



On the return journey in the huge Camps International truck, i asked Bernard if there were any big cats in Mwaluganje. His response was "Only Leopard. but he is very difficult to find" i know this to be true wherever there are Leopard. I asked when he was last seen, and Bernard told me he saw him last year.
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As i write this, i am using some heavy-duty binoculars to watch thirteen or fourteen Elephants from our elevated camp. entrancing, amazing creatures, moving with an unexplainable clumsy grace.
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We set off again for the school this evening. Half the group built bricks, while we went and put up a chain-linked fence. after the first group coming back to camp and whining about it, we thought this would be some sort of horrible chore, but we were enjoying ourselves. We did more and better than the first group.

A joke possibly wasted on the locals.
The kids helped a lot. They are always fun to talk to. One had a orange shirt with "girls love me" printed on it. When asked "so, do the girls love you?" he confidently replied "yes!" I followed up the question with "do you love girls?" to which he said "no,no,no!" Other kids hacked at the trees in our way with machetes longer than their arms, making cuts in the trees centimeters away from their limbs. Terrifying to watch.

you would think this is the least dangerous type of fencing...

Back at base camp we did a fairly un-pubby pub quiz around the campfire. "before we start, i want you to think about a couple of things..." "like why we aren't in a pub?"

Funniest picture ever taken.
