is by commander Gerard Selous.

The contributors to this book are the people who have helped make the Selous the greatest game reserve in Africa and a mecca for the international big-game hunter. Contributors include F. Alpers, G. Atanas, R. D. Baldus, G. Bigurube, R. Bonham, R. Hahn, B. Kibonde, W. Kuhnert, J. McCarthy, B. Meier, I. N. Ngwatura, B. Nicholson, C. Pitra, A. Rodgers, R. Rohwer, M. Shand, L. Siege, N. Stronach, E. Tarimo. These contributors share over a century of work in the reserve.

A Rowland Ward Publication
 
         
 Deutsch   Russian   Espanol   Site Map   E-mail   Print page   Top of page