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Wild Child - Growing up a Nomad (Paperback)
Loot Price: R417
Discovery Miles 4 170
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Wild Child - Growing up a Nomad (Paperback)
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Loot Price R417
Discovery Miles 4 170
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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Ian Mathie was an entertaining raconteur and writer who told his
true life stories with great vigour and enthusiasm. He had an
amazing memory and was able to recall the smallest details, even
from his early childhood. His life was packed with unusual
experiences and adventures in distant places with strange people,
wild animals, danger and fun. He had an extraordinary start in life
by today's standards. Born in Edinburgh, the second son of a
Scottish Army officer, he began a lifelong affair with Africa when
his father was posted to Lusaka in Northern Rhodesia in 1951 to
serve with the Northern Rhodesia Regiment. From the scrub beyond
the barracks to the wilds of the Kafue Game Reserve, the African
bush became his playground. Its peoples were a source of infinite
fascination. His playmates were the children of his father's troops
and from nearby villages. They attended the same mission school a
few miles outside the town, played African games and absorbed
African culture from within. The family made many excursions into
the bush, including one memorable visit to Shiwa N'gandu, the
exotic home of Stewart 'Chipembele' Gore-Browne. When his father's
regiment was sent to Malaya to fight in the jungle, the family went
too. Living in Penang, Ian attended a Chinese school in the
mornings and spent afternoons playing mah-jongg with the local
women, hiding his winnings in a cracked teapot under the wall of
the local snake temple for safe-keeping. British boarding schools
and Ian did not in general get along; his free spirit and
independent nature singled him out for special treatment from both
his fellow students and school masters. Flying out to Africa during
the holidays was a brief respite. In his later school years, he put
his bush knowledge to use in the English countryside and found
outlets for his energy in sports and army cadets. Ian was hooked on
flying from an early age, and joined the RAF as a pilot as soon as
he could. However, defence cuts left him stuck on the ground with
no prospect of further flying. It was a blessing in disguise. No
sooner had he resigned his commission than he was sent back to
Africa by the UK government as a rural development officer,
specialising in water resources and related projects, a job that
allowed him to roam the continent.
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