Hunting the Elephant in Africa, and Other Recollections of Thirteen Years' Wanderings
Chauncey Hugh Stigand (1877–1919) was a British army officer, colonial administrator and big game hunter. He was killed in action while attempting to suppress a rebellion of Aliab Dinka. Theodore Roosevelt wrote that "Captain Stigand is one of the most noted of
recent African big game hunters and explorers, and he is also a field naturalist of unusual powers. ... Captain Stigand has written a book which ought to appeal to every believer in vigor and hardihood, to every lover of wilderness adventure, and to every man who values at their proper worth the observations of an excellent field naturalist."
I. Elephant Hunting
II. Native Trackers
III. About Rhino
IV. More Elephant Hunting
V. Amongst the Madi
VI. About Buffalo
VII. African Rivers and Swamps
VIII. Contrasts and Changes in
IX. About Lion
X. Native Servants
XI. Elephant Hunting in the Lugware Country
XII. Elephant Hunting in the Lugware Country
XIII. The Happy Bantu
XIV. Curious Hunting Incidents
XV. Two Short Treks and Two African Chiefs
XVI. Odd Notes on Game and the Honey Guide
XVII. Tusks of Elephant and their Measurements
XVIII. Curious African Sayings and Ideas
XIX. Camp Hints
XX. Stalking the African
XXI. Hunting the Bongo
XXII. Odd Notes on African Insects
XXIII. Mimicry and Protective Colouration in Insects
This book published in 1913 has been reformatted for the Kindle and may contain an occasional defect from the original publication or from the reformatting.