IX WA-KIKUYU 107 



lia^-e described the comic side of "the drinking of 

 warm blood " in their interesting account of the Kikuyu 

 people. 



They make an alcoholic drink from the juice of the 

 sugar _ cane. The juice is obtained by pounding the 

 cane in a trough with wooden pestles. This is the 



/ 







A Man of Kikuyu with a gallipot in 

 the distended lobo of the ear. 



work of the women. A fermented drink is also made from 

 honey. The Wa-Kikuyn are fond of honey, and honey 

 barrels are seen fixed in the branches of an isolated 

 tree. A honey box in a tree in the Kikuyu country is 

 a feature in the landscape. It is a wooden cylinder, 



