THE RHINOCEROS OF THE LADO 417 
a little larger than any cow of the latter that we had killed. 
We at once sent for Heller—who had been working without 
intermission since we struck the Lado, and liked it—and 
waited by the body until he appeared, in mid-afternoon. 
Here in the Lado we were in a wild, uninhabited coun¬ 
try, and for meat we depended entirely on our rifles; nor 
was there any difficulty in obtaining all we needed. We 
only shot for meat, or for museum specimens^—all the 
museum specimens being used for food too—and as the 
naturalists were as busy as they well could be, we found 
that, except when we were after rhinoceros, it was not 
necessary to hunt for more than half a day or thereabouts. 
On one of these hunts, on which he shot a couple of buck, 
Kermit also killed a monitor lizard, and a crocodile ten 
feet long; it was a female, and contained fifty-two eggs, 
which, when scrambled, we ate and found good. 
The morning after Kermit killed his cow rhino he and 
Grogan went off for the day to see if they could not get 
some live rhino photos. Cuninghame started to join Heller 
at the temporary camp which we had made beside the 
dead rhino, in order to help him with the skin and skeletons. 
Mearns and Loring were busy with birds, small beasts, 
and photographs. So, as we were out of fresh meat, I 
walked away from camp to get some, followed by my gun- 
bearers, the little mule with its well-meaning and utterly 
ignorant shenzi sais, and a dozen porters. 
We first went along the river brink to look for croco¬ 
diles. In most places the bank was high and steep. Wher¬ 
ever it was broken there was a drinking place, with lead¬ 
ing down to it trails deeply rutted in the soil by the herds of 
giant game that had travelled them for untold years. At 
